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D. M. FREDERICKSEN v. OTTO HENKE

Minnesota Supreme Court1926-05-28No. No. 25,200
167 Minn. 356

Summary

Holding. The judgment for the plaintiff is affirmed. Fredericksen established title to the disputed portion of lot 9 through adverse possession, as all statutory requirements were met through the continuous possession of his predecessors under claim of title, regardless of the mistaken boundary line or failure to pay taxes assessed against lot 9.

Fredericksen owned government lot 8 and sought to establish ownership of a portion of the adjoining lot 9 through adverse possession. The disputed land lay between lot 8's southern boundary and the shore of Lake Hook. Beginning around 1884 or 1885, the original owner of lot 8 built a fence extending westward from the lake, treating the disputed portion as part of lot 9's territory but actually claiming it as his own. This mistaken boundary line was maintained by successive owners through descent and conveyance for over 30 years, with the land being pastured, timber harvested, and otherwise used in connection with lot 8. When Fredericksen purchased lot 8 in 1923, the disputed portion had already been subject to continuous adverse possession for the required statutory period.

The court found all elements of adverse possession satisfied: continuous possession by successive owners with legal privity, possession devoted to appropriate uses without requiring residential occupation, hostile intent inferred from the character of possession, and a claim of title based on the mistaken boundary belief. The mistaken nature of the boundary line did not defeat the adverse possession claim; Minnesota law recognizes that possession beyond a boundary under a mistake, when coupled with a claim of title, constitutes adverse disseisin. The defendant's argument that failure to pay taxes on lot 9 defeated the claim was rejected, as the statute does not require tax payment on land separately assessed as part of another lot in boundary cases.

Summary generated by law.co from the public-domain opinion. The opinion text itself is public domain.

Key issues

  • Whether adverse possession can be established on land under a mistaken boundary line
  • Whether privity exists among successive owners to permit tacking of possession periods
  • Whether tax payment on separately assessed land is required for adverse possession claims
  • Whether continuous residential occupation is necessary to establish adverse possession

Procedural posture

Fredericksen brought a statutory action to determine adverse claims to land, and the trial court entered findings and judgment in his favor; Henke appealed.

Authorities cited

No cited authorities resolved to law.co cases yet.

Opinion

majority opinion

Dibeui, J,

Action under the statute to determine adverse claims to land. There were findings and judgment for the plaintiff. The defendant Otto Henke appeals.

The plaintiff is the owner of government lot 8 in section 8-117-29 in McLeod county. He claims to be the owner by adverse possession of a portion of the adjoining government lot 9 in the same section. The defendant Henke is the owner of lot 9 unless his title to the portion claimed by the plaintiff has been divested by adverse possession.

To maintain his statutory action to determine adverse claims the plaintiff must be in possession or the lands be vacant. G. S. 1923, § 9556. ’ The court finds possession in the plaintiff. At a time shortly before the institution of this action there was trouble over the boundary between the two lots. It is probable that it then first became known that the portion in dispute belonged to lot 9. The defendant trespassed upon lot 8, and shifted a fence so as to occupy a part of it. The plaintiff brought an action of trespass. There was a restraining order against the defendant. The evidence is confusing as to just what was done, but it seems probable that the parties decided to leave possession as it had been, or at least that it should not be in the defendant, and that the controversy should be determined in court in an orderly way. If the disputed land was left vacant, the action can be maintained. It is only when there is occupancy by some one other than the plaintiff that the action will not lie. Upon careful consideration of evidence not at all conclusive and sometimes uncertain and unsatisfactory we sustain the finding of possession in the plaintiff. We do not overlook the rule that one in possession, by claiming title and asking affirmative relief, may waive all question as to vacancy or possession. Dun. Dig. § 8044. Whether the evidence makes the rule applicable we do not determine.

The property in dispute is described in the complaint as “all that portion of lot nine (9) in section eight (8) * * * lying between the south boundary of lot eight (8) * * * and the northerly shore line of Lake Hook in said section eight (8).”

■ The easterly boundary of lot 8 and most of its southerly boundary is the irregular shore line of Lake Hook, a meandered lake. The northerly boundary of lot 9 is a line extending from the lake east to the north and south section line between sections 8 and 7. The easterly 600 feet of this line is a common boundary between lots 8 and 9, and the west line of lot 8 is at the east end of the 600 foot line, extending northerly from that point. The portion of lot 9 in dispute is southerly of lot 8 and has the 600 foot line as its northerly boundary and the lake as its easterly and southerly boundary. Except as the size of the government lots were better equalized by putting the disputed portion in lot 9 it might as well have been made, so far as can be seen, a part of lot 8.

