227 P. 1061 | Idaho | 1924
This is an action in ejectment commenced to recover possession of a certain tract of land and for damages. The cause was tried to the court without a jury upon the amended complaint of appellant, the answer and cross-complaint of respondents and appellant's answer to the cross-complaint. *502
In 1889, Frederick Schoeffler and Henry Wessels were the owners of adjoining lands. About that time the construction of a public road intersected these lands. The road cut off about three acres from one corner of Schoeffler's land and also a small tract from the Wessels land.
Evidently because it became more convenient on account of the construction of the road for Wessels to farm, in connection with his land, the three-acre tract cut by the road from the Schoeffler land, they agreed that Wessels should take said three-acre tract in exchange for a tract of about the same size and value of the land cut off by the road from the Wessels land. It is the three-acre tract, originally a part of the Wessels land, that is the subject of this action. Their agreement was oral and, while the evidence tends to show that they recognized that conveyances of land must be in writing, they postponed the making of deeds and Wessels and Schoeffler died without making them. Each of the original parties inclosed the strip, which he had "traded for," with his other land. Wessels cultivated the tract he got from Schoeffler until he died, and his successors have cultivated it ever since. Schoeffler cultivated the tract he got from Wessels as long as he lived, and his heirs have cultivated it ever since. For nearly thirty years Wessels and Schoeffler abided by their trade. In 1921, however, one August Meyer, appellant herein, the owner of the Wessels farm, without notice and without offering to trade back to the Schoefflers the land Schoeffler had traded to his predecessor, Wessels, went upon the three acres in controversy, while a crop of wheat was growing thereon, and built a fence on the original line of the tract. The Schoefflers promptly tore down Meyer's fence, and this action was commenced.
The Schoefflers, the respondents, base their title on adverse possession. The trial court found in their favor. From that decree this appeal is taken. Appellant assigns numerous errors on the part of the lower court, all of which relate to the alleged insufficiency of the evidence. *503
The evidence is amply sufficient to sustain the court's findings that the tract claimed by respondents had been both protected by a substantial inclosure and cultivated for approximately thirty years. But appellant insists that it appears from the evidence that respondents have not paid the taxes. To acquire title to land by adverse possession, it is necessary to comply with all the provisions of the statute relating thereto. C. S., sec. 6603, provides among other things:
"That in no case shall adverse possession be considered established under the provisions of any sections of this code unless it shall be shown that the land has been occupied and claimed for the period of five years continuously, and the party or persons, their predecessors and grantors, have paid all taxes, state, county or municipal, which have been levied and assessed upon such land according to law."
The three-acre tract was not separately assessed for taxes. It conclusively appears from the evidence that each of the three-acre tracts, during all the time after the trade, continued to be assessed to the owner of the legal subdivision from which each tract had been separated, by the road. Although Wessels traded the three acres in question to Schoeffler about 1889, the three acres continued to be assessed to Wessels and his successors, and Wessels and his successors paid all the taxes levied and assessed thereon. This fact, which was not only established by the evidence but was stipulated by the parties during the trial, is determinative of the action, and necessitates a reversal of the judgment. The payment of all state, county and municipal taxes levied and assessed upon land for a consecutive period of five years is an indispensable requirement of the statute to establish title by adverse possession. (C. S., sec. 6603.) Not having paid the taxes levied and assessed against the land respondents cannot establish title thereto upon a claim of adverse possession. And while there is no question here about cultivation and a substantial inclosure, no rule of law has been brought to our attention, and we know of none, which would justify a holding that the payment of taxes *504 levied and assessed upon the forty-acre tract belonging to Schoeffler would constitute a payment of the taxes levied and assessed upon the adjacent tract of three acres, when it was known to the parties that the additional three acres was included in another governmental subdivision.
Respondents rely upon the decision of this court inBayhouse v. Urquides,
Judgment reversed. Costs to appellant.
McCarthy, C.J., and William A. Lee, J., and Johnson, District Judge, concur. *505