Ogilvie v. Copeland

33 N.E. 1085, 145 Ill. 98
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 4, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 33 N.E. 1085 (Ogilvie v. Copeland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ogilvie v. Copeland, 33 N.E. 1085, 145 Ill. 98 (Ill. 1893).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Scholfield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

Joshua Copeland brought ejectment in the Massac Circuit Court against James B. Ogilvie, for the southwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section four, in township fifteen south, range three east, of the third principal meridian. The pleas were the general issue and a special plea denying that the defendant was in possession of the property described in the declaration, verified by affidavit. By agreement of the parties, the trial was before the court without the intervention of a jury. The judgment was for the plaintiff, and the defendant brings the case to this court by writ of error.

No questions of law were raised by written propositions presented to the court upon the trial, to be “held” or “refused,” and the only questions of law discussed in the printed argument, filed with the record, for our consideration, relate to the respective probative force of the different classes of evidence produced upon the trial and preserved in the record. The appellee owns the southwest quarter of the northwest quarter, and the appellant owns the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section four, in township fifteen south, range three east of the third principal meridian. Appellee claims that appellant’s possession extends south of the line dividing these tracts, and appellant denies this, and insists that his possession is not beyond the boundaries of his tract. Appellee concedes if appellant owns forty acres, as is assumed to be conveyed by the patent of the United States under which he deraigns title, his possession does not extend beyond its boundaries: but appellee contends that the section is fractional, and that, consequently, the northwest quarter is so much less than a full quarter section that, when it is properly divided, the line dividing the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter and the southwest quarter of the northwest quarter is north of the south line of appellant’s possession; and so, while the immediate question to be decided is, only, where is the line dividing these tracts, the decision of that question involves the determination of the primary questions, is section four fractional, and if so, where are the boundary lines of the northwest quarter. There is no disagreement .between the parties except as to the length of the north :and south lines of the quarters. Appellant contends that they are forty chains in length, while appellee contends, ;and the court below found, that their length is only twenty chains and fifty-two links.

It was, at a very early period, held by this court, that when, as in this case, the question of fact as well as of law is submitted to the court, the judgment will not be disturbed, unless it shall appear to be clearly against the weight of the evidence; and this has been constantly adhered to through a long line of decisions, a few of which only need be referred to. Eldredge v. Huntington, 2 Scam. 535; Eastman v. Brown, 32 Ill. 53; Bowen v. Dutton, 27 id. 515; Demoss v. Hannaman, 46 id. 185; Smith v. Brown, id. 186; Thompson v. Anthony, 48 id. 468.

It can, therefore, be pertinent here only to ascertain whether the judgment below is clearly against the weight of the evidence; and, in determining this, we shall content ourselves with merely stating the tendency of the evidence, and the conclusions which, in our opinion, we should draw from it.

The government field-notes give the distances from the northwest corner of section four south, to the quarter corner on the west line of the section, at forty chains, and from that corner to the southwest corner of the section forty chains; but evidence was given, on behalf of appellee, tending to show that the monument made by the government surveyors when surveying the section, at the quarter corner on the west side of the section, was only twenty chains and fifty-two links. If that is the fact, then so much of the field-notes as assume to express the length of this line and the government plat of the survey is inaccurate. The field-notes and plat are assumed to be correct, until the contrary is shown, and they are important evidence in ascertaining where monuments are located; but if the location of the monument is clearly shown by other evidence to be at a distance different than that given in the field-notes and plat, they must give way.

The government survey of this tract was made in December, 1806, and, necessarily, many changes have since occurred, making it difficult to retrace the lines then run.

Appellee introduced three experienced surveyors, Johnson, Morton and McCormick—the first of whom was educated as a civil engineer, and was a practical surveyor of many years’ experience, and had, in previous years, filled the office of county surveyor of Massac county; the second was a practical surveyor, and also in previous years had filled the office of county surveyor of Massac county; and the third was, also, a practical surveyor, and is the present county surveyor of Pope county; and they each say, with positiveness, that, in their opinion, the monument fixed by the government surveyors for the quarter corner on the line of section four is only twenty chains and fifty-two links south of the northwest corner of that section; and appellee testified that that had been recognized by the parties owning the land in that vicinity as the government quarter corner on that line for thirty-six years.

Johnson, Morton and McCormick testify to corners which they found as the southeast corner of section four, which is the same as the southwest corner of section three, the southeast corner of section one, which is also the northeast corner of section twelve, and other corners, showing that the line on the south of the north tier of sections is a straight line due east and west, or sufficiently approximating a straight line, to be styled such in general language. They, also, show that a line forty chains north of the southeast corner of section four reaches a point directly east of what they denominate the quarter corner on the north and south line on the west side of the section. It seems to be agreed that the north and south line on the east line of section one is full, and that the quarter corner on that line is equidistant from the north and south corners, at a point identified by the calls of the government field-notes. Johnson and Morton testify that a line drawn due west from that corner strikes what they identify as the government quarter corner on the west line of section four, and the same line extended a mile west to the west line of section five strikes what they say is a government quarter corner on that line.

These men ought to know, and it is fair to presume that they do know, whether the witness trees, or other evidences of the location of a government corner, called for by the field-notes of the government surveyors, are found at the corners about which they testify.

Appellant also introduced on his behalf three experienced surveyors—Wise, a practical surveyor, at present county surveyor of Johnson county; Mathis, also a practical surveyor, and at present county surveyor of Pulaski County; and Giltner, also a practical surveyor, and at present county surveyor of Massac county, and they each gave testimony disagreeing with that given by Johnson, Morton and McCormick.

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Bluebook (online)
33 N.E. 1085, 145 Ill. 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ogilvie-v-copeland-ill-1893.