Zerr v. HECETA LODGE NO. 111, IND. ORDER OF ODD F.

523 P.2d 1018, 269 Or. 174, 1974 Ore. LEXIS 372
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 27, 1974
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 523 P.2d 1018 (Zerr v. HECETA LODGE NO. 111, IND. ORDER OF ODD F.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zerr v. HECETA LODGE NO. 111, IND. ORDER OF ODD F., 523 P.2d 1018, 269 Or. 174, 1974 Ore. LEXIS 372 (Or. 1974).

Opinion

TONGUE, J.

This is an action to recover the possession of real property to compel, by writ of restitution, the *176 removal of an adjacent building owned by defendant to the extent that it encroaches upon plaintiffs’ property.

Defendant’s answer alleged various equitable defenses, including the defense that equity should deny plaintiffs’ request for removal of the encroachment because to do so would impose upon defendant a “disproportionate burden.” Defendant’s answer also alleged the defenses of estoppel, reformation and rescission. In addition, defendant contends that a writ of restitution is not a proper remedy to compel the removal of an encroachment.

The entire case, including the equitable defenses, was tried before the court without a jury as in a suit in equity, apparently with the complete acquiescence of both parties. The trial court then entered general findings and conclusions to the effect that “defendant has failed to prove any of its affirmative defenses by a preponderance of evidence” and that plaintiffs were entitled to immediate possession of all of the real property denied by it. The court then ordered the issuance of a writ of restitution “removing defendant” from plaintiffs’ property and awarded plaintiffs nominal damages for past encroachments in the sum of $10. Defendant appeals.

The facts.

Plaintiffs’ predecessor, Mr. Charnstrom, owned Lots 9, 10, 12 and 13 of Block 5 in Florence. Lot 11 was owned by defendant. Defendant had previously OAvned Lots 11, 12 and 13 and had leased Lots 12 and 13 to Mr. Charnstrom. Later it sold these lots to him. Mr. Charnstrom had a building knoAvn as Fisherman’s *177 Wharf on Lots 12 and 13. Defendant’s lodge building was on Lot 11. Lots 9 and 10 were vacant.

In 1969 Mr. Charnstrom was considering the construction of a building on Lots 9 and 10. He then hired a surveyor, a Mr. Worthington, to survey the boundary line between Lots 10 and 11. Upon making that survey, Mr. Worthington discovered that defendant’s lodge building encroached five feet upon the east side of Lot 10.

There is some conflict in the testimony as to what then happened. According to Mr. Charnstrom, he either was never told by Mr. Worthington or “did not recall” whether Mr. Worthington told him that he (Mr. Worthington) had “found out” in the course of the survey that the Fisherman’s Wharf building *178 (owned by Mr. Charnstrom) was also encroaching five feet on Lot 11 (owned by defendant). He did testify, however, that Mr. Worthington told him that “according to his figures * * * the whole block, they were all over too far west four feet” and that “my building [Fisherman’s Wharf] was four feet over.” Mr. Charnstrom also testified that he was told by Mr. Worthington that defendant “wanted” or was “willing to trade the four feet on the east side for the four feet on the west side and asked me if that was all right”; that he said that this was “all right with him”; that either he or Mr. Worthington then “made out all the papers and recorded them as deeds” and “that’s the way the deal was settled.” Mr. Charnstrom testified that he had no conversation with defendant, but “did that according to what Mr. Worthington suggested I do.” However, the two deeds prepared following these conversations each conveyed a five-foot strip, rather than a four-foot strip, as testified by Mr. Charnstrom to be his understanding.

According to one of defendant’s officers, however, both Mr. Charnstrom and Mr. Worthington had a conversation with him at the time of the survey on the sidewalk at a point between defendant’s lodge building and the Fisherman’s Wharf building; that there was then a yellow mark on the sidewalk at that point; that they told him that “they had found a discrepancy in the line” (between the defendant’s lodge building and the Fisherman’s Wharf building); that he “kidded” Mr. Charnstrom “about his kitchen over our property,” and that Mr. Charnstrom said “If it’s over the line, let’s get together and straighten the thing up.” This witness also testified that Mr. Worthington later “brought the deeds over” and “asked us if we *179 would sign ours and then Mr. Charnstrom would sign the other one, and it would all be straightened up”; that the deed was then signed (conveying to Mr. Chamstrom the five-foot strip) and was delivered to Mr. Charnstrom. Another witness, also one of defendant’s officers, testified that “we relied on that survey and signed the deeds, and all in good faith.”

Mr. Worthington, the surveyor, did not testify and it does not appear whether he was available to do so. An engineer engaged subsequently by defendant testified, however, that he had “studied” Mr. Worthington’s survey; that it “showed that the * * * Odd Fellows building and the Fisherman’s Wharf building were not on their respective lots,” and that Mr. Worthington apparently “concluded it would be necessary to exchange five-foot parcels between the Lodge and Mr. Charnstrom to correct that.” He also testified that Mr. Worthington’s survey was correct “along the front of the building,” but that “the chances are that he did not investigate [the] side of [defendant’s] building enough to find out that the building was not sitting square on the lot.”

This engineer also testified that although Mr. Worthington apparently “set out to correct the boundary lines to the building lines,” and “did that correctly as far as the front of the buildings,” he did not do that correctly “in the back,” where defendant’s building extended approximately nine inches farther to the east and that, as a result, defendant did not convey to Mr. Charnstrom the proper amount of property to “line up their building with the correct line,” but “conveyed too much property on one side.”

In addition, this engineer testified that the new “line” between defendant’s lodge building and the *180 Fisherman’s Wharf building did not consider the fact that the lodge building also leaned toward the east and that its eaves extended further to the east toward the Fisherman’s Wharf building.

Subsequently, in 1969, Mr. Charnstrom sold to plaintiffs both Lots 9 and 10 and also Lots 12 and 13, together with the east five feet of Lot 11. Plaintiff Raymond Zerr testified that he had asked Mr. Charnstrom about the deed to the five-foot strip and was told that the Fisherman’s Wharf building had encroached on defendant’s property and that defendant had given to him a deed for the five feet to settle that problem so that his building would not encroach upon defendant’s land.

As time went on plaintiffs noticed that defendant’s building seemed to have “shifted” and to be “leaning.” They then had a survey made of the boundary line between their property and defendant’s property. That survey was made in 1972 and revealed for the first time that although the front corner of defendant’s lodge building (the southeast corner) was “right on the line,” as established by defendant’s deed granting to plaintiffs’ predecessor a five-foot strip along the east side of Lot 11, the back (northeast) corner of defendant’s building extended nine inches over that line.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
523 P.2d 1018, 269 Or. 174, 1974 Ore. LEXIS 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zerr-v-heceta-lodge-no-111-ind-order-of-odd-f-or-1974.