Decisions of the Nebraska Court of Appeals
736 20 NEBRASKA APPELLATE REPORTS
were able to recommend placements opined that placement at
a treatment level group home was the most effective way to
address Skylar’s poor judgment and behavior. The evidence in
this case shows that a treatment level group home is in Skylar’s
best interests. Because a treatment level group home is a less
restrictive level of care consistent with Nebraska law and
Skylar’s needs, the trial court abused its discretion in order-
ing Skylar’s placement at YRTC. Accordingly, the order of the
juvenile court committing Skylar to YRTC is reversed and the
cause is remanded with directions for the court to order DHHS
to explore whether less restrictive placement settings are avail-
able for Skylar’s care, to include, but not be limited to, a treat-
ment level group home.
CONCLUSION
The trial court abused its discretion in committing Skylar to
YRTC when the evidence in the record proves that committing
Skylar to a less restrictive level of care was consistent with
Skylar’s best interests. Accordingly, we reverse the decision
of the trial court and remand the cause with directions for the
court to order DHHS to explore whether less restrictive place-
ment settings are available for Skylar’s care, to include, but not
be limited to, a treatment level group home.
R eversed and remanded with directions.
K endall B. Curry and Robin L. Curry, appellees, v.
Margaret Furby and Diane M. Schoch, appellants.
___ N.W.2d ___
Filed May 7, 2013. No. A-12-091.
1. Equity: Boundaries: Appeal and Error. An action to ascertain and permanently
establish corners and boundaries of land under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 34-301 (Cum.
Supp. 2012) is an equity action.
2. Equity: Appeal and Error. In an appeal of an equity action, an appellate court
tries factual questions de novo on the record and reaches a conclusion inde-
pendent 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.
Decisions of the Nebraska Court of Appeals
CURRY v. FURBY 737
Cite as 20 Neb. App. 736
3. Waters: Boundaries: Title. Title to riparian lands runs to the thread of the con-
tiguous stream.
4. Waters: Boundaries: Words and Phrases. The thread, or center, of a channel
is the line which would give the landowners on either side access to the water,
whatever its stage might be and particularly at its lowest flow.
5. Waters: Words and Phrases. The thread of a stream is that portion of a water-
way which would be the last to dry up.
6. Waters: Boundaries. Where the thread of a stream is the boundary between
estates and that stream has two channels, the thread of the main channel is the
boundary between the estates.
7. ____: ____. Where the thread of the main channel of a river is the boundary line
between two estates and it changes by the slow and natural processes of accretion
and reliction, the boundary follows the channel.
8. Waters: Words and Phrases. Avulsion is a sudden and perceptible loss or addi-
tion to land by the action of water, or a sudden change in the bed or course of
a stream.
9. ____: ____. Avulsion is a change in a stream that is violent and visible and arises
from a known cause, such as a freshet or a cut through which a new channel
has formed.
10. ____: ____. Accretion is the process of gradual and imperceptible addition of
solid material, called alluvion, thus extending the shoreline out by deposits made
by contiguous water; reliction is the gradual withdrawal of the water from the
land by the lowering of its surface level from any cause.
11. Waters: Boundaries. The changes wrought by accretion versus avulsion involve
markedly different processes, and each process has a different consequence for
the boundary between the landowners on opposite banks of the river.
12. Waters: Quiet Title: Proof. A party who seeks to have title in real estate quieted
in him on the ground that it is accretion to land to which he has title has the
burden of proving the accretion by a preponderance of the evidence.
13. Waters: Proof. The burden to show that the channel of a river changed by avul-
sion is the same as the burden to show that it changed by accretion.
14. Waters: Boundaries. When a river changes its main channel not by excavating,
passing over, and then filling the intervening place between the old channel and
the new channel, but by flowing around the intervening land where the change
to the new channel results from an increase year to year in the amount of water
flowing in the new channel, the law requires that the boundary line remain in
the old channel rather than move to the new channel as long as the old channel
remains a running stream.
15. ____: ____. The mean centerline of a river, determined by dividing the distance
between meander lines of the river, is an arbitrary location of the center of the
stream and is not a determination of the thread of the stream in this jurisdiction.
Appeal from the District Court for Nance County: Michael
J. Owens, Judge. Affirmed as modified.
Stephen R.W. Twiss, of Sampson, Curry & Twiss, P.C.,
for appellants.
Decisions of the Nebraska Court of Appeals
738 20 NEBRASKA APPELLATE REPORTS
Patrick J. Nelson, of Law Office of Patrick J. Nelson,
L.L.C., for appellees.
Inbody, Chief Judge, and Sievers and Moore, Judges.
Moore, Judge.
