Moreland v. Page

2 Iowa 139
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 15, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 2 Iowa 139 (Moreland v. Page) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moreland v. Page, 2 Iowa 139 (iowa 1855).

Opinion

Isbell, J.

This was an action of right brought to settle the north boundary line of the east half of the south-west, and west half of the south-east quarters of section four, township ninety, north of range three, west of the fifth P.M. situate in Delaware county. Defendant is the adjoining owner on the north. A strip of land about three chains in width,, claimed by both parties, constitutes the subject of the controversy. The dispute grows out of the fact of the original survey of a large part of the northern two ranges of sections-in this township, having been either defectively or fraudulently made. This survey was made in 1837, and in 1849, complaints having reached the commissioner of the general land office, that the marks and monuments called for in the original field notes of the survey of the north part of this-township, had not been found, and probably had never been made, and that the distances from the corners which existed to the north boundary, were not as great as represented in the plat and field notes of the original survey, said commissioner caused an accurate examination of the whole township, to be made by an experienced surveyor. This examination discovered that many of the sub-divisional corners could not be found, and that they had probably never been established, as the quantity of land in the north two ranges of sections, was less than represented by the original notes, and the topography, in some instances, was at variance with the calls; as, for example, corners which were represented, as in timber, were where there had never been any timber. By this examination, all the section corners on the lines bounding the north two ranges of sections, and that at the north-east of section seven, were found. Also, all the quarter section corners-on the west lines of the following sections, viz.: 6, 7, 8, and 9, and that on the south line of section 11. No other monuments or subdivisional marks were found,, and those situate on the south line of these two ranges were not accurate, as-called for in the field notes of the original survey. The sav[147]*147eral ascertained and unascertained corners will be readily-understood from tbe attached plat.

In April, 1852, said commissioner, having become satisfied from the examination, that the survey had been defectively made, though after the purchase by the parties to this suit, and after the sale of most of the land in this township by the United States, caused a re-survey of the whole township, under the instructions of the surveyor-general of Wisconsin and Iowa, by Edward James, jr., deputy, who had been detailed for that purpose.

These instructions bear date April 12, 1852, and so far as material are as follows: “ Commencing in the manner prescribed in the accompanying instructions ” (which instructions wele the general printed instructions of the surveyor-general of Wisconsin and Iowa, to his deputies in making government surveys of the public land, and the same under which the survey had been originally made), “you will proceed to retrace the lines of the existing survey from corner to corner, and wherever the same are found, and can be fully identified, as those established by the original surveyor, you are to allix thereto your own official marks of recognition, and from said corners you will run, mark, and re-establish the lines and corners for the residue of the township.”

• “In surveying between recognized corners at remote distances apart, you are to random from corner to corner, and correct back, distributing the excess or deficiency, as the case may be, equally, so that each section may receive its due proportion of either.”

The line between plaintiff and defendant, as ascertained by this mode of survey, falls south of that claimed by plaintiff, about two and one-half chains. It will be observed by a careful examination of the description of the found corners, as hereinbefore given, that the quarter section corner on the west line of section nine, and the section corner at the southeast of said section, are corners found and identified on the examination, and the same were recognized on the re-survey. The decision of the court below, was, in substance, that the dividing line between the parties should be fixed and estab[148]*148listed, by measuring north from these two ascertained corners, lines parallel with the east line of the township, from the first described corner eighty, and the last one hundred and twenty chains, and that a right line between the points attained by such measurement, constituted the true line between the parties. This mode of survey, finds the line claimed by plaintiff and appellee in this suit.

It is claimed by defendant; that the true mode of ascertaining the line in dispute, is by running right lines from, the starting points assumed by the court below, to the found corners at the north-west and north-east corners of section four, and also a right line from the found corner at the north-east corner of section seven to that of the north-east corner of ■section twelve; that the points of intersection of these lines, will establish the true corners of sections 4, 5, 8, and 9, and also, sections 8, 4, 9, and 10; that having thus ascertained the section corners, the quarter section corners on the east and west sides of section four, should be placed at those points respectively, which will give to the parts of the lines lying both north and south of these quarter section corners, the same proportion of length which was given to them by the original survey as returned; and that a line drawn between 'these quarter section corners, thus established, constitutes the true line in dispute. By this mode, a line is found something near a chain south of the one as established by the re-survey.

Both parties have introduced their patents in evidence, and both have relation to the original survey. Neither party claims any advantage, on account of priority of purchase. The title of neither to the land on his side of the true line,-is disputed. The sole question then is, what is the true line between the parties ? Did the court below determine the true line ? "We think not. Here is a large body of land, comprising nearly two ranges of sections, on the north part of the township, on which no subdivisional monuments can be found. Of this body of land in gross, there is less in quantity than is called for in the original survey. Yet we are, as between the parties here, to regard it [149]*149as a lost survey, and not as never having been made. It must be restored. But upon what principle the court should determine, that the plaintiff was entitled to carve out of this body of land, made up of numerous subdivisional tracts, the full quantity which his patent called for by actual measurement, and leave others, who had purchased other sub-divisional tracts of the same body, under the same conditions with himself, a deficiency, we are at a loss to determine. Had this body of land, on which there are no monuments found, exceeded, instead of falling short of, full measurement according to the original survey, the purchasers of the specific tracts included in this body, would have been sharers of the excess in due proportion, and the plaintiff, with others, to his proportion. On the other hand, he should share the deficiency. But it is said, that fractions in subdividing townships, all fall on the north and west sides of the townships. That is true in making an entirely new survey; but this survey is not an original one; it does exist, at least on paper. The purchases have all been made in relation to it.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Iowa 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moreland-v-page-iowa-1855.