Summary
In Rindeikis v. Coffman, 231 Ark. 422, 329 S.W.2d 550 (1959), we had before us a deed from a grantor which conveyed by the government land calls, and a subsequent deed to a different party conveying 0.68 acres which the same grantor had acquired by adverse possession.
Summary of this case from Dan Portis v. Stuckey BrothersOpinion
No. 5-1964.
Opinion delivered December 14, 1959.
1. ADVERSE POSSESSION — INTENT OF DISSEISOR, MANNER OF ARRIVING AT. — In arriving at the intent of the disseisor it is better to weigh the reasonable import of his conduct in the years preceding the litigation rather than rely on one remark made under the stress of cross examination that he intended to hold only to the true line. 2. ADVERSE POSSESSION — TRANSFER OF TITLE TO PROPERTY HELD BY DISSEISOR BUT NOT DESCRIBED IN DEED. — Although the disputed property was not described in the deeds, all of appellants' predecessor's in title had exercised dominion over it and did in fact transfer possession to each succeeding grantee. HELD: The title to the disputed strip passed with the deed. 3. BOUNDARIES — AGREEMENTS, EFFECT ON B.F.P. WITHOUT NOTICE. — Although an agreement was made with respect to a boundary which had been acquired by adverse possession no action was taken with respect to the fence, and appellants purchased without either actual or constructive notice thereof and upon the assurance of real estate agent that the fence was the boundary. HELD: The appellants were not prejudiced by the agreement. 4. BOUNDARIES — PRINCIPAL AND AGENT, AUTHORITY OF AGENT TO POINT our. — An agent has the authority to point out to a prospective purchaser what he reasonably believes to be the boundary of the principal's property. 5. DEEDS — CONVEYANCE OF PROPERTY NOT DESCRIBED, INTENT OF GRANTOR. — Although appellants' grantor testified that he did not intend to transfer the 0.65 acres involved in the dispute and not described in the deed, It was shown that the possession thereof had been transferred to each succeeding grantee prior thereto, that the grantor's agent had pointed out the strip as going with the property, and that the improvements ostensibly sold with the property lay partly on and partly off the disputed strip. HELD: When things other than the grantor's testimony is taken into consideration, it is evident that he intended to transfer the disputed strip of land to appellants.
Appeal from Pulaski Chancery Court, First Division; Murray O. Reed, Chancellor; reversed.
Holt, Park Holt, for appellant.
Quinn Glover and Wayne Foster, for appellee.
This is an adverse possession case concerning 68 acre located in the SW 1/4 of the NW 1/4 of Section Twenty-Five (25), Township One (1) North, Range Thirteen (13) West in Pulaski County, Arkansas. In 1922 Bert M. Marsh, a witness for the appellant, bought the W 1/4 of the W 1/2 of the SE 1/4 of the same section. In 1922 Mr. Marsh had a surveyor run a dividing line between the SE 1/4 of the SW 1/4 of this NW 1/4 and the surveyor ran a line which, according to more recent surveys, encroached westwardly into the SW 1/4 of the NW 1/4 along most of its length. Mr. Marsh then built a fence more or less on this line and the fence has remained there to the present time. The fence encroaches onto the SW 1/4 of the NW 1/4 for a distance of about 45 feet, varying down to a distance of about 12 feet on the south end and merges, with the more recent surveys, on the north end. Mr. Marsh, or his family, remained in possession up to the fence from 1922 to 1945. From 1945 until 1949 the land involved was transferred to several owners, all of whom occupied up to the fence and treated the land as their own.
On July 14, 1949, the land was sold to William F. Thompson who entered into possession up to the fence also. In January 1953, Mr. Thompson and some adjacent property owners had a survey made running North and South between the SW 1/4 of the NW 1/4 and the SE 1/4 of the NW 1/4 of Section 25, and entered into a property agreement whereby they agreed to accept the new survey as the correct property line, notwithstanding the existence of any fences located elsewhere. After the agreement was made, Thompson did not move the fence bounding the west side of his property and remained in possession up to the fence. The appellants bought the property from Thompson on March 17, 1957, at which time the property line agreement was not of record.
