38 Kan. 14 | Kan. | 1887
Lead Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action in the nature of ejectment, brought by H. F. Sheldon against Robert Atkinson, for the possession of a strip of land in Ottawa, thirty-six feet wide north and south, and about six hundred feet long east and west. Both parties claim title from the same common source, one R. D. Lathrop. The several pieces of land in
The ti’ial was had before the court without a jury. No request was made for a finding of the facts specifically. As the court made a general finding only, and as the finding of the court was favorable to Atkinson for the strip of land inclosep in “the little red” and the “little blue pieces,” we must assume that all the controverted facts as to this strip were found and established in favor of Atkinson and against Sheldon. (Knaggs v. Mastin, 9 Kas. 532.) Again, a general finding in favor of Atkinson for the strip of land in “the little red” and “the little blue pieces,” embraces all the facts necessary to constitute his claim thereto, if there was sufficient evidence in support of the same. (Bixby v. Bailey, 11 Kas. 359; Hobson v. Ogden, 16 id. 388.)
In viewr of the general finding of the trial court, it appears that although Wilson and Burt did not execute any deed to “the little red piece” to Atkinson until late in 1868, or early in 1869, his purchase, or his agreement to purchase, under which he took possession and claimed to be the owner thereof,
Many of the courts hold that a parol agreement between two proprietors of adjoining lauds to employ a surveyor to run the dividing line between them, which agreement is executed and payment had accordingly for a long period of time, but short of that prescribed by the statute of limitations, is binding and conclusive on the parties and those claiming under them. (Finley v. Funk, 35 Kas. 668; Turner v. Baker, 64 Mo. 218; Brown v. Edson, 23 Vt. 435; Boyd v. Graves, 4 Wheat. [17 U. S.] 512.) The authorities that do not go to the extent of this rule generally agree that if a division line is marked out and acquiesced in by joining proprietors for a period equal to the statute of limitations, it is thereby conclusively established. (Kip v. Norton, 12 Wend. 127; 27 Am. Dec. 120; 27 Am. Rep. 230.)
In a review of cases of the voluntary adjustment of boundaries between contiguous estates, Judge Cooley says “the parties have only by their agreement and contract determined the limits of their respective ownerships.”
Redfield, J., in Beecher v. Parmele, 9 Vt. 352, said:
“If an entire lot be owned by different proprietors, who are in possession of separate parcels of the lot, and a divisional line is acquiesced in for fifteen years, it is thereby established. If no line of division be in fact drawn, but the parties acquiesced in an imaginary line of division, this is the same as if the line had been marked by visible monuments.”
The claim is made, however, on the part of Sheldon, that the agreement between Jenness and Atkinson was merely as to the establishment of a corner, but nothing was said about any boundary, and that no line was fixed westward from the corner established. The fact that Jenness requested Atkinson to agree with him upon a comer between their lands, as he wanted to build a fence; the actual meeting of the parties, and the establishment of a corner by them; the driving of a hard-wood stake to identify and mark the corner; the construction of a fence in the fall of 1868, extending from where
Again, it is urged that there was no dispute or contention between Atkinson and Jenness at the time of the establishment of the corner between their lands, and it is said that their agreement as to the corner and the marking of the same with a stake goes for naught, notwithstanding the long acquiescence in the corner and division line by all the parties interested. The evidence clearly shows that prior to the time of the establishment of the corner by Atkinson and Jenness, the boundary line between their lands was not known, ascertained, or settled; it was not marked by stakes, monuments, or in any other way. The true line of division between their pieces of
It is further claimed that, admitting there was a valid agreement between Atkinson and Jenness fixing the corner and boundary line between their lands more than fifteen years ago, the agreement, although valid as between them, is not binding on Sheldon. The construction of the fence upon the boundary line west of the corner established by Atkinson and Jenness is evidence that at the time the parties understood where the corner and boundary line were established, and acted upon that knowledge. All persons purchasing after the establishment of the corner, and after Atkinson had taken actual possession of the premises in dispute, had notice of his title thereto. When Sheldon purchased, Atkinson had actual, open, visible, notorious, exclusive and adverse possession of the strip now claimed by him. (Gilmore v. Norton, 10 Kas. 491; Giles v. Ortman, 11 id. 59; Johnson v. Clark, 18 id. 164; School District v. Taylor, 19 id. 292; Tucker v. Vandermark, 21 id. 263.)
In the case of Winn v. Abeles, 35 Kas. 85, there was no agreement as to the actual corners or boundary line, and no hostile and adverse possession; therefore that case is notin conflict with this decision.
We have referred only incidentally to the strip of land on the south end of “ the little white piece,” because, as we understand the judgment, that strip was recovered by Sheldon.
The judgment of the district court will be affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting: This was an action in the nature of ejectment, brought by H. F. Sheldon against Robert Atkinson, for the recovery of a strip of land in the city of Ottawa, thirty-six feet wide north and south, and six hundred feet long east and west. The court below gave to Sheldon the west two hundred feet of this strip, and to Atkinson the east four hundred feet; and the only controversy in this court is with respect to this four hundred feet.
It is admitted that the land in controversy belongs to Sheldon, unless it has been transferred to Atkinson by some statute of limitations, or by a gift from Sheldon, or from some one or more of the previous owners. It is not claimed that Atkinson ever purchased the property from any person, or that he ever paid anything for it, or that he has any deed for it, or that he has any claim to it by virtue of any written instrument. The supposed transfer of the property by virtue of some statute of limitations, or by a gift, is based upon the following facts: this action was commenced on May 31,1884. During the fifteen years preceding this date, Atkinson was absent from the state about nine months; hence if any statute of limitations has transferred the title to the property from Sheldon, or from him and his grantors to Atkinson, such statute must have commenced to run about the 31st of August, 1868. The supposed gift occurred in April or May, 1868. The facts upon which it is claimed that the statute of limitations was put in operation and the gift consummated, are substantially as follows: In April, 1868, and prior thereto, Richard Jenness owned the land in controversy, together with other land adjoining. He owned, in all, a piece of land 400
Afterward, and sometime in the spring of 1869, Atkinson had the land in controversy, or a portion thereof, plowed, and in the spring of 1870 planted a hedge-row along the south line of the land in controversy. Everything, however, occurring with respect to this land after Jenness sold and conveyed the land to Mrs. Hedrick is of but little importance, for Atkinson claims solely under a parol gift claimed to have been made in April or May, 1868, and by virtue of a statute of limitations, which if of any value at all must have commenced to run about August 31, 1868, or sooner. At the time when Atkinson and Jenness made their measurement and drove the stake there was no dispute with reference to any boundary line, nor did any dispute arise about boundary lines until in the spring of 1884, when a survey of the land was made and the true boundary lines ascertained. It was then for the first time ascertained that Atkinson occupied land which he had never purchased, and which he did not own, unless he obtained the same by virtue of the aforesaid statute of limitations, or by a gift. There is no room for any claim in this case that the aforesaid measurement of a portion of the east line of Jenness’s land and the driving of the stake where they did was a settlement or compromise of any dispute concerning boundary lines, for no such dispute existed. Besides, nothing was said at the time with reference to how any line should be extended from such stake, whether east, west, north or south, or in some other direction, nor with reference to how far it should be extended, whether ten feet, a hundred feet, four
It is true that when Sheldon purchased the land, on March