Butler v. Holman

303 P.2d 573, 146 Cal. App. 2d 22, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1417
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 15, 1956
DocketCiv. 5356
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 303 P.2d 573 (Butler v. Holman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Butler v. Holman, 303 P.2d 573, 146 Cal. App. 2d 22, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1417 (Cal. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

COUGHLIN, J. pro tem. *

In 1913, Aaron B. Butler received a patent from the United States government to land in Fresno County, described as the South one-half of the Southeast quarter and the South one-half of the Southwest quarter of Section 34, Township 18 South, Range 13 Bast, M. D. B. M. Upon his death the plaintiffs Butler were appointed executors of his will. Several years thereafter, the defendants James and Thickstun located the “Mistake Lode Mining Claim” upon a deposit of chrome ore which they contend is situated immediately south of the Butler property, in Section 2, Township 19 South, Range 13 East, M.D.B.M. They leased the mine to the defendant Holman. An extensive development program was undertaken resulting in the excavation of a large pit, by bulldozers, and the removal of several thousand tons of ore. The executors first learned of this mining activity through information furnished by some hunters, who had been in the vicinity. An investigation ensued which led the plaintiffs to believe that the mine was on the Butler property. Thereupon the complaint in this action was filed seeking damages for the ore removed; an accounting to determine the amount thereof; and an injunction to restrain any further trespass.

The defendants filed an answer and cross-complaint by which they denied the material allegations of the complaint; set up the defense of laches; sought to quiet their title to the mine; and asked for an injunction against the plaintiffs.

From a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs awarding damages in the sum of $161,558.23, the defendants appeal.

The primary controversy in this case concerns the location upon the ground of the south boundary line of the Butler property.

In 1879, W. F. Benson, a United States Deputy Surveyor, made a survey of Township 18 South, Range 13 Bast M.D.B.M. in which the Section 34 referred to in the Butler patent is located. The monument marking the southeast corner of said section is intact. However, the monument *24 marking the southwest corner thereof cannot be found. In his field notes Benson, the surveyor, records a tie of this southwest corner to two trees: one to the southwest and the other to the northwest. From the section corner the tree to the southwest was described as a forked pine, 24 inches in diameter, bearing south 26 degrees west, 690 links distant, and the tree to the northwest was described as a pine 10 inches in diameter, bearing north 56degrees west, 380 links distant.

In an effort to determine the location of the true south line of Section 34, the parties to this action caused several surveys to be made. Each resulted in a different boundary. In the course of these surveys, a surveyor by the name of Hard-grove found the fallen trunk of a forked pine tree which, undoubtedly, was one of the trees referred to by Benson in his field notes, for it carried the inscription “B T S 33 T 18 S R 13 E” (meaning, bearing tree—Section 33, Township 18 South, Range 13 East). Hardgrove identified this tree as the 24-inch southwest bearing tree described in Benson’s field notes, and, using it as such, established the southwest section corner in question.

Shortly thereafter, a surveyor by the name of Ross discovered the root system and burned remains of another tree, farther to the south, which he identified as the 24-inch pine tree in question. On October 20, 1955, using this tree as the Southwest bearing tree described in Benson’s field notes and using the scribed tree found by Hardgrove as the Northwest bearing tree described in those notes, and following the calls and distances recorded therein, Ross established what he testified was the southwest corner of Section 34.

The Ross section corner is south of the Hardgrove section corner.

Hardgrove never located a witness tree northwest of the corner which he established.

The trial court found that the corner established by Ross was the true section corner and described the southerly end line of Section 34 accordingly,. The pit from which the defendants had excavated ore is north of this line; within Section 34; and on the property of the plaintiffs.

The defendants claim that, in accepting the Ross corner as the true section corner, the court found that the 24-inch forked pine tree referred to in the Benson field notes was not southwest of the "corner, as recorded therein, but was northwest of the corner; that in so doing the court refused to *25 follow those notes, contrary to the rule of law which provides that the field notes of an approved government survey are conclusive on the owner of patented land described by the use of such survey (Weaver v. Howatt, 171 Cal. 302, 306 [152 P. 925]; Chapman v. Polack, 70 Cal. 487, 492 [11 P. 764]; Trabucco v. Sorrels, 113 Cal.App. 401, 403 [298 P. 521] ; Phelps v. Pacific Gas & Elec. Co., 84 Cal.App.2d 243, 247 [190 P.2d 209]).

The defendants’ contention is based upon the false premise that the scribed tree, which the court found was northwest of the Boss corner, was the 24-inch forked pine tree referred to in the field notes.' The evidence upon this point is in conflict. There is substantial proof, by fact and by inference, that this scribed tree was not the 24-inch forked pine tree in question. The finding in this regard is adequately supported by testimony from which the court could conclude that this tree was not 24 inches in diameter at the time of the survey, whereas the tree to the southwest, located by Boss, approximated this size; that the blaze on the scribed tree, when it was standing, faced in the direction of the corner as established by Boss, which connected it with that corner in view of the accepted custom of surveyors to cause the blaze on a witness tree to face the corner to which it is tied; and that this tree was in Section 33, requiring the common corner for Sections 33 and 34 to be to its southeast, because approved surveying practice required a tree to be marked to agree with the section in which it stands.

Contrary to the contention of defendants, the trial court did not change the position of any of the trees described in the field notes. Instead, it found that the remains of the tree described by Boss was the tree which Benson recorded as bearing southwest of the section corner, and that the fallen tree discovered by Hardgrove was the tree referred to as bearing northwest of that corner.

In addition to the testimony with respect to the bearing trees referred to in the field notes, there is other evidence that the location of the disputed section corner is at the place designated by Boss in his survey of October 20, 1955. In their opening brief, respondents cite eight different factual situations, supported by substantial evidence, each of which corroborates the finding of the trial court.

The defendants next attack the judgment on the ground that the amount awarded as damages is excessive.

The court found that the defendants converted in excess of *26 $600,000.

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Bluebook (online)
303 P.2d 573, 146 Cal. App. 2d 22, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butler-v-holman-calctapp-1956.