The deed from Thompson to appellants conveyed only the W 1/2 of the W 1/2 of the SE 1/4 of the NW 1/4 of Section 25. Thompson was in California at the time he sold the land to the appellants and the real estate agent pointed out the fence as being the west line of the property. There is a barn situated partly on this disputed strip which belonged to Thompson and the sewage laterals from his septic tank ended on the strip. Appellants brought this suit to quiet title in themselves to the strip involved. The Chancellor quieted title in the appellee and ordered appellants to remove the barn and sewage laterals to the extent they encroached on the 08 acre.
For reversal the appellants rely on: 1. their adverse possession; 2. the intention to hold adversely by their predecessors in possession; 3. the description of the property in the deed; and 4. the property line agreement being void.
Mr. Marsh made some statements on cross examination to the effect he only intended to claim to the true line. Appellee claims this keeps Mr. Marsh from claiming adversely under our cases holding if the intent of the disseisor is merely to hold to the true line, no adverse possession can arise. Ogle v. Hodge, 217 Ark. 913, 234 S.W.2d 24; Carter v. Roberson, 214 Ark. 750, 217 S.W. 846; Wilson v. Hunter, 59 Ark. 626, 28 S.W. 419. In the case of Rye v. Baumann, 231 Ark. 278, 329 S.W.2d 161, this Court had this question before it and it was there said:
"In arriving at the intent of the disseisor we think it is better to weigh the reasonable import of his conduct in the years preceding the litigation rather than rely on one remark made during the stress of cross examination (which is elsewhere refuted)."
Mr. Marsh was in possession and exercised dominion over the land involved for over twenty years and therefore obtained title to it by adverse possession under Ark. Stats. 37-101.
Each deed that passed in appellants' chain of title did not contain a description of the .68 acre, so it might be argued that if Marsh obtained title, then the title remained in him on his failure to include the .68 acre in his deed, but, in St. Louis S.W. Railway Co. v. Mulkey, 100 Ark. 71, 139 S.W. 643, Ann. Cas. 1913 C, 1339, this Court said:
"While it is true that the land described in the deed to her does not include the strip in controversy, still her grantors, whose adverse possession had probably already ripened into title, intended it should, and thought it did, and at the time of the conveyance transferred to her the possession of it in fact, intending that she should have all the land within the enclosure."
All the predecessors in appellants' chain of title appear to have been in possession and exercised dominion over the land and did in fact transfer possession of it to each succeeding grantee. This places the legal title in Thompson, whose deposition states he knew where the new survey line was and did not intend to transfer the 68 acre to appellants. The question remains as to the effect of the property agreement entered into by Thompson and the apparent intention of Thompson not to include the 68 acre in his conveyance to appellants. As previously stated, Thompson entered into this agreement in January 1953. The agreement was made but no action was ever taken under it and it was not put of record until after this litigation arose and, therefore, appellants not having knowledge otherwise of the agreement are not prejudiced by it.
Ark. Stats. 16-116: "No deed, bond, or instrument of writing, for the conveyance of real estate, or by which the title thereto may be affected in law or equity, hereafter made or executed, shall be good or valid against a subsequent purchaser of such real estate for a valuable consideration, without actual notice thereof unless such ... instrument shall be filed for record in the office of the clerk of the county where such real estate may be situated."
As previously stated, a real estate agent sold the land for Thompson and appellant testified the agent pointed out the old fence row as the west line of the property. An agent has the authority to point out to a prospective purchaser what he reasonably believes to be the boundary. Restatement on Agency 2d 63.
In deciding whether Thompson intended to transfer the property involved to appellants, we think there are things other than Thompson's testimony to be taken into consideration in this case. For instance, it seems unreasonable that Thompson would intend to transfer part of the barn or only the major portion of the sewage laterals. Thompson also allowed appellants to go into possession and remain without disturbance for over a year. From the foregoing, we conclude that Thompson intended to, and did transfer the land involved to appellants.
The decree is therefore reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.