2 N.W.2d 121 | Minn. | 1942
Pelican Lake is a meandered body of water covering about 1,200 acres of land and extending into 13 governmental sections. *540 The water in the lake has risen and fallen with the years. In seasons of normal rainfall it has risen and covered the lake bottom, and in dry seasons it has receded at times to such an extent as to leave large bodies of relicted land between the meander line and low-water mark. The tract here involved consists of about 80 acres and is almost entirely located in the west half of the southeast quarter of section 7, township 120, range 24. For convenience, we shall refer to it as the disputed tract. It is designated as such on the plat here shown. *541
[EDITORS' NOTE: MAP IS ELECTRONICALLY NON-TRANSFERRABLE.] *542
Defendant is the owner of government lots 1 and 2 in section 7 and of the relicted land lying between these lots and the water's edge. The line between the disputed tract and defendant's land, including the relicted land, is not in dispute. It is shown on the plat between the points A and B.
Plaintiffs are the owners as tenants in common of the northwest quarter of the northeast quarter of section 18, township 120, range 24. This tract, which consists of government lot 1 in section 18, and about 16.83 acres of relicted land lying north and east of the meander line, adjoins the disputed tract on the south. The line between these tracts is shown on the plat between the points A and C.
The trial court found:
"That the south 25 rods of said disputed land has been relicted land continuously for forty-four years immediately prior to the commencement of this action, during all of which time the defendant has been in the actual, open, continuous and exclusive possession thereof under a claim of right to the ownership to the fee thereof and hostile to all adverse claims thereto; and that defendant has been in the actual, open, continuous and exclusive possession of the balance of the disputed land during all the time it has been relicted land under a claim of right to the ownership to the fee thereof and hostile to all adverse claims thereto.
"That on December 21, 1895, and for some time prior thereto, there was a wire fence extending easterly from the southwest corner of the disputed land (which point is at meander corner number 21) a distance of 1,096.5 feet along the south boundary line of the disputed land to the southeast corner of disputed land and thence north along the east boundary line of disputed land a distance of 665 feet and there terminating, which fence then was a part of defendant's father's cattle pasture fence; that ever since December 21, 1895, defendant has maintained said fence keeping it in a state of good repair and using it as a part of his cattle pasture fence; that as Pelican Lake receded the north end of this fence was extended in a northeasterly direction so as to enclose *543 the land thus relicted; and that since the commencement of this action the part of said fence thus extended northeasterly has been straightened so that at the time of the trial it was on the east boundary line of the disputed land.
"That for more than 30 years immediately prior to the spring of 1939 plaintiffs and their predecessors in ownership of the so-called NW 1/4 of NE 1/4 of Section 18, which lies south of and next to the disputed land, have successively recognized and acquiesced in the line along the said wire fence extending easterly from said meander corner number 21, a distance of 1,096.5 feet to the southeast corner of the disputed land as a boundary line between said NW 1/4 of NE 1/4 and the lands owned by defendant."
The court concluded "that defendant is the owner in fee simple of the disputed land and entitled to judgment determining that he is the owner in fee thereof."
The appeal presents these questions: (1) May title to relicted land be acquired by adverse possession; and (2) if so, has defendant established such title by adverse possession?
This court has repeatedly held that owners of land bordering on the shore of a meandered nonnavigable lake own the bed of the lake in severalty. 1 Dunnell, Dig. Supp. § 1070; Lamprey v. State,
By stipulation in open court, any dispute as to the correct boundary division was eliminated from the issues, and the sole *544 question became one of ownership, it being agreed that the correct boundary line is either A-B or A-C. (See plat.)
1. We have found no Minnesota case on the point, but we have no doubt that title to relicted lands may be acquired by adverse possession. In Markusen v. Mortensen,
Cases cited by plaintiffs in support of their contention that riparian rights belong exclusively to the owner of the originally granted land and cannot be severed therefrom are not in point. A riparian owner has no more exclusive right to relicted property than he has to any other property he might own, and if title may be divested by adverse possession in the one case it may in the other. The case of Lamprey v. State,supra, is not authority to the contrary. It merely stated a rule to the effect that the state could not cut off riparian rights of an abutting owner by asserting its *545 sovereign dominion over relictions. That rule was designed to protect a riparian owner's fundamental right of access to the water, and reasons supporting it can have no application in a case of this character.
2. The evidence clearly establishes that defendant acquired title by adverse possession. He has lived on the farm all his life, and he testified that the south 30 rods of the disputed land was relicted land during the time his father owned the farm and that it was enclosed with other lands and used by his father as a pasture at the time defendant acquired title to the farm. During the 44 years defendant has owned the farm he has at all times considered himself the owner of the disputed land, and at the trial he testified to the following acts of ownership: Cutting trees and burning them, removing rocks, disking and sowing clover on the land, authorizing others to cut and take willows for their own use, selling trees growing on the property, and renting to plaintiffs his pasture, which included the disputed land. A number of other persons testified to the effect that they had always considered defendant to be the owner, had asked permission to cut willows on the land, and had never seen the water of the lake come closer than 25 or 30 rods from the south boundary, the fence.
On cross-examination defendant stated that he did not intend, under the deed from his father, to take any land that did not belong to him. The point is made that this testimony shows that he did not intend to hold adversely, and that therefore the element of hostility necessary to make out title by adverse possession is lacking. It may be said in answer to this that it is not necessary for a disseizor to avow himself to be a wrongdoer. If he enters into possession of property under an honest belief that such property belongs to him and occupies it as his own with the intention to exclude others, he holds adversely. If such possession is continued the sufficient length of time, it will ripen into title, regardless of the good faith or bad faith of the disseizor. Carpenter v. Coles,
Defendant's title to the 25-rod tract carries with it the right to all accretions and relictions attaching thereto. Having title in fee to the land bordering on the water, he necessarily acquires the riparian rights incident to such ownership. The statute of limitations in its application to such accretions or relictions relates back to the time it began to run in favor of the adverse possessor. Bellefontaine Imp. Co. v. Niedringhaus,
Since defendant has title by adverse possession, we deem it unnecessary to consider whether there was an establishment of a boundary by practical location. The circumstances seem to justify the trial court's finding in this respect.
Order affirmed. *547