I. INTRODUCTION
Margaret Furby and Diane M. Schoch (collectively the
Furbys) appeal from an order of the district court for Nance
County, which found in favor of Kendall B. Curry and Robin
L. Curry in this boundary dispute action filed by the Currys
under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 34-301 (Cum. Supp. 2012). On appeal,
the Furbys assign error to the court’s determination of the loca-
tion of the boundary along the thread of the stream of the south
channel of the Loup River and its use of a metes and bounds
description of the thread of the stream. The court did not err
in finding that certain surveys are presumptive evidence of
the location of the thread of the stream or in finding that the
Furbys failed to present sufficient evidence to overcome the
presumption. We have modified the description of the bound-
ary between the parties’ properties as set forth herein, and
accordingly, we affirm as modified.
II. BACKGROUND
1. General Background and P leadings
The Currys, husband and wife, are the record owners of cer-
tain portions of government Lots 6, 7, and 8 and any accretions
thereto (the Curry property), located north of the Loup River in
Section 3, Township 16 North, Range 5 West of the 6th P.M.,
in Nance County, Nebraska. The Currys purchased the property
in 2002. The original government survey, dated February 21,
1876, of the portion of Section 3 north of the river shows that
the north meander line of the river ran along the southeast side
of the Curry property.
In 2002, Margaret conveyed a remainder interest in govern-
ment Lots 1 and 2 (the Furby property) in Section 3, Township
16 North, Range 5 West of the 6th P.M. in Nance County to
her son, Russel Furby. Margaret retained a life estate interest
in the property. In 2008, Russel conveyed his remainder inter-
est to his sister, Schoch. The original government survey of
Decisions of the Nebraska Court of Appeals
CURRY v. FURBY 739
Cite as 20 Neb. App. 736
the portion of Section 3 to the south of the Loup River shows
that at the time of the survey, dated June 30, 1873, Lots 1 and
2 were both located south of the river, with Lot 1 being north
of Lot 2. The south meander line of the river ran along the
northwest side of the Furby property.
The original government surveys in the record depict the
Loup River as flowing across Section 3 between the south
meander line and the north meander line with no platted
islands in between. The next available evidence in the record
depicting the river as it flows through Section 3 is found in
aerial photographs from 1937, which depict a north channel
and a south channel with an island in between. In other words,
over time, the river has moved southerly so that a significant
portion of Lot 2 is now located north of the thread of the
stream of the south channel of the river and a significant por-
tion of Lot 1 is located on the island. The parties dispute the
mechanism by which the river moved to the south and thus the
boundary between their properties.
In their operative complaint, the Currys claim that the river
moved southerly by the process of accretion and reliction.
The Currys asked the district court to establish the southwest
corner, the south boundary, and the southeast corner of their
property at the thread of the stream of the south channel of the
river, in other words, south of the island.
In their answers, the Furbys denied that the river moved by
virtue of accretion and reliction, alleged that the boundaries
and corners as set forth in the operative complaint were not the
true boundaries and corners of the Curry property, and alleged
that the north boundary of the Furby property remained north
of the island at the thread of the Loup River as measured from
the original meander lines established in the original govern-
ment surveys.
2. Trial Evidence
Trial was held before the district court on July 12 and 13,
2011. A significant amount of evidence was adduced, and we
summarize the relevant evidence below.
In 2002, prior to purchasing the Curry property, the Currys
commissioned a registered land surveyor, Thomas Tremel, to
Decisions of the Nebraska Court of Appeals
740 20 NEBRASKA APPELLATE REPORTS
conduct a survey of the property. In his 2002 survey, Tremel
depicted, among other things, two Loup River channels—a
“Loup River Dry Channel” on the north side of the island and
a “Loup River Main Channel” on the south side of the island.
Tremel also depicted the “Thread of the Stream” of the “Loup
River Main Channel.” A note on the survey states that the
banks of the Loup River and the thread of the stream were
“scaled from the Nebraska Department of Resources 1993 digi-
tal orthophotos.” Tremel’s 2002 survey contains the following
legal description of the southwest corner, south boundary, and
southeast corner of the Curry property:
[T]hence S 00°00ʹ12ʺ W, parallel with the East line of
said Section 3, approximately 1838 ft. to the thread of
the stream of the Loup River; thence Northeasterly on
the thread of the stream of said Loup River approxi-
mately 2042 ft. to the Southerly extension of the East
line of said Section 3; thence N 00°00ʹl2ʺ E, approxi-
mately 2494 ft. on the Southerly extension of the East
line and the East line of said Section 3 to the point of
beginning . . . .
After the Currys purchased the Curry property, Russel com-
missioned a surveyor, Leroy Gerrard, to survey the Furby
property in order to ascertain the boundaries of the Furby
property in relationship to the island. Gerrard’s retracement
survey, dated January 5, 2005, and revised on March 4, shows
the meander lines of the Loup River and the boundaries of
Lots 1 and 2 as originally platted in 1873 and their relation-
ship to the north and south channels of the river and the island
as they existed in 2005. It shows that the north channel was
dry in 2005, that the retraced Lot 1 overlaps a portion of the
island, and that the retraced Lot 2 overlaps both a portion of
the south channel and a small portion of the island. On the
survey, Gerrard stated:
The exterior lines of government Lots One (1) and Two
(2) in Section Three (3), Township Sixteen (16) North,
Range Five (5) West of the 6th P.M., Nance County,
Nebraska have been surveyed and monumented as said
exterior lines are delineated on the original government
survey dated June 30, 1873. All surveyed lines lying
Decisions of the Nebraska Court of Appeals
CURRY v. FURBY 741
Cite as 20 Neb. App. 736
in the Loup River or on the island in the Loup River
are for historical reference only and do not define nor
imply ownership.
