Ringwood v. Bradford, 8073

Decision Date10 May 1954
Docket NumberNo. 8073,8073
Citation269 P.2d 1053,2 Utah 2d 119
Partiesd 119 RINGWOOD et al. v. BRADFORD.
CourtUtah Supreme Court

Robert C. Gibson, Salt Lake City, for appellant.

Lawrence L. Summerhays, Salt Lake City, for respondents.

McDONOUGH, Chief Justice.

This action was originally begun as an action in unlawful detainer but plaintiffs--respondents here--waived that portion of the complaint praying damages and sought merely to quiet title in themselves to a portion of a lot, of which they are the record owners and upon which a canyon cabin of defendant--appellant here--has stood since 1934. The lower court held that despite the fact that a fence built in 1923, under the direction of plaintiff's predecessor in interest, was regarded by defendant as representing the true boundary, the doctrine of boundary of acquiescence does not apply in this case and entered judgment for plaintiffs requiring defendant to remove her cabin from plaintiffs' property. From this judgment defendant appeals.

The sole question involved on appeal is defendant's contention that the trial court should have found that the fence has been established as the boundary between the defendant's and plaintiffs' property by the doctrine of boundary by acquiescence. In support of this contention, she attacks the finding of fact made by the trial court that the fence was not used or intended as a boundary fence by plaintiffs.

This court cannot disturb the finding that the fence was not intended by plaintiffs' predecessor as a boundary marker, inasmuch as the plaintiffs presented evidence by the person who built the fence for Mr. Ringwood, the father of the plaintiffs, that he made no attempt to locate the boundary at the time of constructing the fence because the purpose of the installation was merely to protect newly planted Box Elder trees from sheep which were grazing in the area. Defendant presented no evidence of any discussion as to the boundary line prior to the present dispute nor any evidence that Mr. Ringwood's location of the fence was for any other purpose than that testified to. Defendant's evidence was all to the effect that the fence was in existence at the time her cabin was built in 1934, and that the cabin was built within a few feet of the fence for the reason that it was the most likely spot in the area which her predecessor believed belonged to him. It is noted that the then owner of plaintiffs' property, the only person with the power to protest if he knew the true boundary, was ill in 1934, the year of the construction of defendant's cabin, and did not visit the canyon from that time and he died in 1935.

We therefore confront the question of whether a boundary by acquiescence is established by the fact that the present plaintiffs or their father did not affirmatively claim the property beyond the fence nor did they make any use of it inconsistent with the theory that they recognized the fence as a boundary line. In other words, is acquiescence, or lack of acts inconsistent with acquiescence, for a long period of years sufficient to raise a conclusive presumption that the fence was intended to proclaim the boundary between two properties or does a showing that the parties did not, in fact, recognize the fence as a boundary take the situation out of the doctrine?

It is stated in Glenn v. Whitney, 116 Utah 267, 273, 209 P.2d 257, 260:

'The theory under which a boundary line is established by long acquiescence along an existing fence line is founded on the doctrine that the parties erect the fence to settle some doubt or uncertainty which they may have as to the location of the true boundary, and the [sic] compromise their differences by agreeing to accept the fence line as the limiting line of their respective lands. The mere fact that a fence happens to be put up and neither party does anything about it for a long period of time will not establish it as the true boundary. Peterson v. Johnson, 84 Utah 89, 34 P.2d 697; Tripp v. Bagley, supra.' [74 Utah 57, 276 P. 912, 69 A.L.R. 1417.]

The nature of the presumption which arises upon presentation of evidence of a monument in existence for a long period of time without protest has been inferentially treated by this court in a long line of cases, 1 many of which appear to be in conflict. For this reason and for the reason that the fact situation of this case is similar to that of Hummel v. Young, 1 Utah 2d 237, 265 P.2d 410, 411, the most recent pronouncement of this court on the doctrine of boundary by acquiescence, we quote at length from that case:

'We further pointed out in Brown v. Milliner, supra [Utah, 232 P.2d 202] that in the absence of evidence that the owners of adjoining property or their predecessors in interest ever made an express parol agreement as to the location of the boundary between them if they have occupied their respective premises up to an open boundary line visibly marked by monuments, fences or buildings for a long period of time and mutually recognized it as the dividing line between them, the law will imply an agreement fixing the boundary as located, if it can do so consistently with the fact appearing, and will not permit the parties nor their grantees to depart from such line. This rule is sometimes referred to as...

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12 cases
  • Anderson v. Fautin
    • United States
    • Utah Supreme Court
    • May 31, 2016
    ...... and that she did not live on her lot at that time. Thus it would do violence to the evidence to imply an agreement here.”28 And in Ringwood v. Bradford,29 we concluded that the mere presence of a fence, coupled with no acts inconsistent with acquiescence, was insufficient to raise a con......
  • Hales v. Frakes
    • United States
    • Utah Supreme Court
    • September 11, 1979
    ...claim to the true line was not acquiescence in Glenn v. Whitney, 116 Utah 267, 209 P.2d 257 (1949) and Ringwood v. Bradford, 2 Utah 2d 119, 269 P.2d 1053 (1954). Thus, here the District Court could properly determine in this case that the plaintiff's occupation to the fence without interfer......
  • Jensen v. Bartlett, 8308
    • United States
    • Utah Supreme Court
    • August 12, 1955
    ...judgment under those facts as a matter of law. They cite the cases of Hummel v. Young, 1 Utah 2d 237, 265 P.2d 410; and Ringwood v. Bradford, 2 Utah 2d 119, 269 P.2d 1053, as showing a refusal of this court 'to recognize as the boundary the fence line which was not constructed as a boundary......
  • King v. Fronk
    • United States
    • Utah Supreme Court
    • February 21, 1963
    ...Loan Corporation v. Dudley, 105 Utah 208, 141 P.2d 160 (1943); Briem v. Smith, 100 Utah 213, 112 P.2d 145 (1941).4 Ringwood v. Bradford, 2 Utah 2d 119, 269 P.2d 1053 (1954); Hummel v. Young, 1 Utah 2d 237, 265 P.2d 410 (1953).5 Holmes v. Judge, 31 Utah 269, 87 P. 1009 (1906); Blanchard v. S......
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