109 Wash. 503 | Wash. | 1920
— The plaintiff Elvira B. Samples, and others, as executrixes and executors of the last -will and testament of Daniel Samples, deceased, and in their own right, commenced this action in the superior
On June 3,1893, James Galloway and Alice Galloway were the owners, each, of an undivided one-half interest in a tract of land consisting of approximately five acres, being nearly but not quite rectangular in form, bordering upon the easterly shore of Lake Union, in Seattle. On that day they divided the land between themselves, James Galloway taking the south half and Alice G-alloway taking the north half, each executing and delivering to the other a deed of conveyance accordingly, wherein the portion taken by each was so described. Immediately upon the making of these mutual conveyances, they built a substantial picket fence upon an east and west line, which they then agreed to be the correct dividing line between their respective halves of the land. Ever since that time James G-alloway and his successors in interest, of whom respondents are the last, have been in the open, visible and exclusive possession, adverse to all the world, of all of the land here in controversy lying south of the line of the fence built by the Galloways to establish the dividing line upon the ground between their respective tracts. It may be that in the building of the fence the G-alloways did not succeed in placing it upon an east and west line so as to divide the land into two equal halves with exactness, but if not, the
There is at present a fence along or near the line in controversy, which is claimed by appellants to be a wholly different fence from the one constructed by
In April, 1918, appellants caused to be surveyed and platted into lots and blocks what they claim to be the land acquired by them by mesne conveyances from Alice Galloway as the north half of the tract originally owned by the Galloways, and an exact survey of which, as claimed by them, shows their line to be some two feet south of the present fence, which line, they claim, is the one upon which the original Galloway fence was placed and up to which the possession of respondents
The trial court found, in substance, that the present fence, whether it be a reconstruction or repair of the original Galloway fence, is in fact upon the line of the original location of that fence. The evidence is not free from conflict upon this question, but a careful reading of all the evidence convinces us that it clearly preponderates in support of such finding. Some nine or ten years ago, one of the predecessors in interest of respondents built a substantial dwelling house upon the land now owned by respondents. This house has a basement with walls of solid concrete of a very permanent character, the north wall of which, as we think the evidence shows, is four feet south of the line of the original Galloway fence, which fence, at the time of the construction of the house and basement, was in existence and upon the line of its original location. The north wall of this basement, we think the evidence clearly preponderates in'showing, was located four feet south of the line of the Galloway fence, in accordance with actual measurements then made on the ground.
Contention is made that the trial judge erred in treating information acquired by him upon his view of the premises and the disputed line as evidence independent of the testimony heard by him upon the trial, to a greater extent than he was warranted in doing. We think he was not so unduly influenced, in view of the testimony and other evidence given at the trial, and that he regarded such information in no different light, in connection with the evidence admitted on the trial, than he was warranted in doing, under our decisions in Seattle & Montana R. Co. v. Roeder, 30 Wash. 244, 70 Pac. 498, 94 Am. St. 864; Aldredge v. Oregon-Wash. R. & Nav. Co., 79 Wash. 349, 140 Pac. 550, and Elston v. McGlauflin, 79 Wash. 355, 140 Pac. 396, Ann. Cas. 1916A 255. Without pursuing this inquiry any further, however, we think that, in any event, the evidence given upon the trial compels the conclusion that it clearly preponderates in support of the court’s finding as to the location of the Galloway fence, independent of the judge’s view of the premises.
Some contention is made rested upon 947-949, Rem. Code, relating to the restoration of lost or uncertain boundaries, and our decision in Snell v. Stelling, 83 Wash. 248, 145 Pac. 466, that this case should have been decided upon the theory that it involved only the restoration of a lost or uncertain boundary, and therefore determinable alone by a survey of the exact theoretical line between the north and south half of the original Galloway five-acre tract. This contention, we think, is wholly untenable, in view of the fact that respondents’ rights rest, in their last
Some contention is made that the judgment of the trial court is not sufficiently certain in its terms in determining the location of the line dividing the appellants’ and respondents’ properties. The judgment touching that question, in so far as it refers to the north line of respondents ’ land, reads as follows:
“It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court, that a fence running east and west practically parallel with and four feet north of the basement wall of defendants’ house, and being on the northerly line of the following described premises situated in the county of King and state of Washington:
“Beginning at a point where the easterly line of Minor avenue north intersects the north line of what is known as the J. Galloway tract, thence easterly 120 feet along the said north line of said Galloway tract; . . . is now located upon the line of an old picket fence constructed in the year 1893 by James Galloway and Alice Galloway, his wife, as a division fence between their respective premises.”
It seems to us that, in view of the permanency of respondents’ house and its concrete basement wall as a monument, the judgment is sufficiently certain in fixing the location of the line between the two ownerships. It is plain that the fine is determined to be an east and west line and that it is four feet north of the foundation of respondents’ house. The recital in the judgment that it is practically parallel with the north line of the basement wall, we think, is of no consequence except as a recognition of the possibility of the north basement wall not running exactly east and west. The decree, we think, clearly means that the property line runs east and west and is four feet north of the most
We are quite convinced that the judgment of the trial court must be affirmed.
It is so ordered.
Holcomb, cC. J., Mackintosh, Main, and Mitchell, JJ., concur.