Aрpellees Donald Wanha and Lee Wanha own property abutting the property of appellants, Robert Long and Jolane K. Olander Long. The Wanhas brought a quiet title action against the Longs, claiming adverse possession of a portion of the Longs’ property, and the Wanhas prevailed. The Longs assert that the trial court erred in finding that the Wanhas adversely possessed the disputed property and that the Wanhas’ alleged *852 adverse possession conflicts with Neb. Rev. Stat. § 14-116 (Reissuе 1997), which regulates subdividing and platting. We conclude that the trial court did not err in finding that the Wanhas had adversely possessed the disputed property and that § 14-116 does not apply to the instant case. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
1. Ownership of Lots 104 and 105 and Description of Disputed Property
The Wanhas purchased Lot 105, in Mockingbird Heights Replat, a subdivision in Douglas County, Nebraska, in 1965 and have owned Lot 105 continuously since. On December 27, 1977, Jolane Olander Long purchased Lot 104 in Mockingbird Heights Replat, which lot abuts the Wanhas’ lot on the west. Aftеr their marriage, Robert Long moved into the house on Lot 104 in 1980 to five with Jolane Olander Long, but he did not acquire an interest in Lot 104 until February 15,1996. Lot 104’s chain of title from 1964 until Jolane Olander Long purchased it in 1977 is as follows: 1964 to 1966, Pacesetter Corporation; 1966 to 1968, Robert and Marie Yochim; 1968 to 1973, Victor and Catherine Brown; 1973 to 1975, Richard and Maureen Shannon; 1975 to 1977, Billy and Anita Holman.
Orchard Avenue runs along the north side of the lots, which are bounded on the south by other lots. The disputed property is a wedge-shaped piece of land bounded on the east by the true, platted boundary line between Lots 104 and 105. The west boundary of the disputed property, the “disputed property fine,” runs north from the south post of a fence which was removed in 1996 to a seam in the sidewalk running along Orchard Avenue.
2. History of Disputed Property
When the Wanhas moved into the home on Lot 105, the lot contained no sod and no sidewalk along Orchard Avenue. However, Lot 104 had sod and a sidewalk alongside Orchard Avenue, both of which stopped short of Lot 104’s eastern boundary. Instead, the sod and edge of the sidewalk paralleled the disputed property line. The Wanhas later built a sidewalk along Orchard Avenue, which extended from the edge of the existing sidewalk on Lot 104 to the northeast comer of Lot 105. *853 The Wanhas also seeded Lot 105 and that portion of Lot 104 up to the western edge of the disputed property. They seeded the disputed property believing that it was part of Lot 105.
Sometime between 1973 and 1974, the Shannons, then owners of Lot 104, built a fence between Lots 104 and 105. The fеnce ran along the disputed property line from the southern property line of Lot 104 to a point east of the back of the house on Lot 104. The Shannons did not discuss the fence with the Wanhas before installing it. The Wanhas believed that the fence was located on the property line between Lots 104 and 105. The subsequent owners of Lot 104, the Holmans, did not object to the location of the fence, and the Wanhas never discussed the fence with them either. Likewise, Jolane Olander Long never discussed the fence with the Wanhas, nor did she register any concern regarding the fence’s location. The fence was not modified in any way until it was removed by Robert Long in 1996.
3. Origins of Dispute
In the summer of 1996, Robert Long began constructing a deck behind his house on Lot 104. During the construction of the deck, he removed the fence built by the Shannons. The edge of the deck abutted the former fence line. When he started building the deck, he did not have a permit. A city inspector inspected the deck prior to its completion and tоld Robert Long that the deck needed to be set back 5 feet from the edge of the Longs’ property line. Robert Long asked Donald Wanha whether he would approve a waiver of the 5-foot setback requirement. After asking Donald Wanha to approve a waiver, Robert Long had the property surveyed. Neither the Longs nor the Wanhas knew the location of the platted boundary line until after the survey was taken.
According to Donald Wanha, he first discovered the location of thе platted boundary line in the summer of 1996 when he discovered survey flags in the area of the disputed property. Prior to that time, he had always believed that the seam in the sidewalk and the sod line, later the fence line, determined the boundaries between the lots. Robert Long did not know the location of the platted boundary until the survey was taken, but *854 assumed that the true boundary lay “somewhere between the houses.”
