Murphy v. Kirwan

103 F. 104, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 4797
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 5, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 103 F. 104 (Murphy v. Kirwan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murphy v. Kirwan, 103 F. 104, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 4797 (circtdmn 1900).

Opinion

LOCHREN, District Judge.

This is a bill in equity, wherein the complainants ask for a decree restraining and perpetually enjoining the defendants from making a survey of certain lands claimed by the [105]*105complainants and described in tbe bill, surrounding Cedar Island Lake, in township 57 N., of range 17 W. of the fourth P. M., in the county of St. Louis, Minn.; such survey having been ordered by the land department of the United States. The defendant Kirwan is the United States surveyor general for Minnesota; and the defendant Croswell is a deputy surveyor, with whom a contract has been made, by order of the commissioner of the general land office, to make the survey. Upon the filing of the bill, and after due notice and hearing, a temporary injunction was issued, as prayed for in the bill, and the order allowing the same was afterwards affirmed by the circuit court of appeals of this circuit. Kirwan v. Murphy, 28 C. C. A. 348, 83 Fed. 275.

Upon final hearing the following facts appear: (1) On or about April 26, 1876, a contract for the survey of all lands in township 57 FT., of range 17 W., in St. Louis county, Minn., was made by the government of the United States with one Henry S. Howe, as a deputy surveyor of ihe United States; and thereafter said Howe made and filed what purported to be field notes of a survey of said township, from which a purported official plat of said township was thereafter made, and approved by the surveyor general of the United States for the district of Minnesota, and by the commissioner of the general land office, of which plat Exhibit A, attached to the bill of complainants, is a substantially correct copy. (2) There is no evidence, nor any marks upon the ground, to indicate that any actual survey of said township 57 was ever made by said Howe, as required by his said contract and by the rules and regulations of the general land office, or at all, beyond the running and due marking of the exterior boundary lines of said township, where the section, quarter, and other posts and markings established by him are, and always have been, clear, distinct, and readily found and traced. There is no evidence on the ground that section lines were ever run by him in or across said township, or section corner posts or quarter posts ever located or set by him, except a corner post at the northwest corner of section 36, and a quarter post in the western line of said section 36; and there is no evidence that witness trees were ever blazed or marked by him. (3) 'Cedar Island Lake is a navigable, deep, and permanent body of water, fed principally by springs, having an area of about 900 acres, instead of about 1,800 acres, as described in the field notes of Howe, and shown on said official plat of said township. Instead of the shores of said lake being low and swampy, as stated in said field notes, the banks are generally high and sloping lands, suitable for agriculture, extending around the lake, and support a good growth of pine and other forest trees, large enough for lumbering, such as will not grow in water. The condition was the same in 1876, and no material part of the land surrounding the lake is accretion. Southerly and westerly of said Cedar Island Lake are five other deep, navigable, and permanent lakes, in tbe same township, none of which are shown by the field notes of Howe’s survey, or upon said government official plat of said township, and all of which have, since the making of said official plat, been sold and patented by the government, as land, according to said ifiat. (4) There is no evidence [106]*106upon the ground that any meander line of said Cedar Island Lake was ever surveyed by said Howe, or any meander posts placed by him about said lake, except one where the north line of said township encounters said lake. And the outlet of said lake is at a different place from that described in said field notes and shown upon said official plat. After the making of the said survey and plat, and before its approval, complaints touching the accuracy thereof were made to the commissioner of the general land office, but on the withdrawal of such complaints the said survey and plat were approved. (5) The land lying between the actual water line of said Cedar Island Lake and the meander line of that lake as delineated on said official plat of said township comprises the land in controversy in- this suit, and is the same land directed to be surveyed by the commissioner of the general land office, and referred to in the surveyor’s contract, which is attached, as Exhibit A, to the answer in this suit, being therein described as “the public lands situate in Secs. 2, 3, 4, 9, 10, and 11 in township Ho. 57 H., K. 17 W. of the 4th principal meridian, lying between the old meander boundary of Cedar Island Lake, as given by the original field notes of Henry S. Howe, U. 'S. deputy surveyor, approved by the surveyor general of Minnesota Aug. 19, 1876, and the shore line of said Cedar Island Lake.” (6) Prior to the commencement of this suit the United.States has sold, afid by its patents has conveyed to the purchasers, according to said official plat made from said Howe survey, all the land in said township 57, as the same appeared upon said plat, to which plat all of said patents expressly refer; it being then and still the only government plat of said township. (7) The complainants are the grantees and owners by mesne conveyances from the patentees of the record title to the following described fractional lots in said township, to wit: Lots 1, 2, and 3 in section 2; lots 1 and 2 in section 3; lots 1 and 8, and portions of lots 3, 5, and 6 in section 4; lots 1, 2, 3, and 4 in section 9; lots 1, 2, 3, and 4 in section 10; and lot 3 in section 11, — being the same lands which are more particularly described in complainants’ bill, and each of which fractional lots appear and are represented on said official plat as bounded by and upon said Cedar Island Lake. (8) So far as appears, none of the patentees of said lands had any notice or knowledge of any fraud or misconduct on the part of said Howe in or about the making of said survey and field notes, and all were purchasers in good faith of said lands. (9) Complainants purchased said fractional lots of land of the patentees or their grantees for the pine timber thereon, and the convenience of landing the same in the said Cedar Island Lake, to be driven to the place of manufacture, and before such purchase, in the year 1883, caused said lands to be explored and examined by an experienced timber estimator, who, in making such examination, used, as is customary in such cases, a copy of said official plat of said township which did not have upon it any statement of the acreage or amount of land in any of the subdivisions, and who reported to the complainants his estimate of the amount of pine timber on said lands, and the general character of said .land, and the riparian character thereof, as bounded upon said Cedar Island Lake, but did not [107]*107discover or report any fraud or error in fixe survey of said township, or any error or mistake in the said official plat. And the said complainants purchased, paid for, and took conveyances of said lands in good faith, and without any notice or knowledge of any such fraud, error, or mistake. (10) The other permanent lakes in said township, not. shown upon such official plat, hut appearing thereon as land, and since sold and patented by the government as land according to such official plat, include areas equal to the area, of said Cedar Island Lake; and portions of such, lakes were purchased by complainants as kind, with their other purchases in said township.

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Bluebook (online)
103 F. 104, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 4797, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-kirwan-circtdmn-1900.