McKenzie v. Nichelini

184 P. 871, 43 Cal. App. 194, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 781
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 5, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 2844.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 184 P. 871 (McKenzie v. Nichelini) 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
McKenzie v. Nichelini, 184 P. 871, 43 Cal. App. 194, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 781 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J.

The plaintiff, being the owner of the south half of the northwest quarter and the north half of the southwest quarter of section 24, township 8 north, range 4 west, Mount Diablo base and meridian, brought an action in ejectment against the defendants, who claimed ownership of the south half of the last named quarter-section but who had entered into possession of land by virtue of such claim which, according to the plaintiff, constituted part of the north half of said southwest quarter.

The court, after a lengthy trial, in which much evidence was taken of surveyors and others as to monuments, witness trees, courses, distances and topography, found in favor of *195 the plaintiff, and gave judgment accordingly. The defendants appeal, their main contention being that the finding of the court as^co the location of the plaintiff’s land upon which its judgment is based is wholly unsupported by the evidence and is contrary thereto.

The deciding factor in the case, as admitted by the appellants, is the location of the line dividing the north and south halves of the southwest quarter of section 24 above referred to. According to the contention of the appellants, the true method for locating this line is first to find the legal center of the section—a point, as they remark, which is not set by the government surveyor, but which is found by running a straight line from the quarter-section corner on the north boundary of the section to the quarter-section corner on the south line thereof, and then by intersecting this line by one drawn from the quarter-section comer on the west side of the section to the opposite quarter-section corner on the east, the point of intersection of these two lines being the legal center of the section. Having thus obtained the interior boundaries of the four quarters of the section the north and south halves of the southwest quarter will be found by similarly intersecting that quarter-section by an east and west line equidistant from its north and south boundaries, to do which it is, of course, necessary to know in addition to the points already obtained the quarter comer on the south boundary of the section (identical with the southeast corner of the southwest quarter) and the southwest comer of the section (identical with the same corner of the quarter-section). It is the appellants’ contention that the evidence offered by the plaintiff shows that the lines were not run in this manner, from which they argue that the court’s finding as to the location of the line in dispute is not supported by the evidence.

It will be observed, however, that given a section of land 80 chains square the southwest quarter thereof will be bounded by four straight lines, each 40 chains in length, one running from the southwest comer to the west quarter corner of the section; a second running from the said southwest corner to the south quarter comer; a third running from the west quarter comer easterly and parallel to the last-mentioned line, and the fourth running from the quarter comer on the south northerly and paralleling the first-mentioned line. The *196 north and south halves of this quarter-section will be found by running a line from a point 20 chains north of the southwest corner to a point 20 chains north of the southeast corner thereof. And since the dispute between the parties to this appeal is only as to the location of the line between the north and south halves of the quarter-section involved in its relation to north and south the degree of extension easterly or westerly of this line becomes immaterial, for no right of appellants to land to the east or west of this quarter-section is in question, and the judgment of the court has not ejected them from any land so located.

Turning now to the evidence upon which the court based its finding as to the relative location of the north and south halves of this quarter-section, there is testimony in the record that the entire section is approximately 80 chains from north to south; that the plaintiff’s surveyor for the purpose of locating the plaintiff’s land started at the southwest corner of the section, which corner he had known as the established government corner for many years; from that point he ran north 20 chains and there located the westerly end of the line dividing said southwest quarter into north and south halves; from there he ran 40 chains north, and there located the westerly end of the line dividing the northwest quarter of the section into north and south halves; to ascertain the precise direction in which he should run the north and south boundaries of plaintiff’s land (having ascertained that there were no established government corners on the east side of the section now to be found) he measured the whole township line from south to north between townships 3 and 4, the eastern boundary of section 24 being part of this line, and finding it seven chains short of the correct distance, he prorated the deficiency between the six sections on the east side of the township, which gave him as the direction in which the north and south boundaries of section 24 should be run a course north 83 degrees east. He accordingly ran two such lines 40 chains in length for the north and south boundaries of plaintiff’s land, and joined the eastern extremities of these lines by a line parallel to the western boundary already described. This direction of north 83 degrees east, however, was not accepted by the court as correctly locating the plaintiff’s land. The government field-notes of certain lines of the section in question were in evidence, among them the south boundary *197 thereof, which was a line run due east from the southwest corner of the section; and from testimony as to the topography of the land traversed by a line run east from said comer the court concluded that such testimony was sufficient to establish as the true direction of said south boundary a line due east as given in said field-notes, and in its findings adopted this direction for the north and south boundaries of plaintiff’s land, the latter of which is the dividing line between plaintiff and defendants. It further appears that the northwest corner of this section as established by the government could not be found; but that a line drawn from the corner common to sections 14,15, 22 and 23 (located one mile west of section 24) to a point on the east line of the township between said section 24 and section 19 in the adjoining township, located with reference to its relation to a known government corner further east, would pass through or very close to a point 80 chains north of the southwest comer of section 24, the distance called for by the field-notes for the northwest corner of the section. If we regard the north boundary of the section as being coincident with the eastern half of this line (and it is the only testimony in the record with reference to its location) a line drawn from the quarter corner on the north boundary of the section to the corresponding corner on the south boundary would be somewhat longer than 80 chains. If this excess were divided between the four equal parts of this line it would place the eastern extremity of the line dividing the north and south halves of the section a trifle to the north of where the court found it to be; but the error is so small that we think it is a case for the application of the legal maxim “The law disregards trifles” (Civ. Code, sec. 3533), and not of sufficient magnitude to warrant a reversal of the case.

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Bluebook (online)
184 P. 871, 43 Cal. App. 194, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 781, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckenzie-v-nichelini-calctapp-1919.