Luther v. Walker

1 S.W.2d 6, 175 Ark. 846, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 647
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 19, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1 S.W.2d 6 (Luther v. Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Luther v. Walker, 1 S.W.2d 6, 175 Ark. 846, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 647 (Ark. 1927).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Appellants are the owners of lots 6, 7, 9 and 10, in the southeast quarter of section 1, township 9 north, range 4 west, and broug’ht this .suit to recover possession of a house alleged to be located on lot 10 in that quarter section. Appellee, Mrs. Denny, is the owner of the southwest quarter of this section, and insists that the house in question is on her land. The question between these coterminous owners is therefore the location of the true line between these two quarter sections.

The field-notes of the original United States survey and the Grovernment plat of section .1, township 9 north, range 4 west, was offered in evidence, and it appears from these records that the southwest quarter contains 160 acres and that the southeast quarter is. divided into four lots, numbered 6, 7, 9 and 10, each containing 40 acres, and a fifth lot, numbered 8, a parallelogram in shape, containing 46 acres, which last named lot lies along the east line of the section, which line is also the range line 'between ranges 3 west and 4 west. White River runs near the southeast corner of this section, and the testimony shows that, to such an extent as the river has changed its course since the original Government survey, which is very slight, the river has moved east, and not west.

The field-notes show the south line of this section to be 92.50 .chains in length, while the undisputed testimony shows, according to four separate surveys thereof, that the actual length of the south line of the section is only 75 chains, and that the south line of the section, if run from the southwest corner thereof in accordance with the field-notes, for a distance of 92.50 chains, as called for by the field-notes, would not only run across the range line which divides section 1, township 9 north, range 4 west, from section 6, township 9 north, range 3 west, but would also extend across White River, no part of which stream, according to either the field-notes or the plat, is in section 1, township 9 north, range 4 west.

The southwest corner of the section was found, and exists as an established corner, and the northwest corner of the southwest quarter was also located and established, but neither the southeast corner of the southwest quarter nor the southeast corner of the section itself has ever been found. In fact, every survey of the south half of this section made since the original Government survey demonstrates the inaccuracy and falsity of the original field-notes and the plat thereof. These field-notes and the plat thereof show the course and distance of the interior lines dividing the southeast quarter into five lots, but the conclusion is inevitable that the survey as reported was never in fact made on the east and south lines. The location of the range lines and the river makes it impossible for tbe field-notes to be correct, so that tbe southeast corner of the section, according to the field-notes, has never been found and is nonexistent in fact, yet this corner must be placed' in the range line, because that line forms the boundary of section 1, township 9 north, range 4 west, on the west, and section 6, township 9 north, range 3 west, on the east. This southeast corner of the section must be in the range line, because it cannot be anywhere else, yet the field-notes show the length of the south line of section 1 to be 92.50 chains, whereas every survey shows the actual length of this south line to be only 75 chains. We have therefore the case of an incorrect original Government survey, resulting in the loss of the southeast corner of the south-west quarter of the section and the southeast corner of the section itself.

A witness named Shelton, who was a farm laborer, and who did not profess to know anything about the field-notes, testified that he was present when the south.line .of the southwest quarter of the section-was surveyed, and assisted the surveyor, whose name he did not remember* in making the survey. He testified that the southwest corner of the section was found and marked, a fact about which none of the witnesses, differ, as the location of that corner has been definitely and accurately established. He also testified that the surveyor ran the south line of the southwest quarter, and rocks were placed at the southeast corner of the quarter section according to that survey.- He admitted, however, that the southeast corner of. the section was not found, and that that corner would be in, or across, the river. According to the testimony of this witness, the southeast corner of the southwest quarter, as thus located, would place the house in question on appellee’s land, and would give her the strip of land here in question.

We attach no importance, however, to the testimony of this, witness. He did not testify that the southeast corner of the southwest quarter was located, or that any witness trees or other monuments were found showing that corner. The surveyor did not find this quarter' section corner; he merely located a corner, and this was evi clently done by surveying on the course indicated by the field-notes for a distance of 40 chains from the southwest corner of the section. If the field-notes were correct, such a survey would have located the southeast corner o.f the southwest quarter, but the section cannot be surveyed according to the field-notes, because the superficial area does not exist for which the field-notes, call.

It was adjudged, in the decree from which this appeal comes, that appellee, Mrs. Denny, “is the owner of the southwest quarter of section one, township nine north, range 4 west, and that the east line of said southwest quarter should be and the same is. hereby established as being a line running due north from a point on the south line of said section one, 40 chains east of the southwest corner of said section one as established by the United States Government surveyor, so as to give 160 acres, of land in the said southwest quarter of said section; and that the title to said quarter section as herein established be and the same is hereby quieted and confirmed” in appellee, Mrs. Denny.

It is, of course, obvious that, in establishing the east line of the southwest quarter so as to give that quarter section 160 acres, a proportionate quantity of land was taken from the four lots owned by appellants in the southeast quarter, which lots, according to the field-notes and the Government plat, also contained 160 acres. It is also obvious that if, after thus establishing the east line of the southwest quarter by measuring 40 chains' from the southwest corner of the section, a similar method was' employed to establish the east line of the four lots owned by appellants, by extending the south line of the section 40 chains further, in accordance with the field-notes, lot numbered 8 would cease to exist, and the south line of the four lots, taking no account of lot 8, which is east of them, would extend five chains beyond the range line. as it is only 75 chains from the southwest corner of the section to the range line. This, of course, could not be done, as the boundary line of the section could, in no event, extend beyond the range line of the township in which the section is located.

Authority for the court’s action is asserted under § 57 of Clark on Surveying and Boundaries, which reads as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 S.W.2d 6, 175 Ark. 846, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luther-v-walker-ark-1927.