Keller v. United States

6 Cl. Ct. 724, 1984 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1251
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedNovember 26, 1984
DocketNo. 5-83C
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 6 Cl. Ct. 724 (Keller v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keller v. United States, 6 Cl. Ct. 724, 1984 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1251 (cc 1984).

Opinion

OPINION

NETTESHEIM, Judge.

After trial the court found and concluded that plaintiff Marty Keller, his wife Florence E. Keller, and the Kellers’ other partners (“plaintiffs”) in a land ownership venture called Last Dollar Associates had failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence the existence of a contract whereby defendant, through the Forest Service of the United States Department of Agriculture, agreed to perform an independent resurvey of plaintiffs’ property.

Mr. Keller had contributed money for a resurvey described in an August 29, 1972 letter from an agent of the Forest Service (the survey to be performed by the Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management), as follows: “The survey will probably be an independent resurvey with all private land being traeted and section and Vi corners being brass capped.” An independent resurvey entails tracting, or running a metes and bounds description, of private lands as they were originally sold by the Government. Capping of section and quarter corners would be accomplished as part of either a dependent or an independent resurvey. Mr. Keller, who did not know what the term “independent resurvey” meant, thought that tracting signified “putting a mark of some kind, an official mark at each corner of our piece of land.” He knew what section corners were.

Overall, Mr. Keller’s understanding of the quoted language in the August 1972 letter was that the Government undertook to survey his property in the same manner [725]*725as if a private engineer were engaged to do the job. This view was not supported by plaintiffs’ expert private surveyor. The court found that Mr. Keller lacked sufficient understanding of the elements of an independent resurvey to support the reasonableness of his interpretation of the contract terms. Given that defendant admitted that it had contracted to resurvey plaintiffs’ property, it was also concluded that the word “probably” reserved to the Government an option to vary performance.

The issue to be decided after post-trial submissions is whether defendant reasonably determined to perform a dependent resurvey and in the process to abandon the independent survey already commenced, including the obliteration of some, but not all, of the monuments set during the independent resurvey.

FACTS

Plaintiffs’ property, which had never been surveyed privately, consists of approximately 200 acres of mostly mountainous land in sections 19 and 30, Township 43 North, Range 9 West of the New Mexico Principal Meridian (“T.43N., R.9W., N.M.P. M.”) in the Telluride, Colorado area. In late 1970 the Forest Service requested that the Department of the Interior’s Bureau of Land Management (the “BLM”) undertake a cooperative resurvey of certain lands in the Telluride area, including part of plaintiffs’ property. A July 18,1982 letter from the Forest Service indicates that the purpose of the resurvey was “to identify both private and forest lands in the Telluride area.” A cooperative resurvey involves contribution by private landowners to defray the costs of resurvey work initiated at the request of private landowners and a government agency (here the Forest Service), the principal cost being borne by the Government. In this case the private landowners were asked to contribute a minimum of $16,000, of which plaintiffs paid their share of $480.00.

The Manual of Instructions for the Survey of the Public Lands of the United States, published in 1973 by the BLM [hereinafter cited as the “Manual”], is recognized by the BLM as the Bible of government resurveys and conceded by plaintiffs’ expert as governing what type of resurvey should have been performed. A resurvey is an attempt to retrace the prior official survey. In pertinent part the Manual provides:

Government resurveys involve considerations of a different character from those relating to original surveys. The object is two-fold: First, the adequate protection of existing rights acquired under the original survey in the matter of location on the earth’s surface, and second, the proper marking of the boundaries of the remaining public lands.

Manual, ch. VI, § 6-2.

According to chapter VI, section 6-4 of the Manual, a dependent resurvey differs from an independent resurvey in that the former retraces and reestablishes the lines of the “original survey in their true original positions according to the best available evidence of the positions of the original corners.” In other words, the corners and quarter corners are located and monument-ed. An independent resurvey, on the other hand, involves the establishment of new section lines independent of and without reference to the corners of the original survey. Manual § 6-5. A dependent resurvey does not locate the boundaries of patented lands, or those lands originally alienated from -the Government to private landowners. An independent resurvey tracts patented lands (by a metes and bounds description) and monuments accordingly within sections and quarter sections, although, in doing so, an independent resurvey cannot vary the boundaries of patented lands.1 From plaintiffs’ perspective [726]*726an independent resurvey would have been much more valuable than the dependent resurvey actually completed, because the additional brass caps marking patented land in an independent resurvey would provide markers proximate to plaintiffs’ property line (even if the patented land is not coterminous with plaintiffs’ property) and thereby reduce substantially the cost of a private survey.

Although the BLM survey team was present in the Telluride area before September 1972 performing investigative work leading to an independent resurvey, it was not until August 5, 1975, that the BLM’s Office of Cadastral Survey proposed special instructions providing for an independent resurvey of the south and west boundaries and a portion of the subdivisional lines in T.43N., R.9W. The BLM’s regional office approved the proposal on August 11, 1975. The August 5 recommendation recapitulated the efforts of the Office of Ca-dastral Survey to verify the last official survey of T.43N., R.9W., which was conducted by William H. Clark in 1882. The recommendation concluded:

After a careful review of all survey records, local surveys, and interrogation of local residents and several surveyors, it was concluded the Clark survey was probably either fictitious or subject to even greater distortion than indicated on the official plat____
An extensive retracement of the Clark survey has been made and diligent search for evidence thereof failed to produce any authenticated corners____ There are no fences or property corners which appear to have been established at original survey monuments____
After evaluation of all data obtained which would dictate appropriate methods of resurveys there is one obvious conclusion. The survey of Clark in 1882 is literally nonexistent____ The complete dissimilarity between the survey record and the actual field conditions has been recognized since the date of the first surveys in the area____
******
The survey is either fictitious or totally obliterated. The corners thereof have not been found and what claims that are dependent on the public surveys have been located at record positions rather than by any actual dependent resurvey.

(Emphasis added.)

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Related

Mannatt v. United States
48 Fed. Cl. 148 (Federal Claims, 2000)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Cl. Ct. 724, 1984 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keller-v-united-states-cc-1984.