Churchill Co. v. Beal

278 P. 894, 99 Cal. App. 482
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 18, 1929
DocketDocket No. 3806.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 278 P. 894 (Churchill Co. v. Beal) 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
Churchill Co. v. Beal, 278 P. 894, 99 Cal. App. 482 (Cal. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

PLUMMER, J.

Plaintiff had judgment in an action brought to quiet title to certain lands described in its complaint. From this judgment the defendants appeal. While the action is, in form, one to quiet title, the only issue really involved is the location of the west boundary line of township number 47 north, range number 2 east, Mount Diablo base and meridian, in so far as it affects sections 18 and 19. If the boundary line claimed by the plaintiff, and adopted by the trial court as the true west boundary line of the lands belonging to the plaintiff, is the true boundary line, then the judgment of the trial court should be affirmed. If, on the other hand, as contended by the defendants, the boundary line as run by a surveyor named George W. Wakefield, in 1906, is the true westerly boundary line of said sections, then and in that case the judgment should be reversed. The distance between the two lines just referred to includes a strip along said sections a trifle over 5 chains in width.

The record shows that in 1858 one Tracy surveyed the west boundary line of township 47, the field-notes of which were put in evidence. The Tracy survey was on the town *484 ship line only; he did not survey section or subdivision lines of the land. In October, 1873, while the land was still a part of the public domain of the United States, Ales McKay resurveyed certain township lines, and in the field-notes of his survey refers to a number of natural objects along the line of the survey, such as the road from Yreka to Oregon, Cottonwood Creek and the rock fence; also a point where the line enters certain low swamp or wet land. McKay’s survey included a survey of the sections and subdivision of the lands involved in this suit, including the meander lines through sections 18 and 19. The field-notes of this survey were introduced in evidence. The McKay survey was approved February 3', 1880, and in this manner became the official survey of the land. A plat of this survey was filed in the Shasta Land Office on April 1, 1884. The lands in dispute were shown as surveyed lands on the plat just referred to. Following this survey the lands belonging to the plaintiff were conveyed by the United States either to the plaintiff or to the plaintiff’s grantors, by patents dated May 6, 1887, December 3, 1889, and August 20, 1902. The plaintiff’s title to whatever lands were and are included in these patents is not disputed. The only question is as to where these lands are located, starting for a description thereof from the true boundary line to the west. In 1906, in order to locate some unsurveyed lands lying to the east of the lands belonging to the plaintiff, a resurvey was made of township 47 north, range 2 east, M. D. B. & M., by a surveyor named George W. Wakefield. This survey was approved in 1909, and the plat thereof filed in the surveyor-general’s office in San Francisco. The Wakefield survey does not follow what the court found to be the true line of the McKay survey, and, so far as the record shows, the field-notes thereof do not make mention of any corners or of natural or artificial objects mentioned and referred to in the McKay survey. As we read the, record we do not find that the Wakefield survey makes any mention of any monument or stake at the southwest corner of section 19, as located by McKay. The trial court found that the southwest corner of section 19, as located by McKay, and which constitutes the starting point for determining the lands belonging to the plaintiff and the lands granted by the United States to the plaintiff and the plaintiff’s grantors, *485 was at a point a trifle over 5 chains east from the line indicated and the point indicated by the Wakefield survey. That the trial court was correct in the location of the southwest corner of section 19 is supported by the field-notes of the McKay survey. The first object referred to in the field-notes as the west line of section 19 is extended north, is the road running from Yreka to Oregon. This road runs in a diagonal direction from the southeast to the northwest, and is mentioned in the field-notes of the McKay survey as being distant from the southeast corner 3.50 chains. On the Wakefield survey the line crosses this road at a distance from the southwest corner of section 19, of 6.80 chains. The next object referred to in the McKay survey is Cottonwood Creek, which, on the McKay survey, is 12 chains north of the southwest corner of section 19. On the Wakefield survey it is north 13.30 chains; thence following the line northerly on the McKay survey, we find a rock fence distant form the southwest corner of section 19, 62.05 chains. This rock fence runs in a northwesterly and southeasterly direction, and is intercepted by the Wakefield line at a distance of 71.79 chains from the southwest corner of section 19, as shown by the Wakefield survey. Likewise, another object known as the “Emigrant Road,” referred to in the McKay survey, crosses the westerly line of section 19 at a distance of 76.90 chains from the southwest corner of section 19.

Irrespective of oral testimony of some witnesses that they were familiar with the location of the southwest corner of section 19, as designated in the McKay survey, these objects and the calls and distances were and are sufficient to support the conclusion of the trial court as to the true location of the southwest corner of section 19. In other words, the field-notes and the objects referred to in the McKay survey cannot be superimposed upon the line run as the westerly line of sections 18 and 19 by Wakefield, which again supports the finding of the trial court as to the location of the southwest corner of section 19, as established by McKay, and the true westerly line of the sections involved in this action.

The record contains the testimony of two civil engineers or surveyors, one named Harvey J. Barter, who, for a number of years was the county surveyor of Shasta County, and *486 also the testimony of a surveyor named Zumwalt. These witnesses testified to retracing the lines run by McKay, Barter testifying that he found something to mark every section corner and quarter-section corner of the survey run by McKay, and that he found the southwest corner of section 19 of the survey run by McKay. These resurveys or retracings of the lines extended back over a period of twenty years; that he was not making a new survey, but a location of the McKay corners on the ground, and that he followed, strictly, the McKay field-notes; that he found the objects referred to in the McKay field-notes at the distances therein stated from the southwest corner of section 19. A witness by the name of Churchill testified that he had known the southwest corner of section 19 since 1890. The surveyor Zumwalt testified to finding the objects referred to in the McKay field-notes, at substantially the same distance from the southwest corner of section 19, as stated in the field-notes. The witness Barter also testified that he was familiar with the location on the ground of the corners marking the west line of sections 18 and 19, according to the Wakefield survey, and that their position, with reference to the McKay comers, was a considerable distance west from the same corners set by McKay.

The summary shows that there are two surveys involved in this action, one by McKay in 1873 and the other by Wakefield in 1906. The plaintiff claims title and location of land having its westerly boundary line according to the McKay survey.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Casad v. Qualls
70 Cal. App. 3d 921 (California Court of Appeal, 1977)
Ramirez v. Mookini
207 Cal. App. 2d 42 (California Court of Appeal, 1962)
Larson v. Larson
202 P.2d 121 (California Court of Appeal, 1949)
Schneider v. Pascoe
118 P.2d 860 (California Court of Appeal, 1941)
United States v. Aikins
84 F. Supp. 260 (S.D. California, 1940)
Hoffman v. Van Duzee
65 P.2d 1330 (California Court of Appeal, 1937)
People v. Covell
62 P.2d 602 (California Court of Appeal, 1936)
Trabucco v. Sorrels
298 P. 521 (California Court of Appeal, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
278 P. 894, 99 Cal. App. 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/churchill-co-v-beal-calctapp-1929.