Morley v. Murphy

Gaynor, C. J.

1. Boundaries : acquiescence: conflicting governmental lines. Plaintiff claims to he the owner of the east % and the defendant claims to be the owner of the west % of the NE14 of the SW% of Section 30, Township 84, Range 45, Monona County, Iowa. The controversy here involves the dividing line north and south between these two fractional parts of this forty. Hereafter, for convenience, we will call plaintiff’s land the. east 15 acres, and the defendant’s land, the west 25 acres.

Plaintiff’s father, and grantor, obtained title to this east 15 acres from C. A. McWilliams, in the fall of 1896, and moved on in .the spring of 1897, and he and his grantees have been in possession ever since. One Joseph P. Smith was the owner of the west 25 acres, and in 1896, sold it to defendant’s grantor, Mary Murphy. Smith had owned and occupied this land for 18 years prior to the sale to Mary Murphy, and the defendant and his grantors, ever since. There is no controversy between these parties as to the ownership of the fractional parts hereinbefore described. The only question now between them is as to the dividing line that separates these tracts. To divide them, there must be a line of demarcation. The line in dispute is shown in the following plat:

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one claimed by the plaintiff. The east line is where the line should be to give to each one the quantum of land called for by his deed. The plaintiff brings this action, and claims that the west line appearing upon the plat is the one that should be recognized as the dividing line, for the reason that, on this line, a fence was built more than 30 years ago, and that the fence was recognized and acquiesced in by both parties as the line dividing these two fractional parts of this forty. The plaintiff does not bottom his case on adverse possession, and apparently admits that, if the line is established at the fence, he gets more than 15 acres, and the defendant less than 25 acres. To separate or segregate *856any portion of land upon the surface of the earth from other lands requires a line of some sort to mark the point of separation. This is the purpose in establishing government corners and lines. Any portion of land may be separated by metes and bounds designated and pointed out. It may be separated by lines established and acquiesced in by adjoining owners for the statutory period. Within the lines so established the segregated land must be found. Defendant’s land is between the east and* west and north and south lines of his property. The plaintiff’s land is also between the north and south, east and west lines- of his property. It comes to us to settle the location of the east line of defendant’s property and the west line of plaintiff’s property, the line common to both. This line being found, it becomes the dividing line between the property. The defendant can claim only within his lines to this line on the east, and the plaintiff, only within his lines to this line on the west.

Our statute, Section 4228 of the Code of 1897, provides that, when one or more owners of land, the corners and boundaries of which are in'dispute, desire to have the same established, they may bring an action in the district court of the county where such disputed corners or boundaries, or part thereof, are situated, again'st the owners of the other tracts which may be affected. In such proceeding, either party may, by proper plea, put in issue the fact that certain boundaries or corners are the true ones, or that such have been recognized and acquiesced in by the parties or their grantors for a period of 10 consecutive years.'

Code Section 4238 provides that, if that issue is presented, the commissioners shall take testimony as to whether the boundaries and corners alleged to have been recognized and acquiesced in for 10 years or more have in fact been recognized and acquiesced in, and Code Section 4236 says:

“If it is found that the boundaries and corners alleged to have been recognized and acquiesced in for ten years *857have been so recognized and acquiesced in, such recognized boundaries and corners shall be permanently established.

It is apparent that this statute touching corners and boundaries acquiesced in, deals with a situation that may arise, in which, by reason of acquiescence, one party, or the other may be given more or less than he would be entitled to under a strict recognition of the original boundary lines as established by the government.

2. boundaries : presumptions: governmental It may be conceded that the government survey originally fixed corners and lines and ” boundaries by which the government divisions so created were recognized and known, and it may be conceded that one who buys according to government survey is entitled to- all the land within the limits of the boundaries fixed by the government, whether this be inore or less, in fact, than a strict measurement according to government subdivisions would give. Thus, if one buys the northwest quarter of a section, he is entitled to the possession of all the land within the boundaries of the original survey, as fixed by the government, whether it contains more or less than 100 acres. So it is Avith each of the government subdivisions. This would be his right under a deed describing land according to government survey.