After the survey was taken, the Longs and the Wanhas began contesting ownership of the disputed property.
4. Use of Disputed Property
According to Robert Long, Donald Wanha had told him that Donald Wanha cut the grass “about in the middle until the fence was put up.” Robert Long had no other evidence as to the use of the disputed property from 1965, when the Wanhas moved in, until 1980, when Robert Long moved in. Robert Long claims that he has mowed and trimmed the disputed property since 1980 and has talked to neighbors while standing on the disputed property. The Wanhas claimed that they used and maintained the disputed property from 1965 until 1996, when Robert Long took the fence down.
The owner of Lot 106 stated that the Wanhas had maintained the disputed property for 30 years, even prior to the installation of the fence by the Shannons. The owner of Lot 106 had never seen Robert Long maintain the disputed property prior to 1996, nor had he seen anyone other than the Wanhas do so. The owner of Lot 107 also stated that he was unaware of anyone other than the Wanhas being in possession of the disputed property during the 30 years he had owned Lоt 107.
5. Trial Court’s Findings
The trial court found that the Longs’ claims were not persuasive. The trial court noted that the Wanhas’ claims concerning the original sod line and sidewalk seam were uncontested. The trial court also noted that the fence had remained in place until Robert Long took it down, finding that until that time, the parties recognized the fence line as the true boundary line. Accordingly, the trial court concluded that from 1965 until 1996, the boundary line was the sod/fence line, and that the Wanhas had adversely possessed the disputed property.
The trial court rendered its judgment on April 16, 1997. The Longs then filed a motion for new trial on April 28, which was denied by the trial court on July 1. The Longs filed a notice of appeal on July 30, which resulted in the instant appeal.
*855 II.ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
The Longs assert that the district court erred in (1) finding that the Wanhas had met the requirements for adverse possession of the disputed property for the statutory period when the evidence showed the Wanhas’ possession was not actual, continuous, exclusive, notorious, or adverse under a claim of ownership for the full statutory 10-year period and (2) quieting title to the disputed property in the Wanhas, because such order conflicts with § 14-116, the prescribed statutory procedure affecting the plat of real estate.
III.SCOPE OF REVIEW
A jurisdictional question which does not involve a factual dispute is determined by an appellate court as a matter of law, which requires the appellate court to reach a conclusion independent from the lower court’s decision. It not only is within the power but it is the duty of an appellate court to determine whether it has jurisdiction over the matter before it.
State v. Parmar, ante
p. 356,
A quiet title action sounds in equity. In an appeal of an equitable action, an appellate court tries factual questions de novo on the record and reaches a conclusion independent of the findings of the trial court, provided, where credible evidence is in conflict on a material issue of fact, the appellate court considers and may give weight to the fact that the trial judge heard and observed the witnesses and accepted one version of the facts rather than another.
Rush Creek Land & Live Stock Co. v. Chain, ante
p. 347,
Interpretation of a statute presents a question of law.
State ex rel. Garvey
v.
County Bd. of Comm.,
IV.ANALYSIS
1. Jurisdiction
The Wanhas contend that this court is without jurisdiction to hear the instant appeal because the Longs failed to make a timely appeal. Specifically, the Wanhas argue that since the Longs’ motion for new trial was filed 12 days after the judgment was rendered, the 30-day period for filing the notice of appeal was not tоlled.
*856
In order to vest an appellate court with jurisdiction, the notice of appeal must be filed within 30 days of the entry of the final order or the overruling of a motion for new trial.
TriCounty Landfill
v.
Board of Cty. Comrs.,
In the instant case, the notice of appeal was filed within 30 days of the order overruling the motion for new trial. Thus, the question is whether the motion for new trial was timely filed such that it effectively tolled the time for perfection of the appeal.
Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-1143 (Reissue 1995) states: “The application for a new trial must be made, within ten days, either within or without the term, after the verdict, report or decision was rendered ...” Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-2221 (Reissue 1995) prescribes the methоd for computing the 10-day period:
[T]he period of time within which an act is to be done in any action or proceeding shall be computed by excluding the day of the act, event, or default after which the designated period of time begins to run. The last day of the period so computed shall be included unless it is a Saturday, a Sunday, or a day during which the offices of courts of record may be legally closed as provided in this section, in which event the period shall run until the end of the next day on which the office will be open.
