Wise v. Knapp

412 P.2d 96, 3 Ariz. App. 99
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedMarch 16, 1966
Docket2 CA-CIV 84
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 412 P.2d 96 (Wise v. Knapp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wise v. Knapp, 412 P.2d 96, 3 Ariz. App. 99 (Ark. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

JOHN A. McGUIRE, Superior Court Judge.

This is an action to quiet title to a portion of lot J of Potrero Acres Subdivision located on the outskirts of Nogales, Arizona, and for damages for trespass to this latid, brought by the plaintiffs, Merrill Knapp and Edith Knapp, husband and wife, against George Wise and Eunice Wise, husband and wife, defendants.

Defendants cross-claimed asking that their title be quieted to certain property. The claims of the parties overlapped in certain areas of lot J. Plaintiffs recovered judgment in their favor quieting title to most of the area of overlapping claim. The defendants appealed from this judgment insofar as the judgment grants areas of conflict to the plaintiffs, and insofar as the judgment fails to grant to them a right-of-way over a portion of plaintiffs’ property.

*100 The evidence is difficult to follow both in the transcript and in the instruments admitted in evidence because of the confusion in directional orientation. Potrero Acres is laid out along the Tucson-Nogales Highway, which in this area runs in a northwest-southeasterly direction. However, presumably because Tucson lies almost directly north of Nogales, in the testimony before the court and in many of the deeds admitted in evidence, the northwesterly direction of the layout of the subdivision is referred to as “north.” To further confuse the factual situation from the appellate standpoint, there is a referral throughout much of the oral testimony to points such as “here” or “there” and other unlocated designations.

We state the facts as revealed by this ambivalent record in the light most favorable to the court’s judgment below. All of lot J, the lot in question, originally belonged to one Tomlin. It is an “L” shaped piece-of property, with 235.2 feet of frontage on the Tucson-Nogales Highway, 400 feet in depth and 450 feet across the back. We provide the reader with a sketch of lot J so that this opinion may be followed.

*101 In 1930, Tomlin conveyed 100 feet of the “southern” frontage (and we deliberately fall into the same directional disorientation as the witnesses for ease of expression) to one Sawyer, from whom plaintiffs de-raigned title. The land so conveyed is designated as parcel A-l on the sketch above, and measures 315 feet across the rear of the property and extends in depth to the entire 400 feet.

In 1929, Tomlin conveyed the “north” 130 feet of the “northern” frontage along the highway to Adams, which tract ran back 235 feet. Record title to this land later passed to the defendants through one Peterson. The triangular-shaped parcel B-l in the sketch is a portion of this tract.

Finally, in 1936, Tomlin conveyed the tract immediately in back of the tract conveyed to Adams with dimensions of 130 feet by 165 feet to the same Peterson through whom the defendants acquired their title. Parcel B-2 is a portion of this tract. It is to be noted that Tomlin never conveyed the 5.2 foot strip (parcel A-2 on the sketch) running between these properties. The judgment quieted title to all of lot J shown on the map, except the shaded portion, in the plaintiffs.

There is no question raised on appeal as to the judgment quieting title in the plaintiffs to parcel A-l, with the exception that the defendants claim to be the owners by adverse possession of the area of the driveway as it crosses over A-l near the Nogales highway. (See preceding sketch.)

The record title to the properties in question is somewhat confusing. Errors in description are common in the instruments admitted in evidence. The record title to parcel B-l (the elongated triangle) at the time of trial was in the defendants, and the judgment quieting title in the plaintiffs can only be supported on the theory of adverse possession. The title to parcel B-2 is more complex. In 1948, one Herbert, who had acquired title to substantially all of B-2 from the Peterson mentioned above, conveyed to the plaintiffs by bargain and sale deed all of “A-l” plus an area 100 feet wide and 400 feet long lying to the “north” of “A-l,” covering the 5.2 strip (to which Herbert did not have record title), and including B-2 (as to which Herbert did have record title except as to a small portion). Subsequently, in 1949, the same Herbert executed a quitclaim of A-l to the plaintiffs, but not including in the description the 100 feet “north” of A-l. The defendants choose to regard this later deed as a “correction deed,” thus voiding the 1948 conveyance of B-2, which view is, of course, contested by the plaintiffs who contend that the first deed is a perfectly valid conveyance of most of the B-2 area. There was admitted in evidence, without objection, a quitclaim executed after the filing of this action from Herbert to the plaintiffs of that portion of B-2 to which Herbert did have record title, assuming that he did not divest himself of same by the earlier 1948 deed to the plaintiffs. Defendants, on the other hand, in 1959 obtained a deed from Peterson which covered, inter alia, all of B-2, but, as previously indicated, Peterson did not at that time have record title to B-2 (with the exception of a very small portion thereof). This confusion in record titles is not critical to the decision rendered here because of this court’s holding that the trial court’s decision is supported by the law pertaining to adverse possession.

The following large-scale sketch brings into focus the areas of conflict and we hope will be helpful in following the remaining portion of this decision. The solid line in the sketch is that set forth in the judgment and the dashed line indicates the description set forth in the 1936 deed from Peterson to Herbert and in the 1961 deed from Herbert to the plaintiffs.

*102

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Related

Overson v. Cowley
664 P.2d 210 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1982)
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513 P.2d 1339 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1973)

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Bluebook (online)
412 P.2d 96, 3 Ariz. App. 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wise-v-knapp-arizctapp-1966.