143 Iowa 134 | Iowa | 1909
On August 17, 1904, plaintiff purchased of defendants, E. L. Burnham and his wife, Charlotte, the S. one-third of lot 5, block C, in an addition to the city of Des Moines, and received from them a deed with the ordinary covenants of general warranty. It is claimed in the petition:
That a portion of the real estate thereby conveyed, located and described as follows, to wit: Commencing at the N. "VV. corner of the S. 1-3 of lot 5, block C, Commissioners’ addition to Et. Des Moines, now within the corporate limits of the city of Des Moines, Polk county, Iowa; running thence south, along the west line thereof, one foot and three inches; thence in the southeasterly direction eighty feet; thence north one foot and nine inches; and thence west, along the north line thereof, eighty feet, to the place of beginning — was, and ever since has been, occupied with a brick wall, some eighty-four feet in height above the surface of the ground and some eight feet in depth below the surface thereof. That the wall aforesaid is the south wall of the building locally known as the ‘Essex Building’ situated upon thé N. 2-3 of said lot 5, block C, Commissioners’ addition, and belonging to the owners thereof, parties to plaintiff unknown, extending over and upon and covering the trapezoid above described, and that the wall aforesaid was erected in the year 1892, and ever since has remained in the location described by and with the consent and acquiescence of the defendants. That forthwith, upon the execution of the warranty deed aforesaid, ‘Exhibit A,’ the plaintiff entered and took possession of the real estate thereby conveyed, with the exception of the trapezoid portion above described, but. that the defend
Damages are asked from defendants on account of the claimed breach of covenant in the, sum of $5,000. Defendants denied the alleged breach of warranty, pleaded that Charlotte Burnham was .not responsible in any event because she joined in the deed simply to release her distributive share, and further alleged:
That, after the said deed hereinabove referred to was executed by these defendants, the plaintiff entered into the full possession of the said property and erected a brick building thereon and used the south wall of the building called the ‘Essex building’ in the erection of plaintiff’s said brick building without the payment of any compensation therefor, and that if part of the said Essex' building did rest upon the S. 1-3 of said lot 5 in block C of Commissioners’ addition to Et. Des Moines, being the property conveyed by defendant to plaintiff, the same was placed thereon by the person who erected said Essex building as a party wall, and was always treated by the several owners of said Essex building as a party wall, and was treated and used by the plaintiff as a party wall, and plaintiff is now estopped from saying that said wall was or is an incumbrance upon the property conveyed to plaintiff' by these defendants.
After the testimony was fully adduced upon these ■issues, defendants filed a motion for a directed verdict based upon grounds which do not clearly appear in the abstract. The motion was sustained, however, on the theory that the owners of the Essex building had not obtained title to the property in dispute, that a party wall does not constitute an incumbrance, even though it extends more than nine inches over and upon a neighbor, and that the remedy, if any, in such cases, is to be determined and adjusted when use is made of the wall. It was further held by the trial court that plaintiff’s cause of action, if any it
After plaintiff’s purchase from defendants, it decided to erect an office building upon its property, and it caused a survey to be made which it contended showed the extension of the Essex building upon their land to the extent above indicated. It went ahead and constructed its buildings and made use of the south wall of the Essex building from the basement to the height of four stories for the north wall of its building. After the building had been constructed, the Percival-Porter Co., as assignees of the owners of the Essex building, brought action against plaintiffs to this suit for the value of the wall used by it in the construction of its building, on the theory that it had joined onto and was using a party wall. Plaintiffs gave defendants notice of this suit and requested them to appear and defend or be bound by the result. They did not do so, and plaintiff in that action received judgment for $647.36 and costs. Plaintiff in this action paid this judgment with costs and attorney’s fees amounting to $190. Plaintiff does not seek to recover this amount now, but does claim that by failure to appear defendants acquiesced in the line as claimed by the owners of the Essex building, and that the title to lot 5 is established by acquiescence as being where plaintiff claims it now is, and that as a matter of fact the deed from defendants calls for another and the true line which is northward of the line
To solve the question of defendant’s liability, we must first determine where the true line is between the two fractions of the lot. Unless plaintiff shows by a preponderance of the testimony that he has not received all his deed calls for, he must fail in this action. According to the testimony, lot five is sixty-six and fifty-four one-hundredths feet wide north and south and the width of the S. one-third would be twenty-two and eighteen one-hundredths feet, leaving the N. two-thirds forty-four and thirty-six one-hundredths feet in width. -A civil engineer testified that the south wall of the Essex building was one foot and three inche.s south of the north line of the S. one-third of lot five at one end, and that it was one foot and nine inches south of the line at the other end. The lot faces west on what is known as “Sixth Avenue” in the city of Des Moines.’ We now quote from the cross-examination of this witness as to how he made his survey:
To ascertain the location of lot 5, block C, Commissioners’ addition, I measured from the curb on Grand Avenue. I measured south from this curb, determining the south line of Grand Avenue, and then measured sixty-six and fifty-four one-hundredths feet for the lot immediately north of and sixty-six and fifty-four one-hundredths for this lot, lot five. I measured from other points also— through the block on Fifth Street and also on Sixth Street to Locust Street. I made use of the curb on Locust Street for the purpose of ascertaining the location. There are monuments in some places for beginning surveys.*140 The bench marks are used mostly for determining the elevation. In this particular case the streets all around are paved and curbed, and have been so for a good many years; so that I assumed that these curbs, having been set by engineers when monuments were in existence, are set correctly and established the street line. Upon that basis I made the survey. I simply assumed that the curb lines were correct. I did not make any measurements for the purpose of ascertaining the correctness. of the location of the curb line on Grand Avenue. I didn’t go any further north than Grand Avenue. I didn’t go out of block G for any measurements, that I know of. I made no measurements to any fixed monument that has been established; nothing more than the curb. I simply assumed that the curb line was correctly situated. I don’t know that the curb line has been found incorrect in this case. I think there are places in the city that the curbs have been found incorrect. As to these curbs from which I measured, I did not make any independent survey for the purpose of ascertaining whether these curbs were correctly situated or not. I can think of no way at present by which that could be determined, and for that reason I did not. I did not ascertain the distance of the curb from the lot line by the city plat. I ascertained from the records the width of those streets, and then determined the position of the curb from the measurements taken between the curbsj and, after doing that, got the boundary lines of the street. Grand Avenue is sixty-six feet wide at that point. I don’t recall that that is the width which is shown on the plat, but I think it is. I think I examined the plat to ascertain, but I could not recollect now that it was or was not, but I made a survey on the basis of its being sixty-six feet wide. As to how I ascertained that it was sixty-six feet wide, I say I can’t recollect that I examined the plat for that particular purpose, but I think I did, and I know that measurements from the center to the south line accord 'exactly, or so nearly, with the improvements there thirty-three feet from the south line. I didn’t go to the trouble of measuring thirty-three feet from the center to the north line. So there may be a greater distance from the center to the north line than to the south line. But I believe it is a fact it is sixty-six feet wide, but from the*141 center of the street south thirty-three feet is the way I determined the south line. I determined the width of the lots in block C, Commissioners’ addition,' from the records, the plat. . The plat shows the street too, I think, and I believe I ascertained that distance, although I don’t recollect now that I looked at that particular thing. I parv ticularly looked at the lot.
I think the alley south of lot five in block C, south of this property, also the division line between Commissioners’ addition and the original town. I believe Locust Street is not in the same plat as Grand Avenue. It is a fact that, in those old surveys or plats (of) Commissioners’ addition to the original town of Et. Des Moines, the actual distances, as you find them now, and measuring-on the ground, are not exactly .the same as the distances shown upon the plat; but they are very nearly the same. The plat that I used of Commissioners’ addition shows the lots to be sixty-six and fifty-four one-hundredths feet wide. That plat is supposed to be a copy from a recorded plat in the recorder’s office. I supposed it was. It is a blue print or tracing that is kept on file in the city engineer’s office, supposed to be copied from these record plats; and I remember distinctly that the lots were marked sixty-six and fifty-four one hundredths. I think I made two surveys of the location for Mr. Ballard or the Capital City Investment Company, and this map that I have produced here was from my second survey. I do not recollect that, when the second survey was made, it was ■ discovered that the first survey which I made was incorrect. I think this is the fact that Mr. Ballard' called upon me to make a survey, and I sent a surveyor to do that work, and then, later, he called upon me personally to go with him and make a survey. I don’t recall that there was any discrepancy in regard to the location of the Essex wall. I think that that was the cause of the second survey. The first survey, as I understand it, was the reason for discovering that the lines were marked in attempting to make their distances to the Essex wall. As I understand it, they discovered from the first survey that, the Essex wall was on a portion of the S. one-third, and then, to be entirely certain, they had a second survey made from measurements taken to the wall. In locating the south side .of the Essex
Another witness, nonexpert, testified as follows:
After the first survey, we let a contract to a party
The engineer also testified on cross-examination as follows:
I got the information which I had in making this survey from the blue print, of which, I believe, the original tracing is on file in the city engineer’s office, and that shows the lot to be sixty-six and fifty-four one-hundredths. I do not know who made that tracing. I do not know who made the blue print that I used. There is no record, to my knowledge, in the office of the county recorder showing these dimensions. That is shown simply on some tracings or plats that are kept in the city engineer’s office for the purpose of making blue prints so surveyors may use them in plattings for the dimensions. That is the usual purpose in using them. I do not know that those tracings have ever been adopted as records of the county. They are kept in the city records. I should term them part of the city engineer’s office. They are public records kept there. Surveyors frequently go there to make blue prints. They are public in the sense anybody can