177 P. 760 | Idaho | 1918
Action to quiet title. Respondent, who was the plaintiff below, asserts title to what is commonly known as the Bancroft Land & Irrigation Company canal system situated in Bannock county, Idaho. The system is described at length in the complaint, and in the cross-complaint, and appears to be a canal some 49.76 miles in length, with necessary right of way, reservoir, etc., divert
The respondent claims title by regular chain from the Cache Valley Canal Company and the Cache Valley Land & Canal Company, which companies constructed the canal, commencing about the year 1892, while the appellants claim title by virtue of certain tax proceedings and tax deeds, and also by adverse possession.
Complaint was filed October 14, 1915, the answer and cross-complaint January 26, 1916. Trial was had before the court April, 1917, and findings and decree afterward entered, from which decree, an appeal has been taken to this court.
Some eighteen assignments of error are relied upon by the appellants, but it will be necessary to consider only a small portion of them as the others necessarily fail from the decision of those considered.
The first assignment of error is the alleged failure of the court to find upon the issue of adverse possession for five years as presented by the cross-complaint. The findings have been examined with some care as to this question, from which it appears to this court that the court below made the necessary findings, the failure to make which is assigned as error.
Paragraph 10, subdivisions (a) to (k) of the findings, contains complete recitals of the facts upon which appellants’ claim to the property is based, as alleged in their cross-complaint. Subdivision (i) finds that they did not have the quiet or peaceable possession, or occupancy, or any possession or occupancy of the property for period of five years before the commencement of the action; and subdivision (k) finds specifically as to the payment of the taxes, showing that they had not paid them for the full five year period prior to the filing of the respondent’s complaint to quiet title.
It is next claimed that the court committed error in holding a certain tax deed dated September 23, 1911, and certain tax certificates issued in the years 1910, 1909 and 1908 to be invalid and void. The tax deed in question was based upon a tax certificate of sale issued to Bannock county in July,
In proving the chain of title relied upon by respondent certain exhibits were offered and received in evidence to which the appellants objected and their admission is assigned as error. These exhibits consisted of records from the federal court in foreclosure proceedings resulting in a sale of the eanal property some years prior to the time appellants claimed any interest in the property. And the objection was based upon the fact that neither the appellants, nor anyone from whom they claimed, were parties to the foreclosure. This was not proper ground for objection to these exhibits as they constituted merely a link in the chain of title of respondent and there was no error in their admission.
Nor was there any error, which this court will consider, in the ruling of the trial court in reference to the sixteenth assignment of error, as the evidence involved in the question to which objection was made and apparently ruled out was later on in the course of the trial all admitted in answer to other questions.
The judgment of the district court should be affirmed and it is so .ordered. Costs awarded to respondent.