It is' apparent, however, that, under this statute, .the right to claim the land Avithin the limits of the government survey is invested in the purchaser. This right he may surrender or lose by his OAvn conduct. If he acquiesces, for the statutory period, in a line dividing his land from others, different from the line of the government, he thereby creates for himself and against himself a line other and different from that which the government created, and he is bound by it, eA^en though it in fact gives him less land than hq would be entitled to if he had insisted upon his right to hold to the line fixed by the government. 'The statute so provides. Boundaries of land were originally fixed by the *858government survey. It is presumed that people bought according to the government survey. It is according to the government survey that the land originally passed from the government. The purchaser has the right to the lines and boundaries fixed by the government, if he so insists. It is also true that adjoining owners have a right to fix their lines and boundaries for themselves, and, when so fixed and acquiesced in for the statutory period, they become their lines and boundaries, without regard to where the lines and boundaries were originally placed by the government. Tf a controversy should afterwards arise between the parties touching the true line, of course the government line would, in the first place, control, nothing further appearing. But if the court finds that the parties have settled for themselves the lines and corners, and have acquiesced in them for the statutory period, the court leaves them where it finds them, and leaves the line at the point -so shown to have been established by acquiescence. We say this much to show the policy of the state as expressed in its legislative enactments.

3' "ErZoiPossession1’: effect.*16: . There is no government line involved ÍD ^ie *n question, as can be plainly seen irom tile character of the subdivision of this forty. In the conveyances made, the forty has been described according to the government description.' The plaintiff bought the east % the defendant, the west %. The court, being called upon to divide this land, would follow an accurate survey of the land, nothing further appearing, by which each party would be given the fractional part owned by him, and a line between them established accordingly. But here it is claimed that the parties themselves have fixed the line that divides these fractions; that they have fixed it by acquiescence for such a length of time that each party, as against the other, is now estopped to claim the line to be at a place other and *859different from. where it has existed for the statutory period of time. We are not concerned as to how this line was established, whether by mistake as to where the true line is, or where the true line should be, or as to whether it was done designedly by the plaintiff’s grantors. Of course, under the rule in Grube v. Wells, 34 Iowa 148, and kindred cases, it is clear that, if the plaintiff had taken possession of this 15 acres, intending only to claim up to the true dividing line between his land and the land on the west, and had by mistake taken possession beyond the true line, intending only to hold to the true line, his possession would not be adverse, for the reason that, to make it adverse, his claim of right must be as broad as his possession. Where one takes possession, of land, intending only to claim to the true line, but, by mistake as to where the true line is, occupies beyond the true line, his; possession does not become adverse, for the reason that he is not claiming a right to possess beyond, the true . line. We have no occasion, however, to deal with the law of adverse possession in this ' case. The plaintiff has not invoked it to sustain his right. The district court found that the fence had been built and maintained and acquiesced in as the line dividing these two fractional parts of this forty for more than the statutory period; that it had been acquiesced in by the owners on either side of the fence; and that, under the rule of acquiescence, it became and is the true boundary line between these parties. As we have frequently said, one cannot acquiesce in a line created by himself and bind another party to such acquiescence, even though he. act in good faith and believe it to be the true .line, Acquiescence must he by both parties, to.make a line by acquiescence. This involves notice or knowledge of the claim of the other party., It is apparent, therefore, that, to make a line by acquiescence, it must appear that the party on the other side of the line acquiesced in the line as made. It involves the idea that *860the other party knew of the line as established, knew of the possession taken, and qssented thereto. This may be shown by his conduct, by his words or by his silence.