On February 23, 2007, Tremel prepared a composite draw-
ing of his own 2002 survey and Gerrard’s 2005 survey, over-
laid onto a 2003 aerial photograph, which depicts the positions
of the two tracts surveyed by Gerrard and Tremel relative to
each other and to the physical geographic features depicted in
the photograph.
Tremel testified at trial that he found no evidence of avul-
sion during his work relating to his 2002 survey. One of the
things he did in reaching such a determination was walk down
the dry north channel and examine “how the swales config-
ured [both] the [north and south] banks of the river.” Tremel
testified that he did not observe any evidence of an avulsive
event. He testified that in his experience, the best evidence of
avulsion is where there is a direct channel cut through the land
outside of the original riverbed, leaving behind a definable dry
bed in the old channel, which he did not observe here. He did
not believe an avulsive event occurred, based upon his obser-
vation of the terrain near the south channel, which revealed
low-lying vegetation to the north of the south channel and no
vegetation to the south. Tremel did not review any historic
flood or flow records in connection with his surveys, but he
did review aerial photographs of the area from 1937, 1938,
and 1950.
Tremel was asked about Lot 1, which was on the south
side of the river as originally platted and appears north of the
thread of the stream of the south channel in Tremel’s com-
posite drawing. Tremel testified that in his opinion, Lot 1 had
been washed away by the action of the Loup River and did
not exist any more. Tremel based that opinion in part on his
review of a 1938 photograph, which he testified “shows all
that land gone.” Tremel further opined that the land depicted in
his survey from the north bank of the river down to the thread
of the stream of the south channel was accretion to Lots 6, 7,
and 8.
In the latter part of 2010, at the request of the Currys’
attorney, Tremel did further surveying work and revised his
Decisions of the Nebraska Court of Appeals
742 20 NEBRASKA APPELLATE REPORTS
2002 survey to reflect additional points along the north and
south banks of the south channel of the Loup River. Both the
2002 and 2010 surveys note that the banks of the river and the
thread of the stream were scaled from 1993 aerial photographs.
Tremel indicated that although he had walked in and physically
observed the area, he did not physically measure the banks of
the river; rather, he derived measurements from “orthophotos.”
In his 2002 survey, Tremel split the difference between the
banks of the south channel to mathematically scale the thread
of the stream. He testified that he labeled the “‘thread of the
stream’” on his 2002 survey for “descriptive purposes,” but
testified that this was not necessarily the true line of the thread
of the stream at that time.
In connection with his additional survey work, on
September 29 and November 22, 2010, Tremel again physi-
cally observed the Loup River to determine the approximate
location of the thread of the stream. From an airboat, Tremel
made observations of the amount of water flowing in the
south channel, the depth of the water, and where the greatest
volume of water was at the relevant location. Tremel then
prepared a survey overlaid onto a 2006 aerial photograph,
placing thereon the boundaries of the tract he surveyed as
well as the approximate location of the thread of the stream,
based on his observations. We note that the line on the over-
lay showing the approximate thread of the stream based
on Tremel’s observations falls generally to the south of the
scaled-in thread-of-the-stream line depicted on his 2002 and
revised 2010 surveys. As to both surveys, Tremel testified
that he filed them per Neb. Rev. Stat. § 81-8,122.01 (Reissue
2008) and that they contained the minimum data required by
the statute.
The record also contains photographs taken by Kendall of
the Loup River at the relevant location in 2010. The photo-
graphs taken by Kendall depict the water in the south channel
and the amount and type of vegetation on the island and in the
north channel.
Russel first observed the Loup River at the relevant loca-
tion in about 1973, when he was 7 or 8 years old. There was
water flowing in both channels at that time, and the south
Decisions of the Nebraska Court of Appeals
CURRY v. FURBY 743
Cite as 20 Neb. App. 736
channel was too deep to cross on foot. Since 1973, Russel has
observed the water in the Loup River to flow in one channel
or the other or both channels, switching its flow and which
channel appeared to be the main channel on numerous occa-
sions. Russel did not recall the island’s ever washing away.
Russel last observed water flowing in the north channel in
1992 while hunting off the west end of the island. According
to Russel, the south channel was dry at that time and the flow
of water in the north channel was quite fast. Russel described
an ice jam and flooding in the spring of 1993 that plugged
the north channel with sand and left the south channel as the
deepest channel. Every time Russel has observed the north
channel since 1993, it has been dry. By 2008 or 2009, when
he last observed the north channel, there was a lot of under-
brush and other vegetation growing in it. Schoch’s husband
testified about his observations of the river’s flow around
the island since about 1988, which were consistent with
Russel’s observations.
