153 Iowa 493 | Iowa | 1911
There is not much dispute as to the facts, and the case turns upon the inferences to be drawn therefrom and the law applicable thereto. Plaintiff and
The description given in the several deeds was of the lots by number, according to the plat of the addition. It will thus be seen that Mattie M. Bailey owned lot 153 from 1883 to the year 1898, and lots 154, 155 and 156 from 1876 to 1902. In other words, she owned all the lots from 1883 to 1898. Lots 154, 155 and 156 were inclosed by a fence when Mrs. Bailey purchased them, and this fence was on the west side of the alley where plaintiff now-claims it should be. When Mrs. Bailey purchased lot 153, it was uninclosed, and she proposed, after obtaining the title, to close the alley; but the owner of lot 152 immediately adjoining lot 153 on the east objected to closing the same, and Mrs. Bailey through her husband, ran a fence along the west side of lot 153 in such a manner as to leave an alley eighteen feet in width between this fence and the one on the east ends of lots 154, 155, and 156. There were also some trees put out along what was apparently the east side of the alley running alongside of and to the west of lot 153. The former owners of lots 154, 155, and 156 built a barn at the southeast corner thereof, facing the east on the alley in question, and this was evidently built with the thought that - it was upon the rear or east end of the lots, for a fence was immediately constructed from the northeast corner of this barn directly north to University avenue. When the fence was put in on the west side of lot 153, something like eighteen or twenty feet was left for an alley between that lot and the rear ends of lots 154, 155 and 156. In the year 1897 Mrs. Bailey, through her husband, built a small buggy shed on the southwest corner of lot 153, facing the alley on the west, and this shed ran over to the line now claimed by plaintiff. From the northwest corner of this shed a fence was erected along what is now claimed to be the line of the
The house which is now on lot 153 was erected in the year 1898 or 1899 by one Spaht while he owned the property, and he testified:
Built a house on it, and raised up the lot a little bit. Built the same house that is on the lot now, dwelling house; graded the lot some. I took the grading off the southeast comer, and pulled it around on the west and north, as it was low there. I graded it up to that row of trees on the west side there, walnut trees. The west line of that lot 153 as I was informed and believed was there was walnut trees and kind of an old fence like in with the trees on the west side. Pretty hard to tell now. Wire was put on the trees and post and a few slats. The fence extended clear through to the south alley. The lot was bounded on
Erom the time of the setting out of the trees, the erection of the fences, and the buildings and improvements down until the year 1908 every one supposed that the al
If the city were making a claim of title to that part of the alley which is on defendant’s lots either through dedication by the owner and acceptance by the city or by reason of adverse possession, there would under the facts be no reason why it should not succeed; for a municipality may acquire such title as is necessary to a street or alley in either of these methods. In other words, while the statute of limitations will not, as a rule, run against a city, it will operate in its favor, and give it title or the right to use a strip as a street or alley. This is funda
Now the evidence in this case shows that permanent improvements were made upon lot 153 with reference to the line marked out by the fence, the row of trees, and the buggy shed upon the lot. Both the house and shed were erected, and the lot was improved with reference to that line. All this was without any objection from either the city or the owner of lots 154, 155 and 156. If the alley is now to be opened with reference to the lines shown by the plat, the eaves of plaintiff’s house will extend over and
[Reduced to its final analysis, the question is really between the adjoining property owners, the city being indifferent as to the result. Defendants, Perkins, are seeking to add something like nine and one-half feet to the rear of, their lots, and plaintiff is expected to give up a like amount from the lot inclosed and improved by him. The city in any event has an alley full eighteen feet in width and at approximately the place called for by the plat. Were this simply an attempt on plaintiff’s part to claim part of the alley, and there had been no estoppel in the ease, a different result might be looked for. As it is, there is little doubt in our minds that the decree should have been in plaintiff’s favor, and it is so ordered.
The decree will be reversed and the cause remanded