Mills v. Lehmann

133 N.W. 807, 28 S.D. 347, 1911 S.D. LEXIS 143
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 133 N.W. 807 (Mills v. Lehmann) 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
Mills v. Lehmann, 133 N.W. 807, 28 S.D. 347, 1911 S.D. LEXIS 143 (S.D. 1911).

Opinion

McCOY, J.

This action involves a dispute over boundary lines. Plaintiff is the owner of the S. IL j4 of section 13, and defendant is the owner of the N. of section 24, in township 101 north of range 64 west, situated in Aurora county. The dispute arises over the true location of the section line between said sections 13 and 24. Plaintiff claims to own according to United States governmenf survey. Defendant claims to own according to a survey designated as the Van Antwerp survey. The Van Antwerp survey changes or removes to the north the section line from where plaintiff claims it should be according to the government survey, so that defendant would obtain-about eight acres of the land claimed to be owned by plaintiff. While the pleadings are not set out in full in the abstract, there is sufficient to show the issue or controversy as stated. Plaintiff offered evidence tending to show that there was at the southeast, northeast, and southwest corners of his land original government mounds, and that there are original government mounds at the northeast corner, northwest corner, and southwest corner of section 13, and government quarter [348]*348cornel's between 13 and 14, and 12 and 13. Defendant claimed that none of the corners, as claimed by plaintiff, were original government corners, and claimed that the same should be relocated by running a straight line from the northeast corner of the township to the southeast corner of the township, apportioning the distances; and by running the line from the northwest corner of the township to the southwest corner of the township, and apportioning the distances on that line; and by running a line north and south across the township between sections 13 and 14, and apportioning the distances; and by running a line east and west across the township between sections 13 and 24, and another line across the township east and west between sections 12 and 13, and apportioning the distances on these lines. The defendant also claimed that there were no original government corners on any of these lines, excepting the corners of the township, and claims that all other corners outside these lines in the township were immaterial. The cause was tried to a jury and a general verdict rendered in favor of plaintiff.

[1] None of the testimony, if any was offered by defendant, appears in the abstract. The only exceptions taken were to the charge of the court to the jury. Under the record, every presumption and intendment is in favor of the correctness of the instructions, unless, under no possible theory, could the same be correct. The instruction as given by the court is quite lengthy, and it would serve no useful purpose to reproduce the same in full-Among' others, the court gave the following instruction:

“Now, when the government has made these surveys and subdivided it into sections and quarter sections, and surveyors are required to make a plat of it, and they are required at the time they make these surveys to make what they call field notes. These field notes are just simply a little notation of the direction in which they go. They start out from a particular point, and these field notes are a short notation of the direction they go, the distances that they go, and the landmarks, the mounds, or pits, or methods, that they use in designating the corners of these various sections and quarter sections. They are also expected to note the [349]*349topography of the country around — that is, whether there are any lake beds and hills, etc. — and refer to this in connection with these corners that they may establish. I say they make a plat of that, and together with these field notes ,explaining that plat, it is filed in the General Land Office in Washington. When the government of the United States sells or gives to an individual a piece of land, or gives him a patent to a piece of land, it is given or sold to him according to this plat that is there on file. You will find that all patents from the government read — that is tO' a quarter section of land — will call for 160 acres, but it always says, ‘according to the. platted survey thereof on file in the Land Office.’ Now, that is the way the government hands out its land to the people. Always according to that survey; and, while it is supposed that every quarter section of land will have just 160 acres in it, it is a matter of common knowledge that very often it does not. It may be more, or it may be less; and whether it is more or whether it is less is always ignored by this plat and the survey that is filed in the Land Office. And if that boundary, if the boundary to any quarter section of land, as indicated by that plat and by the survey and field notes that are filed there, can be ascertained, it will govern the amount of land which that man is entitled to under 'his patent, whether it is more than 160 acres or less, or just 160 acres, and no matter what the particular location of it may be, whether it may be exactly rectangular or exactly on a meridian, or exactly on the line at right angles with a meridian, or not. So I say to you, if it can be ascertained, if the boundary lines of a piece of land, as designated by this plat and by the government survey, can be ascertained, that must always and for all time govern, and no man or no state has any right to change it or alter it in any manner. So, in the first place, when a man gets a patent to a piece of land, he is entitled to whatever is within the bounds of the plat corresponding to his description that is on file in Washington, and so long as he can establish that he is entitled to it, no matter how much it may take from another man, or how little the other man may have. The difficulty arises in the fact that very often the landmarks — and we will call them the corner marks — become, out in this country, obliterated. The in[350]*350structions of the Land Office require that the surveyor, in subdividing these townships, shall, at every section corner and every quarter section corner, leave certain marks, which are generally a mound and a stake. Sometimes they say they shall put in a piece of charcoal, which is supposed to exist for a long time in the ground, or a charred stake, which lasts for a long time, or sometimes a stone. They describe what the mound 'shall be, and there is no doubt as to that, for all the witnesses seem to agree in regard to what the mounds and pits should be out in this country. Now, the surveyors, as I say, are required to make those corner marks when they make this survey. They ought to conform to the instructions of the Land Department in making them. If they did, it is probable that the landmarks would last longer than they quite often do; but it is a matter of common knowledge that these pits are not always made just as perfect as is expected by the Land Department; and it is also a matter of common knowledge that they become destroyed in various and different ways, so that after a long length of time it may be very difficult for a person to find many or very many of the original mounds or pits that were put there by the surveyors. Consequently these questions and difficulties in boundary lines arise.
“Now, in this case, it seems, that the people in this township have thought, or some of them at least, that the original lines as run by the original surveyors were indistinct and uncertain, and that they have gotten into some dispute about it, and there has been recently a survey, in the last two or three years, down in that country, in order to settle the question; and, while it is a matter that the whole township is interested in, the jury is called upon to only decide the question as between the plaintiff and the defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 N.W. 807, 28 S.D. 347, 1911 S.D. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mills-v-lehmann-sd-1911.