M. Stanley Dart, an emeritus associate professor of geog-
raphy for the University of Nebraska at Kearney, testified
on behalf of the Currys. His principal areas of teaching were
in physical geography and geology. Through his education,
training, and work, Dart had become knowledgeable about
rivers, and he had focused at times on “fluvial geomorphol-
ogy,” which he described as the “processes that rivers undergo
as they f1ow, and the various types of rivers.” Dart testi-
fied at length regarding the characteristics and history of the
Loup River.
According to Dart, the Loup River, like the Platte River
also in Nebraska, is a braided stream characterized by a large
sediment load composed mostly of sand or small particles.
The river tends to be rather shallow and oftentimes quite wide,
with very low banks and broad expanses. In a braided stream
such as the Loup River, where there is a bend in the river, the
bank on the outside curve of the bend will tend to erode and
the bank on the inside curve of the bend will tend to accumu-
late sediment deposits. In other words, there is more likelihood
of accretions’ being added to the land on the shore on the
inside of a curve.
Decisions of the Nebraska Court of Appeals
744 20 NEBRASKA APPELLATE REPORTS
In his work as a college instructor, Dart made extensive
use of aerial photographs to demonstrate a range of geo-
graphic phenomena. At the request of the Currys’ attorney, Dart
reviewed and analyzed numerous historical aerial photographs
of the land in dispute in this case. After thoroughly reviewing
and analyzing each of the aerial photographs contained in an
exhibit comprising many such photographs from 1937 to 2010,
Dart marked the island in dispute on each photograph and
offered a number of opinions about the evolution of the Loup
River based upon his review.
According to Dart, the Loup River changed as expected over
the 73 years between the first aerial photographs in 1937 to the
last aerial photograph in 2010. Dart testified that the river “is
eroding, it is depositing, it is moving sediment, it does so regu-
larly and consistently, and to a degree in a predictable pattern.”
Dart observed that the main channel of the Loup River as it
passes the island in dispute was on the south side of the island
until about 1980. Between 1980 and 1993, the main channel
of the Loup River as it passed the island varied back and forth
from the north side of the island to the south side of the island.
In 1993, and consistently thereafter, the main channel of the
Loup River had been in the south channel, on the south side
of the island. Dart’s review of the photographs showed that the
island had existed in the river since at least 1937. Dart noted
that in 1937, the island had significant mature vegetation,
indicating that the island had “been there a sufficient period of
time to become stabilized.” On cross-examination, Dart admit-
ted that he did not know what might have changed the course
of the Loup River between the original government survey and
1937. He agreed that the island could have been formed by
either erosion or avulsion, but he testified that the island might
also have been the result of deposition of material in the chan-
nel of the stream.
3. Judgment and Posttrial
P roceedings
The district court entered an order on October 14, 2011,
finding in favor of the Currys and establishing the south
boundary of their property along the thread of the stream of
Decisions of the Nebraska Court of Appeals
CURRY v. FURBY 745
Cite as 20 Neb. App. 736
the Loup River to the south of the island. The court found
that both the 2002 and 2010 Tremel surveys met all of the
foundational requirements of § 81-8,122.01 and were thus
presumptive evidence of the facts stated therein, specifically
the location of the thread of the stream. The court found that
the evidence adduced by the Furbys was not sufficient to over-
come the statutory presumption. While the court noted prior
appellate decisions acknowledging the difficulty of an accu-
rate determination of the location of the thread of a stream, it
accepted Tremel’s conclusion as to the location of the thread
of the stream.
The district court discussed the Furbys’ argument that the
formation of the south channel of the river sometime between
1873 and 1937 and the changes to the flow of the river fol-
lowing the massive ice jam in the spring of 1993 support a
finding that the boundary line remains north of the island
at the thread of the stream between the originally surveyed
meander lines. In rejecting this argument, the court relied on
Dart’s testimony. Specifically, the court noted Dart’s opinion
that the island in question was in existence prior to 1937. The
court noted Dart’s testimony that the south channel existed
prior to 1937 and was clearly the main channel of the river
at that time, and it found this testimony to be compelling.
Accordingly, the court found that the Furbys’ contention that
the thread of the stream was in the north channel was not sup-
ported by the evidence.
The district court discussed the Furbys’ contention that the
1993 ice jam was an avulsive event which changed the main
channel of the Loup River from the north channel to the south
channel. In rejecting this contention, the court relied on photo-
graphic evidence presented by the Currys regarding the flow of
the river prior to 1993 and found that the thread of the stream
was on the south side of the island prior to 1937. The court
also found that the Furbys failed to present sufficient evidence
in support of what it termed the “‘flowing around intervening
land mass’ rule” set forth in State v. Ecklund, 147 Neb. 508, 23
N.W.2d 782 (1946), which we discuss in greater detail in the
analysis section below.
