Carr v. Schomberg

232 P.2d 597, 104 Cal. App. 2d 850, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1700
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 21, 1951
DocketCiv. 14643
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 232 P.2d 597 (Carr v. Schomberg) 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
Carr v. Schomberg, 232 P.2d 597, 104 Cal. App. 2d 850, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1700 (Cal. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

PETERS, P. J.

This is a disputed boundary case. The land involved is located in a mountainous area of Santa Clara County. The plaintiffs admittedly own the northwest quarter of the northeast quarter of Section 31, Township 7 South, Range 2 West, M. D. B. & M. The defendants admittedly own the northeast quarter of the northwest quarter of the same section. These two parcels adjoin each other, so that the westerly line of the plaintiffs’ parcel is the easterly line of the defendants ’ parcel. Defendants claim that the questioned boundary runs north and south through a certain sycamore tree, while plaintiffs claim that it runs from and through a certain 2-inch pipe and old hub. The area in dispute between the old hub and the sycamore tree is 575 feet wide. Plaintiffs brought this action to quiet their title to their parcel, including the disputed strip, which runs the length of their west boundary. Defendants denied the material allegations of the complaint, pleaded adverse possession, and cross-complained for an adjudication of their rights in the property. The trial court determined that the proper boundary ran through the sycamore tree, and established that line as the true boundary between the parties. The court found that for more than 20 years prior to the commencement of this action the true dividing boundary between the two parcels was unknown to the respective parties; that the true boundary runs through the sycamore tree; that the respective owners agreed that the boundary should run through the sycamore tree; that since such agreement was entered into more than 20 years ago the defendants and their predecessors in interest have occupied all of the disputed area west of the sycamore tree line and have constructed buildings thereon and have exercised complete and exclusive use, possession and enjoyment of the disputed area; that they have, in addition, paid all taxes thereon and have had actual, notorious, exclusive, peaceable and uninterrupted adverse possession of the area west of the sycamore tree line; that for more than 20 years prior to the commencement of this action plaintiffs have not been seized or possessed of the disputed area. Based on these findings the trial court entered its judgment determining that defendants are the owners of the strip iri dispute. Plaintiffs appeal.

Although the evidence is conflicting, the finding that the *853 true boundary between the two parcels runs through the sycamore tree is supported by the evidence. Likewise, the findings that the parties had agreed upon the sycamore tree line as constituting the true boundary, and that defendants have title by adverse possession are amply supported.

The two adjoining parcels are located in a mountainous area of Santa Clara County. The only usable portion of either parcel is the area included within a canyon through which runs Stevens Creek, which also runs through the disputed strip. This usable area is principally adapted for summer cabins. Defendants or their predecessors, with full knowledge of the plaintiffs or their predecessors, in the disputed area have constructed several houses and sheds, and a swimming pool, all assessed at $1,070.

The respective chains of title of the parties are not in dispute. The Carrs’ title is predicated upon a United States patent to N. Ehrhorn, recorded in 1890. In 1943, the property was distributed to Ehrhorn’s widow, and her estate sold it to the Carrs in 1946.

The defendants’ title evolves from a title in Mason, Sr., dating back to 1913. Mason, Sr., sold to Mason, Jr., in 1929. Mason, Jr., sold to Schomberg in 1942.

After the Carrs purchased their parcel in 1946 the present dispute arose. In 1947, the Carrs employed one James, a civil engineer, to make a survey of their parcel. James made a study of a previous private survey made for Ehrhorn in 1890. James also studied the county records, various maps on file with the county surveyor, official maps of the Department of Interior, and the official notes appertaining thereto. James also hired a surveyor, Nolte by name, to make a field survey. Nolte examined the same documentary material above referred to, and then made a field survey. He testified at great length and quite technically as to his findings. Plaintiffs place their main reliance on his testimony and contend that it is uncontradicted, and urge that it compels a reversal. In substance, Nolte testified that he tried to locate old survey markers; that he found old brushed lines and other survey points from previous surveys; that he found various hubs which he assumed were corner markers; and that, among other things, he discovered, at what he claimed was the northwest corner of the plaintiffs’ property, a 2" pipe behind an old hub inscribed “14 S.” In this general area were found witness and bearing trees as shown on the Ehrhorn private survey of 1890. Some blazed trees and stumps were found, *854 but on some there were no references, so that they could not be tied in with the survey. Nolte could not testify as to who had set the various hubs found by him. He testified that the brushed lines were about 10 or 15 years old, so that they were more recent than any government survey and more recent than the Bhrhorn survey, and that he did not know who had made them. He admitted that the official government survey did not contain any description of the bearing trees, but some of them appeared in the Bhrhorn survey. He located the hub for the northwest corner of plaintiffs’ property within inches of the spot' fixed for the same corner in the Bhrhorn survey. Nolte’s survey seems to be based primarily on the references in Bhrhorn’s map, the result of a private survey.

The main witness for defendants was Williams, a civil engineer and land surveyor. He did not make an actual survey, but he had a crew go out and locate the sycamore tree and make various ties to it. He gave quite a lecture on the proper method of making resurveys, and commented at length on the various maps and notes in evidence. He testified that there had been two government surveys, one in 1868, and one in 1882, and that, as between two government surveys, the later survey is the established one. He put the field notes of the 1882 survey into evidence. He then pointed out that, in its township, section 31 is a “marginal,” “closing” or “long” section. A government surveyor, according to this witness, first lays out the township lines, and then subdivides this area into sections. The last section laid out is called a “marginal,” “closing” or “long” section, which means that it may be larger or smaller than the standard section, dependent upon how accurately the township lines and the other section lines were laid out. If the Government Rules of Survey were followed, section 31 is such a closing section. This section had a surplus. According to the government rules normally followed, this excess would be put in the westerly half of the section, which would put the disputed strip in defendants’ parcel, with the boundary along the line of the sycamore tree. Admittedly, however, the government manual recognizes another method of dividing up this surplus known as the “direct proportional method,” which would divide the surplus up among the various quarter sections.

The sycamore tree was blazed with the letters “B.T.” and “S.E.” Those marks looked like they had been on the tree for a long time, probably since 1910 or 1911.

The government map of 1882 was made from the field notes

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Bluebook (online)
232 P.2d 597, 104 Cal. App. 2d 850, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1700, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carr-v-schomberg-calctapp-1951.