Wacha v. Brown
This text of 43 N.W. 269 (Wacha v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Plaintiff claims to be the owner of all of the south half of lot 118, in East Dubuque addition to the city of Dubuque, and that defendants wrongfully occupy and retain possession of a strip of land one hundred feet long and eighteen inches wide, constituting a part of said lot, and bounded on the south by the south boundary line thereof. Defendants are the widow and heirs of John Brown, who died intestate in the year 1878, and as such claim to own and occupy the north half of lot 119, which is south of and adjoining lot 118. In the year 1858 said Brown occupied the north half of lot 119, and built thereon and on the strip in controversy a dwelling house. Other improvements were afterwards [433]*433made, including the building of a fence, kitchen and stable. The dwelling house and other improvements were occupied and used by Brown during his lifetime, and by the defendants Since his death, as a home. The evidence shows that of the improvements made by Brown and others the dwelling house projects over the boundary line between lots 118 and 119 onto the former seventeen inches, the kitchen so projects twenty-one inches, the stable eighteen inches, while the fence from the street to the house is twenty-eight inches north of the line. It is shown that plaintiff is the owner of all of the south half of lot 118, unless defendants have acquired title thereto by virtue of adverse possession continued for more than ten years.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
43 N.W. 269, 78 Iowa 432, 1889 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wacha-v-brown-iowa-1889.