88 P. 214 | Wyo. | 1907
The defendant in error commenced this action against the plaintiff in error, in the District Court of Carbon County, June 13, 1904. and in an amended petition filed June 21, 1904, alleged in substance: that the defendant in error was the owner of lot ri, in block 46, in the Union Pacific Railway Company’s Fourth addition to the town of Rawlins, together with the improvements thereon, and for a long time had been in possession thereof; that said lot is forty feet in width, and one hundred and thirty-two feet in length, extending north and south; that defendant in error and her grantors for more than seventeen years prior to. the commencement of this action have' had open, notorious, hostile, adverse, exclusive, continuous and actual possession of a wedged-shaped strip of land ten feet in width at the north end and widening to fourteen and one-half feet on the south end and adjoining said lot 11, on its west side, said strip of land being a portion off the east side of what was designated in said plat of said block as lot 12; that said strip of land was fenced in with a portion of said lot 11 for more than seventeen years and had been occupied as above stated, and that the title to the same was in defendant in error and her grantors by right of prescription. That on June 13, 1904, the- plaintiff in error unlawfully and maliciously entered upon said' premises and commenced to build a fence along the line between said lots 11 and 12. The petition contains other allegations, but the foregoing are
The defendant in error claims this strip of land, which is a part of lot 12, by prescription; and the real issue in the case is, whether or not that claim is sustained by the evidence. This renders it necessary for us to state briefly the substance of the evidence bearing upon that question.
It appears that the land included within the plat of this addition was patented by the United States to the Union Pacific Railroad Company February 24, 1877, and was platted as such addition by the railroad company April 30, 1886, the plat being filed in the office of the County Clerk of Carbon County May 7, 1886. The lots front north, and lot 12 adjoins lot 11 on the west.
Mrs. N. E. Price testified that she and her husband lived on what is known as lot 11, block 46, from 1880 for four or five years and built a small log house on the lot: “When we were there the lots were not sold to people. It was Union Pacific land. We had no title to the ground.” M. B. Pendleton testified, that he bought the Price property in 1884 and lived there until 1890, and built a fence around
Numerous authorities to the same effect are cited in the notes in 1 Cyc., 1037 and 1038. (Scott v. Williams, 87 Pac. (Kan., 1906), 550.)
Defendant in error acquired title by deed from Jolleff. That deed was for lot 11 and no more. She says she bought a forty-foot lot; that she has and is entitled to no more. While it is the rule that this court will not set aside the verdict of a jury or the findings of the trial court on questions of fact where there is a conflict in the evidence and where there is evidence to support'the verdict or findings, yet, where the evidence wholly fails, under the law, to support the verdict and judgment, it is our duty to set it aside. In our opinion such is the case here. The evidence of plaintiff below shows that the fence was built before the addition was platted and that after it was platted the occupants of lot 11 did not claim to be entitled to more than that lot. That being the case, their possession of the strip in controversy was not such an adverse possession as would ripen into a title by prescription; and the court should have directed the jury upon plaintiff’s evidence, as requested, to return a verdict for defendant. This failure in the evidence was not cured by the evidence of the defendant. For the reasons above stated, the judgment of the District Court is reversed and the case remanded for a new trial.
Reversed.