48 Wash. 431 | Wash. | 1908
In the year 1883, appellant established a home upon certain lands abutting the shores of Smith’s Cove, in
In November, 1905, appellant, apparently without consideration and in trust, executed a quitclaim deed to a portion of these premises to one Czerney, who subsequently executed a quitclaim deed for the same to one Thompson for the benefit of all of- these respondents. On the 26th of July, 1906, appellant and wife signed an instrument, also signed by Herbert S. Conner, wherein and whereby the latter assumed to let and lease unto appellant and wife a portion of the lands involved in this litigation. It is urged by respondents that the purpose of this lease and this quitclaim deed was to show a waiver by appellant of any' claim to the premises covered by said instruments, and to quiet the title in respondents. Appellant claims that said lease was obtained from him by misrepresentation and fraud, that the deed was likewise obtained, and that he was incompetent to transact business when said instruments were executed, and did not realize or understand their purpose and effect. Respondents claim that $25 was paid to Czerney for the quitclaim deed which he executed. The latter disputes this. The trial court found in favor of respondents upon all the material issues, and entered a decree quieting title to the premises in them. From this decree the present appeal is prosecuted.
Appellant does not claim to, have entered the premises under color of title, but maintains that his entry was under a claim of right. He testified that he believed, at the time he entered the land, that it was government land and subject to
Appellant denies positively that he ever agreed to pay any rent, or that he ever did pay any rent, or that he was a tenant of Dr. Smith, and says that the eggs were delivered to Dr. Smith and family merely as a neighborly courtesy, and especially as a return of courtesy on the part of the doctor’s family in sending him berries, fish, etc. Appellant was at this time living in a building left upon the premises by persons who had theretofore been “logging off” the timber. The little evidence shown by the record as to paying rent is indefinite and does not indicate whether it was for the premises or for the use of the building, it appearing that there were several buildings or shacks upon the land and that considerable bartering, buying, selling, and leasing of these took place between Smith, plaintiff, and various other persons without much or any reference to the ownership of the land upon which the buildings stood. Whatever may have heen the fact as to the rent or as to appellant’s possession being permissive on the part of Dr. Smith, it is evident, that appellant’s occupancy of the land soon after became hostile to the claim of Dr. Smith, and adverse and exclusive as to him and every
While an entry upon the land of another, under the supposition and belief that it is government land and that the party entering may hold the same as such, may not of itself constitute an entry under claim of right, yet where such an entry is made in good faith, and the entryman upon discovering his mistake proceeds to openly and notoriously hold the same adversely and in hostility to the title of the actual owner or claimant, we think this constitutes an adverse holding and disseizin under a claim of right as understood in this state. Moore v. Brownfield, 7 Wash. 23, 34 Pac. 199; Flint v. Long, 12 Wash. 342, 41 Pac. 49; Bowers v. Ledgerwood, 25 Wash. 14, 64 Pac. 936; Messer v. Siepmann, 35 Wash. 14, 76 Pac. 295; Mather v. Walsh, 107 Mo. 121, 17 S. W. 755; Francoeur v. Newhouse, 43 Fed. 236; 1 Cyc. 1028.
The evidence shows by a clear preponderance that appellant held actual, uninterrupted, and notorious possession of a portion of these premises adversely to everybody for a period of ten years, after he learned of Dr. Smith’s claim, and after he had decided to hold adversely thereto, and prior to the date of the quitclaim deed to Czemey. It is urged that he paid no taxes. The nonpayment of taxes, while evidence against
It next becomes necessary to ascertain the amount of the respondents’ land to which appellant thus established adverse possession, or rather to ascertain whether or not of such respondents’ lands he obtained title to any other than those covered by the Conner lease and Czerney quitclaim deed. We think the evidence fails to show that he did. In this action he is claiming between thirty and forty acres of land, but we do not think that the "evidence establishes an adverse claim to, and holding of, all this or any portion of respondents’ lands other than those covered by the Conner lease and Czerney deed. Of course, it is not necessary for a person claiming a certain tract of land adversely to prove that he has actually occupied, used, improved, or inclosed all of said tract. But it must appear that he openly and notoriously claimed the entire tract and that his possession, use, or improvement of a portion thereof was intended to hold, not merely that particular portion, but the whole of the entire tract. We do not think
The trial court apparently entertained the view that the validity of the deed to Czerney could not be questioned in this action, for the reason that Czerney was not made a party to this action. Attorneys for appellant seem not to have seriously questioned this view. .After appellant had put in all of his evidence and rested his case, and after respondents had introduced a portion of their evidence, the attorneys for appellant asked to file a complaint in intervention on the part of the said Czerney, under which it would have been possible to go into all questions affecting the validity of the said quitclaim deeds. The trial court denied this application upon the ground that it came too late. The writer of this opinion thinks it might have been well to have granted this application, but the majority of the court feel that the trial court acted well within its discretion and committed no error. We are therefore confined to the evidence now before us. Upon the evidence touching the question of fraud, misrepresentation, and incompetency of appellant to make such lease and deed, the trial court found' against appellant. There was much conflict in this evidence. Remembering that written instruments should be set aside for fraud or mistake only where the evidence is clear and convincing, and bearing in mind that the trial judge had the advantage of seeing and hearing the witnesses upon the stand, we are not justified from this record in setting aside his conclusion.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.
Hadley, C. J., Rudkin, and Dunbak, JJ., concur.
Mount and Ckow, JJ., concur in the result.