Decisions of the Nebraska Court of Appeals
746 20 NEBRASKA APPELLATE REPORTS
The district court found in favor of the Currys and set the
south boundary of their property at “the thread of the stream
of the Loup River as depicted and described in [Tremel’s
2002 survey] and [the certified copy of Tremel’s 2010 sur-
vey].” The court then set forth a legal description of the
thread of the stream as “set forth in [the Currys’] opera-
tive complaint.”
The Currys filed a timely motion to alter or amend the
judgment, alleging that the legal description of the thread of
the stream contained in the district court’s order was taken
from their original complaint, filed in October 2009, and
not from their amended complaint, filed in January 2011, as
the court intended. The Currys asked the court to revise the
legal description in its order to correspond to the descrip-
tion contained in the actual operative complaint. Following
a hearing, the court entered an amended order, finding that
the south boundary of the Curry property was the thread of
the stream of the Loup River “as depicted and described in
Exhibit 76.” Exhibit 76 is an overlay of Tremel’s 2010 sur-
vey on a 2006 aerial photograph. The legal description of the
south boundary set forth in the amended order corresponds
to that found in the Currys’ actual operative complaint,
as follows:
Commencing at the Northeast corner of Section 3,
Township 16 North, Range 5 West of the 6th Principal
Meridian, Nance County, Nebraska, and assuming the
East line of said Section 3 as bearing S 00°00ʹ12ʺ W,
and all bearings contained herein are relative thereto;
thence S 00°00ʹ12ʺ W, on the East line of said Section
3, a distance of 1,530.55 feet; thence S 84°24ʹ26ʺ W, a
distance of 48.19 feet; thence S 31°25ʹ56ʺ W, a distance
of 280.42 feet; thence S 56°33ʹ59ʺ W, a distance of
105.07 feet; thence S 77°25ʹ57ʺ W, a distance of 61.98
feet; thence S 42°44ʹ21ʺ W, a distance of 455.66 feet;
thence S 71°17ʹ58ʺ W, a distance of 474.63 feet; thence
S 60°49ʹ25ʺ W, a distance of 127.80 feet; thence S
81°51ʹ29ʺ W, a distance of 466.72 feet; thence S 72°02ʹ22ʺ
W, a distance of 589.03 feet; thence S 39°22ʹ42ʺ E, a dis-
tance of 506.61 feet; thence S 52°40ʹ51ʺ E, a distance of
Decisions of the Nebraska Court of Appeals
CURRY v. FURBY 747
Cite as 20 Neb. App. 736
111.75 feet; thence S 00°00ʹ12ʺ W, parallel with the East
line of said Section 3, if extended southerly, a distance of
2,331 feet, more or less, to a point on the thread of the
stream of a channel of the Loup River, which point is the
actual point of beginning; thence Northeasterly, on the
thread of the stream of such channel of the Loup River,
a distance of 2,322 feet (direct measure), more or less,
to a point on the East line of said Section 3, if extended
southerly, such point being located 4,024.55 feet, more
or less, South of the Northeast corner of said Section 3,
which point is the point of termination (said boundary
line being hereinafter referred to as “Plaintiffs’ South
Boundary Line”)[.]
The Furbys subsequently perfected their appeal to this court.
III. ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
The Furbys assert, as combined and summarized, that
the district court erred (1) in determining that the boundary
between the parties’ properties is at the thread of the stream in
the south channel of the Loup River rather than at the thread
as measured from the original meander lines established in the
original government surveys and (2) in establishing a precise
legal description of the thread of the stream using a metes and
bounds description.
IV. STANDARD OF REVIEW
[1,2] An action to ascertain and permanently establish cor-
ners and boundaries of land under § 34-301 is an equity action.
Anderson v. Cumpston, 258 Neb. 891, 606 N.W.2d 817 (2000);
Oppliger v. Vineyard, 19 Neb. App. 172, 803 N.W.2d 786
(2011). In an appeal of an equity action, an appellate court tries
factual questions de novo on the record and reaches a conclu-
sion 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. Prime
Home Care v. Pathways to Compassion, 283 Neb. 77, 809
N.W.2d 751 (2012).
Decisions of the Nebraska Court of Appeals
748 20 NEBRASKA APPELLATE REPORTS
V. ANALYSIS
1. Water Law P rinciples
Before addressing the Furbys’ assignments of error, we first
set forth some basic principles of water law.
[3-7] Title to riparian lands runs to the thread of the contig
uous stream. Obermiller v. Baasch, 284 Neb. 542, 823 N.W.2d
162 (2012). The thread, or center, of a channel is the line which
would give the landowners on either side access to the water,
whatever its stage might be and particularly at its lowest flow.
Id. The thread of a stream is that portion of a waterway which
would be the last to dry up. Id. Where the thread of a stream
is the boundary between estates and that stream has two chan-
nels, the thread of the main channel is the boundary between
the estates. Oppliger v. Vineyard, supra. Where the thread
of the main channel of a river is the boundary line between
two estates and it changes by the slow and natural processes
of accretion and reliction, the boundary follows the channel.
Anderson v. Cumpston, supra.
