Bayhouse v. Urquides

105 P. 1066, 17 Idaho 286, 1909 Ida. LEXIS 114
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 105 P. 1066 (Bayhouse v. Urquides) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bayhouse v. Urquides, 105 P. 1066, 17 Idaho 286, 1909 Ida. LEXIS 114 (Idaho 1909).

Opinions

AILSHIE, J.

— This is an appeal from a judgment quieting the title to a strip of land claimed by two adjoining lot owners. The first objection urged by appellant is against the ruling of the court in admitting in evidence certain exhibits marked “A” and “B,” being maps and plats of a survey [290]*290of the ground in dispute. This surrey appears to hare been made by one A. M. Ashline, and embraced the north half of block 29 of the original townsite of Boise City. The surveyor testified on the trial as follows: “I made a survey of this property from which the map was drawn. The starting point of the survey was the center of Second street and First street, and prolonged the line from Idaho south to the alley, and used the measurement from First and Second on Main street. I didn’t start from a government monument. These points that are in these street centers have all been surveyed and cheeked by other people and are supposed to be right. I did not start this survey from any government point.I have nothing but the word of somebody else as to the correctness of my initial point. I started from no government corner to make this survey of the property. ’ ’

It appears from the testimony of another surveyor that about 1891 the city council of Boise appointed some kind of a commission to survey the exterior boundaries of the city in conformity with the government patent that had been issued for the townsite, and that the initial point used by the surveyor, Ashline, had been established by such a commission. The evidence, however, as to the action of the commissioners-is not clear, and indeed there is nothing in the record to show that the survey and maps made by them was a correct ascertainment or an attempt to ascertain where the original lines, were run and monuments were placed. Judging from the evidence, it seems more probable that such survey was made rather with a view to ascertaining where a correct survey would have in fact placed the lines and monuments of the original government and townsite surveys. It is clear, however, that the parties could not have been bound by any survey, maps, or plats not based and founded upon the survey asi originally made and monuments as erected. (Seabrook v. Coos Bay Ice Co., 49 Or. 237, 89 Pac. 417; Orena v. City of Santa Barbara, 91 Cal. 621, 28 Pac. 268.)

The purpose of a resurvey subsequent to the taking of title by purchasers and settlers is to ascertain the lines of the original survey and the original boundaries and monuments as established and laid out by the survey under which the parties-[291]*291originally procured their titles. (Martz v. Williams, 67 Ill. 306.) On such resurvey or re-established boundaries and monuments the question of the correctness of the original survey cannot enter into the matter at all, and is a matter that does not concern the surveyor, and is not a question to be ascertained by him. (Diehl v. Zanger, 39 Mich. 601; Penry v. Richards, 52 Cal. 672 (675); Bullard v. Kempff, 119 Cal. 9, 50 Pac. 780.)

Under the plat introduced in this case by the plaintiff and the survey and measurements on which the map was made, it was found that the division fence between plaintiff and defendant embraced within defendant’s inclosure a strip of land 5.7 feet in width, fronting on Main street, and extending back in a southerly direction at a gradual increase in width to 7.1 feet in width fronting on the alley between Main and Grove streets and being 122 feet in depth, and that the same was in fact a part of lot 8 and belonged to the plaintiff in this action. John Lemp, the original owner of lot 8, in block 29, testified as follows:

“At one time I owned lot 8, in block 29, original townsite of Boise City. I lived there from 1866 to 1868, then moved to where I am now. My ground was inclosed there, two lots. I had it fenced on the line of the original stakes. I moved away in November, ’67 — something like that. It was either the last part of ’67 or the fore part of ’68. There is no fence there that I put up. I kept the fences up until the mayor’s deed — that was in ’71. I kept my fence up on that line as shown by the original stakes, until 1871; after that I didn’t pay any more attention to it.”

It seems from this testimony of Lemp that he maintained a fence around this lot, and especially between his lot and lot 9, now owned and occupied by the appellant. It also appears that one Antonio De O’Campo settled-upon and inclosed lot 9 some time prior to 1869, and that he continued to occupy the same up to the time of his death in the year 1879. O’Campo made a will whereby he devised and bequeathed this property to the appellant, Jesus Urqpides. The appellant testifies as follows:

[292]*292“I have lived in Boise City from 1869 np to the present time. I have been living on Warm Springs avenue for thirty years, I think. I have known the property which I now reside upon for nine or ten years before that. I was acquainted with the property which I now reside upon in 1889. Antonio O ’Campo was living on it at that time; I was living on the same piece of property that I am now living on; I had a fence on it: that fence was where I now have it, and I had a stable on this side of the house close to the fence. My property is now inclosed by a fence. It' has been fenced all the time. There is a fence on the west side of my property between my property and Mrs. Bayhouse’s property; that fence has been there for forty years. It has been in the same place. It fell down and I put it in the same place. I say that fence never has been moved for forty years. My house was built' on that property twenty-nine years ago, in the same location that it is now, the same place the old man made his house — a little on the side of that and a little back. I built the first house and then I built a room on the other side close to Mr. Bayhouse; that was built — it must have been twenty years ago — must have been that long. I saw where the surveyor, who testified here, placed a stake in front of my house in the ground; if that was on the line it would cut off about four feet of my house. The fence is about one and one-half feet from the house, something like that. I have lived and resided there all this time.”

The appellant is corroborated by the witness Al Ostner, who testifies that he has known the property in question since 1869, when it was occupied by O’Campo; that the lot was inclosed by a corral or fence, and that there was a fence running along the west side of the lot and adjoining Mr. Lemp’s lot. He also testifies that to the best of his knowledge and belief the fence now dividing these lots is at the same place that it was in in 1869, and that in his opinion and judgment it has been continuously in the same place.

George W. McIntyre testifies to the same effect. He says that he has known the property well since 1874 or ’75, and that there has been a partition fence between that and lot 8 ever since he first knew the property, and that, in his judg[293]*293ment, tbe fence now standing as tbe dividing line between tbe two lots is at tbe same place it bas been continuously ever since be first knew the property.

There is no dispute in this case but that tbe appellant and bis predecessor in interest, O’Campo, have bad this strip of land inclosed as a part of lot 9 since 1869, and that they have used and occupied tbe same continuously for forty years as their own property, and under tbe assumption that it comprises a part of lot 9, block 29, of tbe original townsite of Boise City.

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Bluebook (online)
105 P. 1066, 17 Idaho 286, 1909 Ida. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bayhouse-v-urquides-idaho-1909.