There is evidence that in 1884 or 1885 Haine, the owner of lot 8, built a fence along his westerly line and extended it to the lake disregarding his actual southern boundary as represented by the 600 foot line extending west from the lake. There is some dispute as to whether the first fence went so far as the lake, but the evidence is ample that it was there for 30 or 40 years at the least. The possession of Haine was continued by those taking through him as his heirs, and by others taking by conveyance or by descent. In 1923 the plaintiff purchased. The disputed portion was pastured, timber was cut from it, some brushing was done, and one year some cropping small in amount and unsuccessful in result was attempted. The land was used and devoted to purposes for which it was appropriate in view of its character and location. The farm buildings were upon the northeast part of lot 8. The disputed portion was used in connection with the rest of the lot. To constitute adverse possession it is not essential that the adverse possessor actually live upon the land which he claims. It is enough that it Is occupied and applied to the uses for which it is fit. Costello v. Edson, 44 Minn. 135, 46 N. W. 299; Brown v. Kohout, 61 Minn. 113, 63 N. W. 248; Dean v. Goddard, 55 Minn. 290, 58 N. W. 1060; Glover v. Sage, 87 Minn. 526, 92 N. W. 471. Adverse or hostile intent may be inferred from the character of the possession. Dean v. Goddard, 55 Minn. 290, 56 N. W. 1060; Seymour v. Carli, 31 Minn. 81, 16 N. W. 495; Sawbridge v. Fergus Falls, 101 Minn. 378, 112 N. W. 385. Possession to be under “claim of title” or “claim of right,” a misleading phrase, need be nothing more than possession with intent to appropriate and hold against all comers. Carpenter v. Coles, 75 Minn. 9, 77 N. W. 424; Guaranty T. & T. Corp. v. U. S. 264 U. S. 200, 44 Sup. Ct. 252, 68 L. ed. 636. The evidence justifies the conclusion that the plaintiff’s predecessors supposed that the southerly boundary of lot 8 was the lake and that the intent in any event was to hold the disputed portion as a part of the lot.

The evidence discloses the elements essential to constitute adverse possession and sustains the finding.

The possession of successive occupants, if there is privity between them, may be tacked to make adverse possession for the requisite period. Privity is essential. Possession lost by abandonment or lost by disseisin, and possession taken when a prior occupant abandons or is disseised, cannot be tacked. Possession through descent or by transfer of title or possession is in privity. Sherin v. Brackett, 36 Minn. 152, 30 N. W. 551; Ramsey v. Glenny, 45 Minn. 401, 48 N. W. 322, 22 Am. St. 736; Marek v. Holey, 119 Minn. 216, 137 N. W. 969; Kelley v. Green, 142 Minn. 82, 170 N. W. 922. There was privity here from the time of Haine down to the acquisition of title by the plaintiff.

The boundary claimed by the plaintiff and his predecessors was a mistaken boundary. In Seymour v. Carli, 31 Minn. 81, 16 N. W. 495, it was held that where an adjoining owner occupies beyond the boundary line, under a mistake as to the true line, but under a claim of title, his occupancy is a disseisin and his possession adverse though initiated and continued by mistake. This rule has been followed. Brown v. Morgan, 44 Minn. 432, 46 N. W. 913; Ramsey v. Glenny, 45 Minn. 401, 48 N. W. 322, 22 Am. St. 736; Weeks v. Upton, 99 Minn. 410, 109 N. W. 828; Meyer v. Town, 99 Minn. 450, 109 N. W. 840; Stevens v. Velde, 138 Minn. 59, 163 N. W. 796; Kelley v. Green, 142 Minn. 82, 170 N. W. 922. There is some quarreling with it and some worry lest it offend a logical or legal principle; but it persists. A peculiarly useful application of the doctrine of adverse possession is in the settling of disputed or mistaken boundary lines. “The object of the statute is to quiet titles and end disputes.” Seymour v. Carli, 31 Minn. 81, 16 N. W. 495.

It is the contention of the defendant that the plaintiff cannot sustain the claim of adverse possession because of a failure to pay taxes on lot 9. It is provided by the statute, G. S. 1923, § 9187, that unless the one claiming adverse possession, or his predecessors, during five successive years of the limitation period, shall have paid taxes, when the real estate is separately assessed, there is no adverse possession. Saying nothing of the provision in the statute relative to boundary lines established by adverse possession, it was not essential to the acquisition of title to land in controversy that the adverse possessor pay the taxes on the land in controversy which was assessed as a part of lot 9. Kelley v. Green, 142 Minn. 82, 170 N. W. 922, is decisive.

To maintain a title, acquired by adverse possession, it is not necessary to continue the adverse possession beyond the time when title is acquired. The title once acquired is a new title, a legal title though not a record title, is not lost by a cessation of possession, and continued possession is not necessary to maintain it. McArthur v. Clark, 86 Minn. 165, 90 N. W. 369, 91 Am. St. 333; Dean v. Goddard, 55 Minn. 290, 56 N. W. 1060. The authorities are uniform. 2 Tif. Real Prop. (2 ed:) § 511; 3 Thomp. Real Prop. § 2516; 3 Wash. Real Prop. (6 ed.) § 1994; 2 C. J. 251-258; 1 R. C. L. p. 690, § 5; 1 Cent. Dig. Adv. Poss. §§ 604-623; 1 Dec. Dig. Adv. Poss. § 106. This is said in response to a suggestion that the plaintiff may not have had adverse possession or possession at all at all times after he bought. Title was perfected by adverse possession many years before he bought.

Judgment affirmed.