Dougherty v. Hood

78 So. 2d 324, 262 Ala. 311, 1954 Ala. LEXIS 569
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 16, 1954
Docket5 Div. 606
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 78 So. 2d 324 (Dougherty v. Hood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dougherty v. Hood, 78 So. 2d 324, 262 Ala. 311, 1954 Ala. LEXIS 569 (Ala. 1954).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This is an appeal by respondent in an equity suit to settle a disputed boundary line between complainant and respondent.

A motion to dismiss the appeal appears in this cause. It is not on transcript paper and was filed after the cause was submitted, so that there has been no submission on the motion. It is based on a failure to file the transcript in this Court within the time required by law. Therefore, it does not go to the want of jurisdiction of this Court, and in such status it cannot be considered.

The parties are coterminous landowners in section 13, Township 18, Range 24 in Lee County. Complainant owns land to the north and respondents own land to the south of the line in dispute. Complainant’s paper title makes her land extend to the south boundary line of the SWj4 of NWj4 of section 13. Respondents’ paper title extends north to the same line, being in NWy4 of SWy4 of section 13.

There is a wire fence extending east and west on or near the half mile line between the SW14 of NW14 and NW% of SW%. Complainant claims that the true line according to the government survey extends south of that fence and about ten to fifteen feet from it. Respondents claim that the fence is on the true line: but if that is not the true line they have had adverse possession for more than ten years of the land south of the fence, even though this area in dispute may be found to be in the SWj4 of NW14 and not in the NWJi of SW*4 of section 13. For a long time there has existed across the forty a roadway extending east and west and south of the fence. It has been in some sort of use for a great many years. For an uncertain period respondents have maintained a gap of some kind at each end of the road so that the land south of the fence, including the road area, could be enclosed as one field. People would “let down the gap” and go through without let or hindrance. Finally a dispute arose over it, resulting in this suit. Respondents claimed adversely to the fence erected by complainant’s predecessor in title and such claim has Continued for a long indefinite period of time. Complainant had a survey made by a surveyor named Sizemore, by which there was an attempt to locate the true line with reference to the government survey. This line run by the surveyor is the line complainant contends is the true dividing line between the two forties and claims that respondents have not acquired by adverse possession the strip between it and the fence. The line was also run by a surveyor named Pickett, which is said to be located substantially the same as that run by Sizemore. The details of the Pickett survey are not otherwise given, and he did not testify. Before Pickett made his survey the parties agreed that he should do so and they would abide by such survey. Respondents Dougherty did not abide by it.

It is apparent from the decree that the court meant to hold that the true line between the two forties is as surveyed by Sizemore and Pickett, and undertook to comply with section 4, Title 47, Code, by appointing Sizemore as a surveyor who was found to be competent, “to establish a permanent stone or iron landmark at the east end and another at the west end of the aforesaid adjoining tracts of land on the line herein fixed as the true boundary line between the respective parties; that he shall mark thereon the following words, ‘Judicial landmark’; and he shall then make due report of his action to this court as provided by section 4, Title 47 of the Code of Alabama of 1940, and the register of this court will forthwith issue a proper order to said surveyor to proceed accordingly.” The decree then directed that a writ, of possession issue, using as the true line the one *313 “fixed herein”. It is obvious that the court was rendering a final decree and directed the surveyor to mark the corners of the line which he had surveyed according to his survey. It is distinctly not a direction for a survey to he made to locate the line as authorized by section S, Title 47, Code, before a final decree is rendered. The trial was conducted under Equity Rule 56, Code 1940, Tit. 7 Appendix, and the testimony was heard in open court by the trial judge.

In offering testimony on the trial, section 372 (1), Title 7, Pocket Part, Code, was observed with respect to objections to it. The court did not specially rule on the legality of any evidence, but under that statute, we presume, he only considered that which was relevant, material, competent and legal. We must uphold the finding by the court when there is legal evidence before him as if it were the verdict of a jury notwithstanding section 17, par. 1, Title 13, Code. Andrews v. Grey, 191 Ala. 152, 153, 74 So. 62. The trial judge “looked over the disputed land” in question. In the light of that situation we do not feel justified in reversing the finding of the court on the issue of adverse possession.

Appellants complain that the evidence was not sufficient to support the finding that the true line was as run by the surveyor and which the court had adopted. In locating the true half section line here involved, the surveyor testified that he began at a point at the SW corner of section 13, which was marked by a rock two feet high; that Mr. C. N. Godfrey pointed out the rock to him as the section corner, which was the intersection of two hedgerows. He testified he was not able to prove the field notes; that he had the field notes but the land had been in cultivation at one time and there were no trees or stumps that reasonably could have been there at the time of the original survey. This corner of section 13 was one actually surveyed and fixed by the original government survey and the field notes undertook to locate it. There is no evidence that Mr. Godfrey had any knowledge that the rock was on the corner as located by the government survey, and there was no other evidence that it was on the true corner. There are various ways to find the true location of a section corner. If there are no original markings of corners of the section and the field notes cannot help in that respect, and there is no subsequent official survey, other authentic sources of information must be pursued. The evidence must locate with reasonable certainty the lost corner. And whether it is so, is finally a question for the court (or jury) based on the evidence. Billingsley v. Bates, 30 Ala. 376, 380. A surveyor of long experience may sometimes give his opinion as an expert that the line as surveyed is the true line. The surveyor in this case did not give such testimony. The fact that a certain location is generally known and acquiesced in is admissible. Billingsley v. Bates, supra; Ford v. Bradford, 212 Ala. 515 (7 and 8), 103 So. 549; Clark on Surveying and Boundaries (2d Ed.) sections 348, 349. Cf. McLaurine v. Knowles, 257 Ala. 8, 57 So.2d 543.

The half section line here in dispute in section 13 was not established by the government survey. Nolen v. Palmer, 24 Ala. 391. It is provided in U.S.C.A., Title 43, § 752, that “the corners of half and quarter sections, not marked on the surveys, shall he placed as nearly as possible equidistant from two corners which stand on the same line.” To comply with that statute it is necessary to locate the SW corner and the NW comer of section 13, and find a point equidistant from each of them. Nolen v. Palmer, supra. Those corners should be located according to the required standards when they are available. Whether those standards have been met is not solely a question for the surveyor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 So. 2d 324, 262 Ala. 311, 1954 Ala. LEXIS 569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dougherty-v-hood-ala-1954.