[8-11] Avulsion is a sudden and perceptible loss or addition
to land by the action of water, or a sudden change in the bed
or course of a stream. Id. Avulsion is a change in a stream that
is violent and visible and arises from a known cause, such as
a freshet or a cut through which a new channel has formed.
See Conkey v. Knudsen, 141 Neb. 517, 4 N.W.2d 290 (1942),
vacated on other grounds 143 Neb. 5, 8 N.W.2d 538 (1943).
On the other hand, accretion is the process of gradual and
imperceptible addition of solid material, called alluvion, thus
extending the shoreline out by deposits made by contiguous
water; reliction is the gradual withdrawal of the water from
the land by the lowering of its surface level from any cause.
Monument Farms, Inc. v. Daggett, 2 Neb. App. 988, 520
N.W.2d 556 (1994). The changes wrought by accretion ver-
sus avulsion involve markedly different processes, and each
process has a different consequence for the boundary between
the landowners on opposite banks of the river. Oppliger v.
Vineyard, supra.
[12,13] A party who seeks to have title in real estate quieted
in him on the ground that it is accretion to land to which he
Decisions of the Nebraska Court of Appeals
CURRY v. FURBY 749
Cite as 20 Neb. App. 736
has title has the burden of proving the accretion by a prepon-
derance of the evidence. State v. Matzen, 197 Neb. 592, 250
N.W.2d 232 (1977). In Oppliger v. Vineyard, 19 Neb. App.
172, 803 N.W.2d 786 (2011), this court stated that the burden
to show that the channel of the river changed by avulsion obvi-
ously would be the same.
2. Application of Statutory
P resumption
The Furbys first argue that the Currys did not sustain their
burden of proving that the thread of the stream changed by the
process of accretion, such that the thread of the stream is now
located in the south channel of the river. However, the district
court did not find that the Currys proved the change in the
thread of the river by accretion; rather, the court found that
the 2002 and 2010 Tremel surveys are presumptive evidence
of the location of the thread of the stream. The court relied on
§ 81-8,122.01 in accepting Tremel’s conclusion as to the loca-
tion of the thread of the stream.
Section 81-8,122.01 provides:
Whenever a survey has been executed by a land
surveyor, registered under the provisions of sections
81-8,108 to 81-8,127, a record of such survey bearing the
signature and seal of the land surveyor shall be filed in
the survey record repository established pursuant to sec-
tion 84-412 if such survey meets applicable regulations. .
. . The record of survey shall be filed within ninety days
after the completion of the survey . . . and shall consist
of the following minimum data: (1) Plat of the tract
surveyed; (2) legal description of the tract surveyed;
(3) description of all corners found; (4) description of
all corners set; (5) ties to any section corners, quarter
corners, or quarter-quarter corners found or set; (6) plat
or record distances as well as field measurements; and
(7) date of completion of survey. The record of survey
so filed shall become an official record of survey, and
shall be presumptive evidence of the facts stated therein,
unless the land surveyor filing the survey shall be inter-
ested in the same.
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750 20 NEBRASKA APPELLATE REPORTS
Because Tremel’s 2002 and 2010 surveys met all of the foun-
dational requirements of § 81-8,122.01, the district court found
them to be presumptive evidence of the facts stated therein,
specifically as to the location of the thread of the stream.
We agree based on our de novo review of the record
that Tremel’s surveys meet the foundational requirements of
§ 81-8,122.01. Tremel testified that he executed the surveys
when he was a registered land surveyor, that a record of each
survey bearing his signature and seal was filed in the survey
record repository within 90 days after the survey’s completion,
and that both surveys contained the minimum data required by
statute. Specifically, he testified that both surveys contained a
plat and legal description of the tract surveyed; a description
of all corners found and all corners set; ties to any section,
quarter, or quarter-quarter corners found or set; a plat or record
of distances as well as field measurements; and the date of the
survey’s completion. He also testified that he had no personal
interest in the land shown in the surveys. Thus, the surveys
are presumptive evidence of the facts stated therein, including
the fact that the thread was located in the south channel at the
time of the surveys, and the district court did not err in apply-
ing the statutory presumption. As such, it was unnecessary for
the Currys to establish that the thread of the stream changed
through the process of accretion.
3. Did Furbys Overcome
Statutory P resumption?
We next turn to the question of whether the Furbys over-
came the statutory presumption.
The Furbys argue that the boundary line remains as estab-
lished in the original government surveys; in other words, in
the north channel. In support of establishing the boundary in
the north channel, the Furbys assert that there was either suf-
ficient evidence to show that the thread of the stream changed
through avulsion or evidence of other processes recognized
in the exception found in State v. Ecklund, 147 Neb. 508, 23
N.W.2d 782 (1946).
The district court concluded that the evidence adduced by
the Furbys was not sufficient to overcome the presumption
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CURRY v. FURBY 751
Cite as 20 Neb. App. 736
established by the statute, specifically finding that they failed
to establish avulsion or their arguments with respect to the
exception found in State v. Ecklund, supra.
4. Did Furbys P resent Sufficient
Evidence of Avulsion or
Other Exception?
