Thomas v. Johnson

29 N.W.2d 490, 72 S.D. 62, 1947 S.D. LEXIS 15
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 14, 1947
DocketFile No. 8916.
StatusPublished

This text of 29 N.W.2d 490 (Thomas v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas v. Johnson, 29 N.W.2d 490, 72 S.D. 62, 1947 S.D. LEXIS 15 (S.D. 1947).

Opinion

HAYES, J.

This suit was instituted for the purpose of obtaining an adjudication of adverse claims of ownership to a strip of land IOV2 feet wide and extending across the full widths of what we will refer to in this opinion as lots 1 and 2 and to quiet title to said strip in plaintiffs.

These two lots comprise an area of approximately 152 by 88 feet, the south line thereof being slightly less than the dimension first given, which area is bounded on the north by 3rd Street and on the east by Indiana Avenue in the City of Sioux Falls. Lot 1 is the corner lot with a frontage of 44 feet on Indiana Avenue and lot 2 lies south and adjacent thereto with a like frontage on the avenue. A plat of these lots, conceded by the parties to be correct, discloses that 3rd Street, running east and west, does *63 not extend beyond the northwest corner of lot 1 on the line of said lot and that an alley ten feet wide, running parrallel with Indiana Avenue, is the western boundary of both lots. It also appears from said plat that fences and buildings of the owner or owners of the property lying west of said lots and across the alley have been constructed or placed so as to extend into and upon said alley an average distance of two feet.

It further appears from the plat above mentioned and from undisputed testimony before the trial court that for a considerable number of years the westerly eight feet of said lots 1 and 2 and the east half of the strip platted for an alley have been used for alley purposes. One witness, the city engineer, testified that such had been the situation for more than twenty years.

The facts which gave rise to the conflicting claims of ownership are not in dispute. The common grantor of all parties litigant is Ellen Johnson, one of the defendants. She acquired title to the lots in question in 1934 by deed from her husband who had first held the same as owner thereof in 1915. A one-story dwelling had been erected on the westerly part of lots 1 and 2, facing 3rd Street, prior to the acquisition of the premises by Gust C. Johnson, deceased husband of Ellen Johnson. The east wall of said dwelling is 55.8 feet from the western boundary of said lots 1 and 2. An open porch or stoop attached to and near the rear of the dwelling on the east side thereof and a narrow walk from the front of the dwelling to and around said stoop occupy an additional space of 6.2 feet. Consequently, the dwelling, stoop and walk extend to the east of the western lot lines a distance of 62 feet.

Plaintiffs first occupied the dwelling above described as tenants in 1925. They continued such occupancy until October, 1938, when they entered into a contract to purchase the same from Ellen Johnson and remained in possession. The contract described the property as the west 52 feet of said lots 1 and 2. In July, 1940, Ellen Johnson conveyed to plaintiffs as per the contract description adding the words “according to the recorded plat thereof”. At the time when *64 plaintiffs acquired title to said property there was tendered to them an abstract of title to which was attached a drawing indicating that said lots 1 and 2 were 140 feet instead of 152 feet east and west. A firm of reputable attorneys found from said abstract that title to the west 52 feet of said lots 1 and 2 was in plaintiffs, subject to stated encumbrances and a sewer easement. No survey of the lots was made nor were measurements taken of the area deeded to plaintiffs at the time of transfer.

Ellen Johnson defaulted in the action and took no part in the trial proceedings. It does not appear that any of the parties sought to have her testimony in the record. One of her daughters testified to the effect that the condition of her health was such that she was not able to come to court. Over objection on the part of the contesting defendants plaintiffs were permitted to testify that Ellen Johnson and her deceased husband had each declared to plaintiffs that the eastern boundary line of the west 52 feet of said lots was “right along the east end of the sidewalk.” It is altogether clear that the walk and stoop were used in connection with the dwelling during all of the period while plaintiffs occupied the premises as tenants, purchasers and owners. During all of this same period a dwelling house stood upon the easterly ends of each of said lots 1 and 2 facing Indiana Avenue.

The Schumachers and Arnes, defendants and cross-complainants, acquired the titles to the easterly parts of said lots 1 and 2 respectively by virtue of separate transfers in which the areas conveyed were described as the east 100 feet of said lots. Said transfers were made in 1943. No survey was made nor were any measurements taken to determine the depth or western line of the area sought to be conveyed to these defendants prior to the transfers to them. A survey made in 1945 disclosed that part of plaintiffs’ house and the stoop and walk were not within the lines of the area as described in the contract of purchase and deed to the latter and that plaintiffs were occupying and enjoying the west 10 feet of the area described in the transfers to these defendants and an additional space marked *65 off by the picket fence and a hedge to the rear of said fence. The contesting defendants asserted title to the areas according to the calls of the deeds to them and by their cross-complaint sought to have said title quieted in them. The trial court entered findings and a judgment in favor of said defendants, the latter decreeing that plaintiffs were bound by the description in the deed to them and that plaintiffs’ cause of action be dismissed on the merits. The appeal to this court is from the findings and judgment adverse to plaintiffs and from the refusal of the trial court to adopt findings and judgment as proposed by the plaintiffs.

By findings of fact I and II the trial court found that the Schumachers and Arnes are in possession of the east 100 feet of the lots in question and that these defendants are the owners in fee thereof and have title thereto. Each of the defendants testified that they claimed the east 100 feet of the lots as conveyed to them but it is not at all disputed that the plaintiffs have been in the open and continuous possession of the westerly 10 feet of the described area since 1925 as heretofore recited in this opinion. The findings of possession by these defendants, or any them, of the area in dispute are wholly unsupported in the record. It clearly appears that none of the defendants asserted any right to the disputed area until after the survey in 1945.

The decisive question presented by this appeal is whether the designation of the eastern line of plaintiffs’ property by Ellen Johnson was thereafter binding upon the contesting defendants. The trial court, as above pointed out, adopted the negative view of this proposition. Plaintiffs contend that they are entitled to the west 62V2 feet of the lots in question by virtue of the line designation to them by the Johnsons and for the further reasons that the deed from Ellen Johnson was intended to convey to plaintiffs that part of the area long used as a unit for dwelling purposes and that the contesting defendants, having purchased with notice of plaintiffs’ occupancy, cannot be heard to assert ownership to the area in dispute. Defendants contend that the calls of the several deeds determine the rights of all parties.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 N.W.2d 490, 72 S.D. 62, 1947 S.D. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-johnson-sd-1947.