Defendants, Raymond L. Olson and Judy A. Olson, appeal from a decree entered by the District Court for Burt County, Nebraska, quieting title to an irregular tract located in Sections 14 and 15, Township 23 North, Range 11 East of the 6th P.M., in Burt County, Nebraska. Although William W. McAdams and his wife were originally made parties defendant to the action, they were voluntarily dismissed with prejudice by the plaintiff prior to trial, and are not appellants herein. In its decree the District Court found that the plaintiff, Clem R. Pokorski (herein after referred to as Pokorski), and his predecessors in title, had acquired legal title to the area in question by adverse possession for the statutory period of time. The District Court quieted title to the property in Pokorski, and further dismissed the Olsons’ counterclaim for damages. We reverse in part and affirm in part.
The irregular tract to which the court quieted title consisted of 50.37 acres. However, the dispute between the parties involved in this appeal only concerns a tract consisting of 36.39 acrеs between the designed channel and the high bank of the Missouri River (hereinafter referred to as River), located in Section 14. In order to understand the controversy, we have prepared a sketch of the area involved which, however, is only approximately correct and is used for illustrative purposes only.
While various formations, identified in the evidence as islands and sandbars, later appeared, the record is clear that the area was at least partially covered with water from the date of the installation of the dikes until the date of trial, March 1978. The use of the tract prior to the time of trial was recreational in nature, primarily for hunting and fishing purposes.
The evidence adduced at trial may bе summarized as follows. The Corps of Engineers, in an attempt to stabilize and channelize the River, arranged for the construction and installation of dikes 737.7 and 737.9, shown on the sketch referred to. As shown, dike 737.7 was connected to the high bank of the River in Section 14 on land owned by the Olsons’ predecessor in title, William W. McAdams (hereinafter referred to as McAdams). Dike 737.9 was connected to the high bank of the River at a point upstream from the land owned by Pokorski’s predecessor in title to Lot 12, Melvin Stillman (hereinafter referred to as Still-man). Lot 12 is an 8-acre tract located in Section 15, adjacent to McAdams’ land and extending approximately 380 feet along the high bank to the west of the dividing line between Sections 14 and 15. The dikes were cоmpleted in the fall of 1963, and thereafter, from that date until the date of trial, material was deposited by the River in
Stillman, who was the record owner of Lot 12 at the time of the installation of the dikes until August 19, 1974, testified that he had used the “island” to fish on since the time of its formation. However, he could not state exactly when this commenced. He further indicated that the “island” had been formed sometime between 1963 and 1965. His son-in-law, James Reno, whо was the record owner of Lot 12 and all accretions thereto from August 19, 1974, to December 20, 1974, testified that in 1963 he hunted on a sandbar formed at the end of dike 737.9, the upstream dike. He further testified that he hunted and fished in this area from that time until the time of trial. Pоkorski testified that he had hunted "in the area” in 1964, and from 1967 until the date of trial.
Sometime after 1964, Stillman commenced leasing Lot 12 to various persons to use as cabin and trailer house sites. He gave his tenants permission to hunt in the area between the dikes. We shall not repeat in detail the testimony of Pokorski’s other witnesses at the trial. Suffice it to say they testified they had hunted in the area from sometime after 1964 until the date of trial.
As previously stated, the trial court found generally for Pokorski and against the Olsons. Title to the tract was quieted in Pokorski, and a counterclaim for damages filed by the Olsons was dismissed. On appeal to this court, the Olsons assign as error that the findings of the trial court were contrary to the law and contrary to the evidеnce.
An action to quiet title to real estate is an equitable action and is tried de novo on appeal. § 25-1925, R. R. S. 1943; Neylon v. Parker,
Pokorski claims adverse possession of a tract which was partially covered with water. While we have held that title to an island in a stream which would normally belong to a riparian owner may be acquired by adverse possession, Burket v. Krimlofski,
Hоwever, an examination of the record convinces us that Pokorski has even failed to establish by evidence his claim of adverse possession to an “island.” In order to prove adverse possession, it is necessary that the claimant prove that the possession was actual, open, exclusive, and continuous for a period of 10 years. Barnes v. Milligan,
supra.
In 2A C. J. S., Adverse Possession, § 264, p. 21, the rule is stated: “A claimant of title by adverse possession must further show the extent of his possession, thе exact property which was the subject of the claim of ownership, that his entry covered the land up to the line of his claim, and that he occupied adversely a definite area sufficiently described to found a verdict upon the dеscription.” Also, in Harvat v. Clear Creek Drainage Dist.,
One further matter, however, must be commented upon. As previously stated, the District Court in its decree dismissed the counterclaim filed by the Olsons for damages to their commercial hunting operation. In their counterclaim they alleged that their commercial hunting business had been damaged due to the dispute over the tract and due to the proximity of Pоkorski’s blind to their operation. While they may not have been able to successfully operate a commercial blind on this land, such fact,
In view of what we have stated above, that part of the decree of the trial court quieting title to the tract in question in Pokorski must be reversed and title to the disputed 36.39 acres is ordered quieted in the Olsons and further, that part of the decree of the trial court dismissing the Olsons’ counterclaim for damages should be and hereby is sustained.
Affirmed in part, and in PART REVERSED.