go there to use them; that is, the memoranda are public. I have reasons to believe these dimensions of that lot are correct, and the reason I have come to that conclusion is that I measured*144 from the curb on Grand Avenue to the curb on Locust ’ Street and found them to agree very closely, to a small fraction of a foot, with the dimensions in that entire block. In the block on Sixth Avenue they disagreed about forty-two one-hundredths of a foot between Grand Avenue and Locust Street. The returns that are set in the alley intersection on the east side of Sixth Avenue between Locust and Grand, here, coming from Grand Avenue, nearly accord with these dimensions, sixty-six and fifty-four one-hundredths. I did not find the original monuments or stakes that were set when these lots.were surveyed. I have reason to believe the curb to be correct from the fact that it is an improvement set by the city engineer, and in setting curbs it is customary to use the utmost care in getting them placed correctly, and there may be, and there are, monuments that are in existence at the time. Frequently the pavement itself will destroy the monument. I have known cases where, through pavement and sewering, they will be taken up and the curbs themselves be left as a record of the condition of the street. I do not know when that curb was established on Grand Avenue, nor by whom it was established. I suppose it was established by the city engineer, but I do not know. I didn’t look it up to see. I do not know whether the original monument was there at the time that curb1 was set. I do not know whether the curb has ever been changed since it was originally located. At the east line of Sixth Avenue I believe the width of Grand Avenue between curbs is forty-one and eighty-six one-hundredths. I measured it. I think the pavement was intended to be laid forty-two feet. The distance between curbs is not six inches less than it was intended to be. The difference between forty-one and eighty-six one-hundredths and forty-two feet is fourteen one-hundredths of a foot. I suppose the width of Grand Avenue was intended to be forty-two feet. Being so near, that would indicate it. I did not measure to ascertain the location of the north curb on Grand Avenue with reference to the lot lines there. The distances I measured overran slightly. 'I am unable to ■ say the cause of that.
Q. The fact that you find on making surveys that the actual distances overrun those shown by the official
Recurring now to the various transfers made by the parties, we find the following description in the chain of title to the north two-thirds of lot 5: “The north two-thirds of lot five (5) in block 0 of Commissioners’ addition to the town of Ft. Des Moines, now included in and forming a part of the • city of Des Moines, Polk County, Iowa, said premises having a frontage of forty-four (44) feet on West Sixth avenue and a depth of one hundred thirty-two (132) feet, together with- a seven (7) story brick building • now located thereon.” It should also be stated that plaintiff here, in its answer to the claim made against it in the Percival-Porter case for compensation for its part of the party wall, pleaded the following matters in its answer:
That the south wall of the Essex building aforesaid is not, and never has been, a party line wall, nor can it become a wall in common under and within the meaning*146 and. intent of the statutes of Iowa, for the following reasons, to wit: (1) For that, at the time of its erection, there was a wall on the line between the N. two-thirds and the S. one-third of said lot 5; (2) for that the thickness of said wall, above the cellar wall, exceeds eighteen inches, exclusive of the plastering; (3) for that from fifteen (15) inches to twenty-one (21) inches of the thickness of said wall, for its entire length, rests upon defendant’s property; and (4) for that said wall was erected with, and still contains, many and divers windows and other openings in and through it, destroying its character and capacity as a partition wall.
Upon .that issue tendered there was a judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $615.60. It should also be stated that we may have all the facts before us, that the plat of the addition in which lot five is found shows the lots to be sixty-six by one hundred and thirty-two feet and the width of Sixth Avenue to be sixty-six feet. It also shows a stone set at the southeast corner of block C at the intersection of Fifth Street with Locust.
We are impressed with the notion that the testimony of the civil engineer who made the survey of the line between the two fractions of the lot does not show that the true line is other than the one occupied by the wall between the two. buildings which is now in common. He did not go to the original plats, nor to the original monuments, but accepted as correct the location of the curbing put in by the city, and the lot lines as improved by various owners. The original plat does not correspond with his survey either as to the width of streets, or lots. He went to none of the original or substituted monuments and did not go to the stone at the southeast corner of block C which was fixed on the plat as the datum point.
Conceding arguendo that the presumption is a rebuttable one, the evidence to establish another line as the true one must be clear and satisfactory. Such testimony is not found here. We have quoted substantially all there is of it, and when taken in connection with the original plats, deeds, etc., it is not found to be of that character to justify us in reversing the action of the trial court, although this was not made the basis of his decision as shown by the oral declarations of the judge at the time of making his ruling.
We plant the decision in the case squarely upon the ground that there is not sufficient showing that the line upon which the wall stands is not the true one as established by the original plat; the survey testified to by the engineer being too uncertain to justify a disturbance of a line which is presumed to be the true one. There is no need therefore for considering any other proposition in the case.
The result is that the judgment must be, and it is, affirmed.