We have examined the evidence submitted in this record, in which the court found that the line alleged to be in dispute had been recognized and acquiesced in by the parties for more than the statutory period. We find that the judgment of the court, based upon the evidence, has ample support. The evidence establishes the following factsr

That Louis A. Morley bought the east three eighths in 1896, bought it from C. A. McWilliams, and moved on the land in March, 1897; that he and his grantees have been in possession ever since; that, when Morley moved on the land, a division fence was there, such as is shown on the plat hereinbefore set out; that, at this time, Joseph Smith and Mrs. Smith owned and occupied the land to the west; that the fence had been on there for some years before Morley took possession; that On neither side had any question been raised as to its being on the trué line; that both parties farmed and cultivated up to the fence on either side; that the fence remained there as the dividing line until the spring of 1915, when the defendant undertook for the first time to remove it; that Smith continued to own the west 25 acres until he sold it to' Murphy in 1906; that on the north end of this fence the land on either side was cultivated up to the fence. The land along the south end of the fence was in pasture. Smith had it fenced in and used the southern part as a pasture, using the fence in controversy as his east fence. The south half of the 15 acres was also fenced in, using the fence .in question as the wést fence of the pasture. North of this, both on the 15 acres and the 25 acres, the land was cultivated up to the fence. The fence has been in the same location, as is shown upon this plat, even since 1896. This is shown by the positive testimony of living witnesses, and not disputed. There is a strong *861suggestion in the evidence that it had been there for several years before 1896.

In Miller v. Mills County, 111 Iowa 654, at 659, Judge Ladd, speaking for the court, said:

“Reference is had to the government survey as pointing out the lines by which the lands described in the patents passed from the government, and by which they are ordinarily transferred by deeds. But if the coterminous owners have adopted another line as their division line, and have occupied up to it and recognized it as such for a period of 10 years, there appears to be. no reason for not regarding it as the true boundary line, notwithstanding it is not that fixed by the government survey,” citing authority. '

“There was no express agreement between the parties to this case, or their grantors, that the fence be regarded as marking the boundary between their respective tracts of land, but the circumstances are such that an agreement-ought to be implied. For more than 18 years they have occupied up to and acquiesced in the division fence, and maintained it as the true boundary line between them. They adopted it by their unmistakable acts, which, in any other transaction, would have all the force of implied contracts. * * * The authorities quite generally hold that, in the absence of controlling circumstances, acquiescence in a division line, assumed or established, accompanied by actual occupancy by the adjoining owners in' accordance therewith for a period equal to that prescribed in the statute of limitations within which an entry may be barred, is conclusive evidence of such 'an agreement. The rule will be found perspicuously stated in Sneed v. Osborn, 25 Calif. 626. ‘The acts of the parties might not amount to an agreement between them to locate the tract as surveyed, and it is unnecessary to consider them in that view; but do they not show an acquiescence by the parties in those lines between the two tracts of land? If they do show such acquies*862cence, it will make no difference in the result that they acted in ignorance or under a mistake as. to the- true line. * * * Authorities are abundant to the point that when owners of adjoining lands' have acquiesced for a considerable time in the location of a division line between their lands, although it may not be the true line according to the calls of their deeds, they are thereafter precluded from saying it is not the true line.’ ”

The opinion then proceeds:

“The great current of authority sustains our conclusion that, in the absence of other controlling circumstances, the inference is conclusive that the division line between adjoining tracts, definitely marked by the erection and maintenance of a fence or other monuments, recognized by the owners as such, and up to which they have occupied and cultivated the land on either side more than ten years, * * * is the true boundary between them.”

This Miller case has been cited with approval and followed ever since, and controls the rights of the parties here. See Laughlin v. Francis, 129 Iowa 62; Klinkner v. Schmidt, 114 Iowa 695, 699; Griffin v. Brown, 167 Iowa 599; Dwight v. City of Dos Moines, 174 Iowa 178; McGovern v. Heery, 159 Iowa 507.

On the whole record, we think the judgment of the court was right, and it is — Affirmed.

Ladd, Evans and Salinger, JJ., concur.