See
Harsche
v.
Czyz,
In the instant case, the 10-day period ended on April 26, 1997, which was a Saturday. Accordingly, the motion for new trial could be timely filed on the following Monday, which was April 28. The Longs filed their motion for new trial on that date, *857 and thus, it was timely filed. Because their motion for new trial was timely filed, the time for perfection of their appeal was tolled, and their notice of appeal was likewise timely filed. Therefore, we conclude that this court has jurisdiction to hear the instant appeal.
2. Adverse Possession
The Longs argue that the Wanhas failed to establish the simultaneous and continuous existence of each element of adverse possession for the requisite period. See
Rush Creek Land & Live Stock Co.
v.
Chain, ante
p. 347,
(a) Actual
Actual occupancy or possession is always involved in any claim to land by adverse possession.
Thomas
v.
Flynn,
In the instant case, the land was residential in character. In 1965, the Wanhas constructed а sidewalk on and seeded the disputed property. The evidence indicated that from 1965 until 1975, no one other than the Wanhas used or maintained the property. This use and maintenance was not inconspicuous. It is not necessary that a party prove a complete enclosure or that he remain continuously on the land for the statutory period, but only that the land be used continuously for the purposes to which it was by its nature adapted.
Jones
v.
Schmidt,
We conclude that the Wanhas actually and сontinuously possessed the disputed property for a period of at least 10 years.
*858 (b) Exclusive
Possession must be exclusive, and if the occupier shared possession with the title owner, the occupier may not obtain title by adverse possession.
Dugan v. Jensen,
In the instant case, the evidence indicates that the Wanhas were the only persons to use the disputed property in any way from 1965 to 1975. At best, the Longs would have begun using the property in 1978. Prior to that time, there is no evidence that anyone other than the Wanhas used the property.
We conclude that the Wanhas’ possession was continuously exclusive for a period of at least 10 years.
(c) Notorious
The acts of dominion over land allegedly adversely possessed must, to be effective against the true owner, be so oрen, notorious, and hostile as to put an ordinarily prudent person on notice of the fact that the lands are in the adverse possession of another.
Gustin
v.
Scheele,
In the instant case, it is clear that the Wanhas’ use was not inconspicious. See,
Pettis
v.
Lozier,
We conclude that the Wanhas’ possession was continuously notorious for a period of at least 10 years.
(d) Adverse Under Claim of Ownership
A possession that is adverse is under a claim of ownership. Henry H. Foster,
Nebraska Law of Adverse Possession,
11 Neb. L. Bull. 378 (1933). Claim of ownership or claim of right means “hostile,” and these terms describe the same element of adverse possession.
Berglund v. Sisler,
Title may be acquired by adverse possession though the claim of ownership was invalid and the occupant believed he was asserting legal rights only.
Erickson
v.
Crosby,
In the instant case, the evidence clearly indicates that the Wanhas believed that the disputed property was theirs, and treated it as such, from 1965 until the present.
The Longs argue that the Wanhas’ possession of the disputed property was permissive, and thus, not hostile. Permissive use of property can never ripen into title by adverse possеssion unless there is a change in the nature of possession brought to the attention of the owner in some plain and unequivocal manner that the person in possession is claiming adversely thereby.
McCaslin v. Meysenburg,
The Longs also argue that the trial court erred in relying on evidence concerning the Shannons’ fence in determining that the Wanhas had adversely possessed the property. The Longs contend that there was no evidence as to whether the Shannons constructed the fence as a boundary line, and thus, that the parties did not consider it as such.
In
Thornburg
v.
Haecker,
*861
Thus, the law is clear that the placement of a fence within one’s boundary line does not lead to the relinquishment of ownership of lands outside the fence through adverse possession without an additional showing that those lands outside the fence have beеn used
by the neighboring landowner under a claim of ownership
for the requisite period of time.
Gustin
v.
