Case v. Ericson

258 P. 536, 44 Idaho 686, 1927 Ida. LEXIS 128
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 2, 1927
DocketNo. 4636.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 258 P. 536 (Case v. Ericson) 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
Case v. Ericson, 258 P. 536, 44 Idaho 686, 1927 Ida. LEXIS 128 (Idaho 1927).

Opinion

*690 BRINCK, Commissioner.

Plaintiff! is the owner of the north half of the northeast quarter, and defendants are the owners of the northwest quarter, of section 32, township 9 south, range 16 E., B. M., in Twin Falls county. Plaintiff brings this action to determine the boundary line between her land and the defendants’, it being alleged that the defendants erected a fence the south end of which is at the center of the section, and the north end of which is 49 feet east of the section corner on the north line of the section, thus cutting off a strip of plaintiff’s land, which strip is occupied by defendants. The defendants deny the allegation that the fence is not on the correct boundary line. From judgment establishing the fence at practically the line claimed by plaintiff, and containing certain remedial provisions, the defendants appeal.

The action was commenced in 1916 by counsel not now appearing for respondent, and, it seems, was permitted to remain dormant till defendants in 1924 demanded trial. The complaint asks equitable relief, but the cause was apparently tried as an action in ejectment. Among the errors assigned, appellants complain that the court should have made findings of fact and conclusions of law before it could have entered a judgment, and that the judgment could not be based upon the verdict of the jury. This is urged, however, merely as a specification of the insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict; but even if properly made, the assignment would be without merit, the case having been tried by counsel on the theory of ejectment.

The errors assigned which are necessary to consider involve the admission of evidence of a purported survey by *691 the county surveyor; the giving of certain instructions, and the denial of a motion by defendants for a directed verdict.

Plaintiff’s case rested principally upon the testimony of the witness Berg, county surveyor of Twin Falls county, who, in 1923, made a more or less complete survey of section 32. From his uncontradicted testimony it appears that the north end of plaintiff’s fence is located 48 feet east of a point equidistant between the northeast and northwest section corners of section 32, if the points assumed by this witness to be such section corners were in fact the true corners of the section. He testified that he found none of the monuments of the original survey at either of the section corners or at the quarter-section comer on the north side of the section, and that, in his opinion, the quarter-section comer was a lost corner, but that the section corners were merely obliterated and not lost.

There was evidence for defendants tending to show that when the fence here in question was built, in 1907, its north end was located 25 feet directly south of what appeared to be a government monument consisting of a marked stone set in the ground beside a mound of earth; that the stone remained there until 1913, when it was pulled out of the ground by a boy driving along the road in which the stone was imbedded; and that the stone was soon afterwards reset by a surveyor at the exact place it had previously occupied.

If the stone as it appeared in 1907 was the original government monument, and in the place where the government surveyor had set it, and the testimony of defendants’ witnesses as to its being reset in the same location is to be believed, then the quarter-section corner is not lost; but its original location, being thus determinable, would mark the north point of the boundary between the lands of the parties. If, on the other hand, this evidence is not to be believed, or if the stone as originally located was not the monument placed there by the government surveyor, the north point of the boundary between the parties would be a point equidistant between the northeast and northwest *692 corners of the section. (Craven v. Lesh, 22 Ida. 463, 126 Pac. 774; and see Sala v. Crane, 38 Ida. 402, 221 Pac. 556.)

In order for plaintiff to prevail upon the theory that the quarter-section corner was lost, it became necessary for her to establish by competent evidence the correct location of the northeast and northwest corners of the section, from which the quarter-section comer could be measured. It is appellants’ first contention that the court erred in admitting evidence of the survey made by Berg, for the reason, as they urge, that the section corners adopted by him were not shown to be correct, and were not determined by him as a basis for his survey in accordance with the rules properly applicable thereto.

C. S., see. 3674, provides that no survey made by the county surveyor or other surveyor shall be considered legal evidence in any court within the state, except such surveys as are made in accordance with the United States Manual of Surveying Instructions, the circular on restoration of lost or obliterated corners and subdivision of sections, issued by the General Land Office, or by the authority of the United States, the state of Idaho, or by mutual consent of the parties. The circular referred to in the statute is quoted in Craven v. Lesh, supra, as follows:

“An obliterated corner is one where no visible evidence remains of the work of the original surveyor in establishing it. Its location may, however, have been preserved beyond all question by acts of landowners, and by the memory of those who knew and recollect the true situs of the original monument. In such eases it is not a lost corner.”

And: “A lost corner is one whose position cannot be determined, beyond reasonable doubt, either from original marks or reliable marks or reliable external evidence.”

The United States Manual of Surveying Instructions further says:

“A corner will not be considered as lost if its position can be recovered satisfactorily by means of the testimony and acts of witnesses having positive knowledge of the precise location of the original monument.”

*693 The witness Berg rested his assumption that the points he fixed were the true section corners, not upon any original monuments found by him at those points, nor upon testimony of witnesses of persons having knowledge of the facts; but merely upon an inspection of the existing surroundings of the supposed corners. No effort was made by him to discover original monuments on the line east or west of the corners of this particular section. He found at each of the north section corners of section 32 a road running north and south, and one running east and west. At the northeast corner he found fences, there being a fence corner at each of the four corners of the road intersection, and on the east side of the north and south road were some trees apparently 12 or 15 years old. There were also some telephone and power lines located along the road. He knew that the road had been in its present location some 18 years, and that a highway district, which had been established some three or four years prior to the trial, ran its roads parallel to these corners, and that the highway district had a surveyor whose business it was to determine the correct location for the roads, but he had no knowledge that such surveyor located these corners.

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Bluebook (online)
258 P. 536, 44 Idaho 686, 1927 Ida. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/case-v-ericson-idaho-1927.