The Furbys contend that there have been two substantial
changes in the flow of the Loup River in the pertinent area.
They allege that the first change occurred between 1873 and
1937 and formed what is now the south channel and that the
second change occurred as a result of the ice jam in the spring
of 1993.
(a) Change Between 1873 and 1937
The original government surveys depict the Loup River as
flowing across Section 3 between the south and north meander
lines with no platted islands in between. The next available
evidence in the record is found in aerial photographs from
1937 which depict a north channel and a south channel with
an island in between. Testimony from Dart established that
the south channel was the main channel of the river in 1937.
The Furbys contend that the vegetation shown on the original
government surveys suggests that the south channel could have
been formed between 1873 and 1937 by water rushing through
a high water channel in an avulsive event; however, there is
nothing in the record to affirmatively show that this in fact
occurred. Although Dart agreed this theory was a possibility,
he testified that he did not know what caused the south channel
to form during this period of time and that it was also possible
it could have formed slowly over time by erosion or from the
deposition of material in the channel.
Tremel testified that he did not see any evidence of avulsion
during his examination of the property in connection with his
2002 survey. Specifically, Tremel based this conclusion on his
examination of the banks of the dry north channel and of the
south channel.
The Furbys did not adduce affirmative evidence to show
that an avulsive event occurred between the time of the
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752 20 NEBRASKA APPELLATE REPORTS
government survey in 1873 and 1937. There is no evidence
that during this timeframe, there was a sudden and percep-
tible change to the land by the action of water or in the bed
or course of the river, or a violent and visible change from a
known cause. See Babel v. Schmidt, 17 Neb. App. 400, 765
N.W.2d 227 (2009).
(b) State v. Ecklund Exception
[14] Alternatively, the Furbys argue that the exception found
in State v. Ecklund, 147 Neb. 508, 23 N.W.2d 782 (1946), is
applicable. In that case, the north channel of the river had
originally carried most of the water, but after dams had been
built upstream, the south channel began to have more flow
and was considered the thread of the stream. The Nebraska
Supreme Court found that the exception to the law of accre-
tion and avulsion detailed in Frank v. Smith, 138 Neb. 382,
293 N.W. 329 (1940), applied to the boundary dispute. As
recognized in Frank, this exception applies when a river
changes its main channel not by excavating, passing over, and
then filling the intervening place between the old channel and
the new channel, but by flowing around the intervening land
where the change to the new channel results from an increase
year to year in the amount of water flowing in the new chan-
nel. In that situation, the law requires that the boundary line
remain in the old channel rather than move to the new channel
as long as the old channel remains a running stream. See id. In
Ecklund, the court concluded that while the change of the main
channel from the north side of the river to its present location
on the south side may have been a gradual change through-
out a space of at least 40 years, the thread of the stream did
not gradually move over the subsequently formed intervening
lands. As such, the boundary remained the line of the thread of
the stream where it formerly ran in the north channel. State v.
Ecklund, supra.
This court has recognized that in cases where this exception
has been applied, there was ample evidence that the river did
in fact change course in a sudden and violent manner, as well
as evidence as to how that change took place. See Babel v.
Schmidt, supra.
Decisions of the Nebraska Court of Appeals
CURRY v. FURBY 753
Cite as 20 Neb. App. 736
In the present case, there was insufficient evidence to estab-
lish that the river changed in such a manner as described in
Frank v. Smith, supra, or in State v. Ecklund, supra. As men-
tioned above, Dart testified that he did not know what caused
the south channel to form between 1873 and 1937, but that it
was possible that it could have formed slowly over time by
erosion, by the river’s rushing through it in a single avulsive
event, or from the deposition of material in the channel. As
such, the evidence in this case does not support application of
this exception.
Based on our de novo review, we agree with the district
court that the Furbys failed to adduce sufficient evidence both
to support their contention that the south channel was formed
by avulsion or any other process and to overcome the statu-
tory presumption.
(c) 1993 Ice Jam
The Furbys assert that the 1993 ice jam was an avulsive
event that permanently changed the location of the main chan-
nel from the north side to the south side of the island, requiring
us to find that the north channel remained the legal boundary.
In discussing this contention, the district court noted the evi-
dence presented by the Currys regarding boundary locations
prior to 1993, specifically the exhibit comprising many aerial
photographs from 1937 to 2010, which were reviewed and dis-
cussed by Dart. Upon reviewing that evidence, the court found
that the thread of the stream was on the south side of the island
prior to 1937 and otherwise rejected the Furbys’ arguments
about avulsion.
In our de novo review, we conclude that the occurrence of
the ice jam in 1993 does not support a finding that the thread
of the stream should remain in the north channel as depicted
in the original government surveys. As discussed above, the
island and south channel were formed prior to 1937, and the
south channel was the main channel from sometime before
1937 until about 1980. During this time, the north channel
carried less water than the south channel and was occasionally
dry. After 1980, the evidence suggests that the main channel
alternated between the north and south channels, but that after
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754 20 NEBRASKA APPELLATE REPORTS
the ice jam in 1993, the north channel has become dry and the
south channel is the main, and only, channel to carry water.
