Hoekman v. Iowa Civil Tp.

132 N.W. 1004, 28 S.D. 206, 1911 S.D. LEXIS 114
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 132 N.W. 1004 (Hoekman v. Iowa Civil Tp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoekman v. Iowa Civil Tp., 132 N.W. 1004, 28 S.D. 206, 1911 S.D. LEXIS 114 (S.D. 1911).

Opinion

McCOY, J.

In this case defendants demurred to plaintiffs’ complaint on the grounds (i) that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against defendants, or either of them; (2) that there is a defect of parties plaintiff; (3) that several causes of action have been improperly united in this: That the plaintiffs are- not in any way jointly interested in this cause of action; that their interests are wholly several. The demurrer was overruled and exception taken, and such ruling of the court now assigned as error.

The complaint demurred to is as follows: That plaintiffs and each of them now are residents and taxpayers and owners in fee and in severalty of a large amount of farm lands in said Iowa civil township, in Douglas county, S. D., and bring this action on behalf of themselves and all other persons similarly situated, who desire to become parties plaintiff and share the expense of this action. That the defendant Iowa civil township is now, and for more than 25 years has been, a public corporation, and that, defendants Henderson, Van der Meer, and Plooeter are the duly elected, qualified, and acting supervisors of said Iowa civil township, and that defendant Ploekman is clerk thereof. That in 1868 the lands embraced in said township, then being a part of the public lands of the United States, were duly surveyed and subdivided by a surveyor of the United States, under and by virtue of the laws of the United States, and were officially known and described as township 99 N., range 65 W., of the fifth principal meridian. That all the lands in said township, except school sections, were entered more than 25 years ago, under the laws of the United States, and patents issued therefore to the claimants thereof, among whom are plaintiffs herein, or their grantors, and that plaintiffs and their grantors have since said entries possessed and occupied said lands, and farmed and improved the same, and claimed exclusive ownership thereto, in accordance with the original mounds, section, and quarter section corners made aiid established by said United States survey thereof, and that during [208]*208all said time the section lines of said township, as marked by said original government mound's and corners, have been traveled by the public as highways, and large sums of money paid out and expended in building bridges and culverts and in working and grading said roads. That in 1886 and in 1890 one Huston, a surveyor, re-marked the original government mounds, section and quarter section corners in said township, and that such re-marking by Huston was coincident with and occupied the same place as the original markings made by the original government survey. That in July, 1909, the defendant Iowa civil township, through its board of supervisors, entered into an alleged contract with one Bruce, whereby Bruce agreed to erect land markers, consisting of red granite stones, at the section and quarter section corners of said township, at the points said corners were located by the original government survey, and that thereafter tlie said Bruce, professing to make a resurvey ( of all the lands embraced in said township, erected red granite stones at the points so designated by him as the section and quarter section corners of said township, and that thereafter, and shortly prior to the commencement of this action, the defendant Iowa civil township, acting through its board of supervisors, passed a resolution, therein described as a notice, declaring said lines as run and the corners as located by Bruce to be the true corners, and notifying all property owners to conform to said lines. That said notice was published in the Corsica Globe for three issues prior to the commencement of this action, and is as follows: “Whereas, at a special meeting in and for Iowa civil township, duly and legally called, held on the 10th day of July, 1909, it was decided to erect landmarks at the section and quarter section corners of said township, and that the supervisors of said township^ should contract with some competent, surveyor for the erection of such landmarks; and whereas, the supervisors of said township entered into a valid contract with one W. B. Bruce, of Yankton, South Dakota, for the erection of such landmarks throughout the township; and whereas, under and in accordance with said contract such landmarks have now been erected at all section and quarter section corners throughout said township: Now, therefore, notice is hereby given, that [209]*209said landmarks, being red granite stones, indicate the true section and quarter section corners throughout said township, and therefore indicate the true section lines and public highways of said township, and all landowners and land occupants of said township are hereby notified to forthwith remove all fences and other obstruction now located in- or upon any of the section lines or public highways of said township, as indicated by said landmarks, and in all things to forthwith conform to the section lines and highways, as indicated by said red granite landmarks. And you are further notified that, unless you have in all respects complied with this notice within ten days from the date of the first publication thereof, the board of supervisors of said township will proceed by all necessary and legal means to remove all obstructions from the section lines and public highways, as indicated by such landmarks. By order of the Board of Supervisors of Iowa civil township. Attest: Gerrit Hoekman, Clerk, C. Van der M-eer, Chairman.” That said Bruce, in making said alleged resurvey of said township and placing of said landmarks, did not follow or regard, and did not attempt to follow or regard, the original government mounds so placed and established when said lands were originally surveyed under the laws of the United States; nor to ascertain the original location of said mounds, and did not observe and follow the boundaries and monuments as run and marked by the original survey, nor to ascertain the original location of such mounds when the same had become obliterated, but absolutely disregarded the same, and likewise disregarded the survey of said Huston and the original mounds found, located, and described by him. That in re-establishing lost or destroyed corners said Bruce did not follow the rules adopted by the general government in the resurvey of public lands, but wholly disregarded such instructions; that said Bruce did not run his north and south lines straight from one side of the township to the other, but varied the lines, running the same through the two lower tiers of section of said township in different directions from the lines running north and south through the remaining sections thereof, and made said alleged resurvey and located said alleged [210]*210landmarks, not for the purpose of making the same conform with the original government mounds, but for the purpose, apparently, of equalizing and making uniform in amount of acreage the different quarter sections in said township, and for the correction of alleged errors in said original United States government survey.

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Bluebook (online)
132 N.W. 1004, 28 S.D. 206, 1911 S.D. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoekman-v-iowa-civil-tp-sd-1911.