148 Iowa 695 | Iowa | 1910
I. The controversy in the main case between the parties involves the question whether thej street in front of plaintiff’s property has a width of one hundred feet, or only eighty feet. The following diagram shows the platting of the original town of Gravity, together with the property of the plaintiff lying to the north .thereof.
The principal occasion of the controversy is that large shade trees are growing on the disputed strip, which are in close proximity to plaintiff’s residence. The proposed improvement of the street, by bringing it to grade and
II. The second branch of the case involves a dispute over a- four-foot strip of ground lying along the south side of the park, indicated on the diagram. One of the former owners of plaintiff’s land dedicated the park to the town by appropriate description of metes and bounds. The town took possession of such park, and fenced and improved it, and this was done more .than twenty years ago. Some mistake, however, appears to have been made as to its true location. The tract actually taken by the town was of the proper dimensions, but it' lay as a whole four feet farther north than the description indicated in the deed of gift. The result was that the town included in its park a strip of ground along its north side four feet wide, which had not been conveyed to it by its grantor, and that it left to its grantor a strip four feet wide along its south line, which had been conveyed. This discrepancy was discovered many years ago, and seems to have been acquiesced in by both parties, and each has exercised' undisputed dominion over the respective strips in his actual possession. The trial court adjudged each to be the owner of the strip so possessed by him, and required that each relinquish to the other by proper quitclaim deed, so as to give to each a paper title conformable to his possession. We think the evidence warranted the decree in this respect.
Affirmed on both appeals.