Scheele,
We conclude that the trial court did not err in relying on evidence concerning the fence in finding that the Wanhas adversely possessed the disputed property. Moreover, we conclude that the Wanhas’ possession was continuously adverse and under a claim of right for a period of at least 10 years.
(e) Continuous
Title cannot be acquired without the simultaneous and continuous existence of each element of adverse possession for the required period.
Dugan
v.
Jensen,
Based on our de novo review, and giving due weight to the trial court’s findings, we find that the Wanhas established their adverse possession of the disputed property by a preponderance of the evidence, and we conclude that the trial court did not err in so finding.
*862 3. Platted and Subdivided Land and § 14-116
The Longs argue that platted and subdivided land within a municipality cannot be adversely possessed. They also allege that the Wanhas’ adverse possession altered the boundary lines of a platted lot within the city limits of Omaha and thus conflicts with § 14-116.
(a) Platted and Subdivided Land
The law has long been that an individual cannot adversely possess a public way. See, e.g.,
Teter
v.
Teter,
In
Schock,
the trial court sustained a demurrer to the plaintiff’s petition. The petition had alleged that the plaintiff’s land had been previously surveyed, platted, and laid out into lots, blocks, streets, and alleys. The grantors of plaintiff had enclosed and cultivated part of the platted land, including a section platted as a street, which had never been opened or prepared for public use. More than 10 years after the street had been enclosed and allegedly adversely possessed, the city of Falls City threatened to remove the plaintiff’s fences and open the street to public use. This court stated, “If the allegations in the petition are true, the plaintiff has been in possession of the land in controversy adversely for a sufficient length of time to give him title by adverse possession.”
Id.
at 605,
In
Roberts
v
Duddles, 47
Mich. App. 601,
(b)§ 14-116
Section 14-116 states in part:
No owner of any real estate located in an area which is within three miles of the corporаte limits of any city of the metropolitan class, when such real estate is located in any county in which a city of the metropolitan class is located, and is outside of any organized city or village, shall be permitted to subdivide, plat, or lay out said real estate in building lots and streets or other portions of the same intended to be dedicated for public use or for the use of the purchasers or owners of lots fronting thereon or adjacent thereto without first having obtained the approval thereof by the city council of such city and no plat of such real estate shall be recorded in the office of the register of deeds or have any force or effect unless the same shall have been first approved by the city council of such city.
(Emphasis supplied.) The Longs contend that the Wanhas’ adverse possession constituted an attempt to “ ‘subdivide, plat, or lay out. . . real estate . . . without first having obtained the approval thereof by the City Council [of Omaha].’ ” Brief for appellants at 23. Accordingly, thеy assert that the Wanhas should have sought the city council’s approval prior to bringing the instant action for adverse possession and that the Wanhas’ failure to do so was fatal.
The Longs admitted that the disputed property lies within the Omaha city limits. According to its plain language, § 14-116 does not govern the subdivision of property within an organized city or village. Rather, that section governs property outside of any organized city or village. Thus, the statute does not apply to the disputed property in the instant case.
Even if the property were located within 3 miles of the city limits, § 14-116 would not apply.
*864 [I]t is . . . thoroughly established that the title of the adverse possessor is not derived from anything in the nature of a transfer or grant by operation of law from the former title holder. The title of the adverse possessor is independent and “relates back” to the very beginning of such possession. . . . His own possession is the source of his title.
(Emphasis supplied.) Henry H. Foster,
Nebraska Law of Adverse Possession,
11 Neb. L. Bull. 378, 380 (1933). See, also,
Ziemba
v.
Zeller,
It is likewise true that an adverse possessor need not make any such application prior to the running of the period of limitations. By its own language, § 14-116 applies only to the subdivision of property by its owner. Until the period of limitations has run, the adverse possessor does not own the property that is being adversely possessed. The actual owner may bring an action to quiet his or her title at any time before the period has elapsed, rendering any application of § 14-116 a nullity.
Therefore, § 14-116 has no application to the doctrine of adverse possession and is not in conflict with it.
V. CONCLUSION
We conclude that the Wanhas adversely possessed the disputed property and that § 14-116 does not apply to claims of adverse possession. Therefore, we affirm the district court’s decision in all regards.
Affirmed.
