Morrison v. Seaman

38 A. 710, 183 Pa. 74, 1897 Pa. LEXIS 716
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 25, 1897
DocketAppeal, No. 126
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 38 A. 710 (Morrison v. Seaman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morrison v. Seaman, 38 A. 710, 183 Pa. 74, 1897 Pa. LEXIS 716 (Pa. 1897).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Williams,

The plaintiff’s right to recover in this case depends on the location of the boundary line between warrants numbers 3725 and 3721, in the name of Robert Morris warrantee. These warrants are part of a considerable number of surveys made in the ■name of the same warrantee, returned as made on consecutive days, and as located in a compact body. The deputy surveyor adopted a well marked district as the eastern boundary of the Morris lands. The Allegheny river and four small river surveys were adopted as the western boundary, and on the south the lands of the Holland Land Company were called for as an adjoiner all the way from the district line to the river. The north line of these surveys is the only continuous east and west line that is shown by the evidence to have been run upon the ground by the deputy surveyor in the location of the Robert Morris tracts. The space inclosed by the exterior lines just spoken of was subdivided into twenty-two separate tracts arranged in tiers. The first, second and third of these tiers going west from the district line contain six warrants each. The fourth tier reached to the river and to the old surveys and contained four warrants of which 3725 was the second- in order going north from the line of the Holland Land Company. An original line was run along the west boundary of the first and [81]*81second tiers wrest from the district line, and corners marked, for the several tracts upon both lines. The result of this work is that each of the twelve tracts in these two tiers has four original corners made for it on the ground, while the warrants in the third tier have an original east line and northeast and southeast corners, the location of which is apparently free from difficulty. The warrants in the fourth tier rest upon the river, and the four old river surveys at their western boundary. Their location is fixed therefore by reference to original marks and corners in their west lines as solidly as the place of warrants in the third tier is fixed by their east lines and corners. The situation of the twenty-two tracts, so far as the work of the surveyor is concerned, is shown by the accompanying diagram in which the dark lines indicate the lines run or adopted by the surveyor, die dotted lines those that are admitted to be chamber work.

It will be noticed that 3721 has an original east line with northeast and southeast corners, and 3725 has an original west line with northwest and southwest corners. The open line about which this controversy arises is the line which is at once the east line of 3725 and the west line of 3721. The plaintiff’s theory for locating this lino is to treat the whole body of the [82]*82Morris’ surveys as a block, and run a line from the quaking aspen, the southwest corner of 3731 and the southeast corner of 3724 in the north line of the Holland Company, northerly between six and seven miles to the post, the northwest corner of 3704 and the northeast corner of 3727. This would locate the division line about sixty rods east of where the courses and distances of the' survey of this individual warrant would place it and throw a large excess of land over the official quantity into the plaintiff’s warrant 3725. The defendants assert that the original work on the ground is sufficient to locate each tract in the entire body of Morris surveys, and that the conditions do not exist which authorize the application of the rules relating to block surveys. Nevertheless, the defendants locate this division line by the same method adopted by the plaintiff, with the difference that they would start from the place of the post at the north, and run southerly to a point some sixty rods further west at the line of the Holland Land Company than the plaintiff’s location of the quaking aspen, thus fixing the course and position of the line, not by the surveys of these two warrants, but by marks made or adopted in the lines of exterior surveys. The learned judge of the court below adopted the defendants’ position that these survej’s did not constitute a block, and that the interior lines were not to be located by the rules applicable to a block; at the same time he adopted also the defendants’ method of running the division line, by starting at the post on the north and running southerly across the Robert Morris lands to an assumed common corner for numbers 3724 and 3731, in the north line of the Holland Land Company. This would put the large excess of land within the lines of 3725 and 3721, or most of it, into the defendants’ warrant 3721. The small diagram

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Related

Strong v. Sunray DX Oil Company
448 S.W.2d 728 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1969)
Morrison v. Seaman
40 A. 1134 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1898)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 A. 710, 183 Pa. 74, 1897 Pa. LEXIS 716, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrison-v-seaman-pa-1897.