In other words, the thread of the stream remains in the south
channel, as was true prior to 1980. Again, the evidence regard-
ing the changes in the river between 1980 and 1993 does not
overcome the statutory presumption regarding the thread of
the stream.
5. Legal Description of
Thread of Stream
Finally, the Furbys assert that the district court erred in
granting the Currys’ motion to alter or amend the judgment,
finding that a precise legal description of the thread of the
stream was established by the evidence, and precisely describ-
ing the southern boundary of the Currys’ property using a
metes and bounds description of the location of the thread of
the stream. In its amended order, the court found that the south
boundary of the Curry property was the thread of the stream of
the Loup River “as depicted and described in Exhibit 76,” and
it set forth a legal description corresponding to that found in
the operative complaint.
[15] In support of their argument, the Furbys cite Oppliger
v. Vineyard, 19 Neb. App. 172, 803 N.W.2d 786 (2011). In
Oppliger, this court determined that the boundary between the
parties’ properties was the thread of the stream of the north
channel of the North Platte River. We then addressed whether
the precise location of the thread could or should be addressed
by a metes and bounds description. We stated:
As to precisely and exactly where [the thread of the
stream] is in a metes and bounds description, such is not
before us and is inherently impractical, and in reality,
such would rarely be subject to precise measurement and
legal description beyond the conceptual definition we
have employed for the thread of the stream throughout
our opinion. Therefore, the thread of the stream of the
North Platte River is found in the north channel, and it
fits the definition of “thread of the stream” [found in
Nebraska case law].
Decisions of the Nebraska Court of Appeals
CURRY v. FURBY 755
Cite as 20 Neb. App. 736
Oppliger v. Vineyard, 19 Neb. App. at 208, 803 N.W.2d at 812.
The land surveyor in Oppliger prepared a composite survey
map that platted the geographic centerline of the north chan-
nel superimposed on an aerial photograph with a metes and
bounds description. This court observed that the surveyor had
clearly platted the middle of the north channel measured bank
to bank. We found that the mean centerline of a river, deter-
mined by dividing the distance between meander lines of the
river, is an arbitrary location of the center of the stream and is
not a determination of the thread of the stream in this jurisdic-
tion. Id. We further observed that
as a practical matter, the precise and exact location of the
thread would become important only in times of drought
and extremely low flow. Of the numerous Nebraska cases
involving the thread of a stream, none contains a pre-
cise metes and bounds legal description of its location.
[Citations omitted.] We conclude that such a description
is neither required nor practical given that the thread of
the stream is a legal concept and that pinpointing its exact
location is inherently difficult, if not impossible, until a
river actually dries up, which event would then reveal the
thread’s precise location, i.e., where the last little bit of
flowing water could be found.
Id. at 209, 803 N.W.2d at 813.
The Furbys also observe that in its amended order, the court
found that the boundary was the thread of the stream of the
Loup River as depicted and described in exhibit 76. Exhibit
76 does not contain any legal descriptions and shows both the
scaled-in thread-of-the-stream line shown on Tremel’s surveys
(i.e., the line he derived by dividing the distance between the
banks of the south channel) and the line showing the approxi-
mate thread of the stream as observed by Tremel from an air-
boat in September and November 2010.
The Currys observe that the legal description found in
their operative complaint and the district court’s original and
amended orders employs a “more or less” distance descrip-
tion to arrive at the location of the thread of the stream.
They agree that the court’s statement that the boundary is the
Decisions of the Nebraska Court of Appeals
756 20 NEBRASKA APPELLATE REPORTS
thread of the stream “as depicted and described in Exhibit 76”
is not entirely correct, as there is no legal description con-
tained in exhibit 76. They assert that such error is insignifi-
cant, however, given this court’s determination in Oppliger v.
Vineyard, 19 Neb. App. 172, 803 N.W.2d 786 (2011), that no
precise or exact legal description of the thread of the stream
is required. The Currys argue that there is a practical reason
why exhibit 76 is significant and why Tremel’s depiction of
the approximate thread of the stream as observed in 2010 and
the approximate distances shown thereon are important. They
assert that without a description which comes relatively close,
using descriptive phrases such as “more or less” and “approxi-
mately,” future disputes might well arise over whether the
thread of the stream is located on the north or south side of
what appears to be a new island forming south of the island in
dispute in this case.
We agree that a metes and bounds description is unneces-
sary and inherently impractical for the reasons we previously
stated in Oppliger. Thus, we modify the district court’s order to
establish that the boundary between the Curry property and the
Furby property is the thread of the stream of the Loup River,
which thread is located in the river’s south channel south of the
island as generally depicted in exhibit 76.
VI. CONCLUSION
The district court did not err in applying the statutory pre-
sumption found in § 81-8,122.01 or in finding that the Furbys
failed to present sufficient evidence to overcome the pre-
sumption. We modify the description of the boundary as set
forth above.
Affirmed as modified.