Satchell v. Dunsmoor

172 P.2d 826, 179 Or. 463, 1946 Ore. LEXIS 177
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 172 P.2d 826 (Satchell v. Dunsmoor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Satchell v. Dunsmoor, 172 P.2d 826, 179 Or. 463, 1946 Ore. LEXIS 177 (Or. 1946).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiffs, four in number, from a decree of the circuit court which dismissed their complaint and held that “plaintiffs have ho right, title or interest or claim to the following described real property, to-wit; N y2 of the SE % of Section 14 * * * and that the boundaries of said described property áre as determined in the surveys made by Beasley and Stoehr in 1945.”

The purpose of the complaint was to establish a boundary line. Specifically it sought a decree holding *465 that a line mil by one J. D. Meiser, a civil engineer, in 1938, constituted the true line between the southeast quarter and the southwest quarter of Section 14, Township: 2-North, of Bange 2 West of the Willamette Meridian in Multnomah County. Five items of property are involved in this suit. All are situated in the two quarter sections just mentioned.. Two of the five are owned by the defendant. One is forty acres in extent and is situated in the northwest quarter of. the southeast, quarter of Section 14. The other is less than,.an. acre in extent and its boundary lines are material only upon a claim of estoppel, submitted by the plaintiffs, Thomas and Madeline Satchell,. who are husband and wife. They own a forty-acre tract directly west, of the defendant’s forty-acre tract. It is.-the, northeast quarter of the southwest quarter. The west boundary line of the defendant’s main tract is, therefore, the east line of the Satchells’. The same line, "if extended north and south in harmony with geometric accuracy, would pass through the center of the section and also through the quarter section points'on both the north and the south boundary lines of the section. It would separate the section into hálves. The 'northwest corner of the defendant’s property and the northeast corner of the Satchells’ would be directly at the center point of the line.

South of the defendant’s property is a forty-ncre tract., owed by Mr. and Mrs. Bobert H. Kirkwood, who are qot ;parties to the suit although both of them testified-'■ Adjoining the Kirkwoods’ property on the-west are two-twenty-acre pieces, the northerly of which is owned.by the plaintiff, Benjamin D. Morlock, and the southerly of which is owned by the plaintiff, E. .1. Pavne. Thus it is seen that every item of property *466 involved in this suit abnts upon the line which separates the southwest quarter from the southeast quarter. The properties of the defendant and of the Kirkwoods are immediately east of the line. Those of the Satchells and of Morlock and Payne are directly west of the line. The properties of the Satchells and of the defendant face each other. Those of Morlock and of Payne face that of the Kirkwoods.

The principal issue before the circuit court, and likewise before us, is the location of the line between the property owned by the Satchells and that of the defendant. The deed which conveyed title to the defendant of his aforementioned forty-acre tract described the property thus: “The West one-half (W y2) of North one-half (N %) of the Southeast quarter (SB 14) of Section Fourteen (14) in Township Two (2) * * *.”

In 1938 the aforementioned J. D. Meiser ran a line between the southeast and the southwest quarter sections. As a witness, he characterized his survey as “an approximate line” and explained that he was hired to do nothing more than run “a compass line”. It was agreed, he swore, that he should set no markers or monuments. While proceeding with his work he did not encounter the markers or monuments which had been set in the course of previous surveys, and he did not verify the accuracy of his work by comparing his line with the field notes compiled by other surveyors who had worked in the section. He testified he began his line from “the bearing trees at the quarter corner between Sections 14 and 23.” According to the uncontradicted record, an iron pipe marks the quarter corner just mentioned. Meiser could not recall whether or not he found the pipe, but said: *467 “I know that I did measure the prescribed distances from the bearing trees.” Other evidence indicates that he did not find the iron pipe.

The plaintiffs do not urge that Meiser’s line was accurate. In fact, their brief, referring to it, says: “It might not be the exact dividing line between said quarter sections.” They insist, however, that Meiser’s line, through agreement, was accepted as the boundary line between the properties. They argue that the Satehells, the Kirkwoods, the defendant and predecessors in interest of the Paynes and of Morloek agreed to accept Meiser’s line as the true boundary between the southwest quarter and the southeast quarter. They do not claim that the purported agreement was reduced to writing.

The defendant, in addition to denominating the line run by Meiser as “a temporary line,” denies that the parties agreed to accept it as the boundary line. In March of 1945 P. W. Beasley, the civil engineer who is mentioned in the part of the decree which we quoted, surveyed the line between the southeast quarter and the southwest quarter of Section 14. He was employed for that purpose by the defendant. The latter depends upon Beasley’s line and insists that it is the true boundary line between the forty acres which he owns and the tract which the Satehells own. When the plaintiffs pointed out to the trial judge the discrepancies between the Meiser and the Beasley lines, they used a map and the witnesses, in referring to it, constantly employed the terms “here” and “there”. We do not know to what places they referred and, hence, the significance of much of their testimony is lost to us. It is clear, however, that Beasley placed the center of the section and the southwest corner of *468 the defendant’s property substantially different -from Meiser. Beasley marked Ms corners and lines with monuments. He verified the accuracy óf Ms work by resort to the markers wMch were placed by civil, engineers who had run the lines in previous years and also by .the use of the memoranda which they had filed in the. office of the county surveyor. One of the earlier surveys took place in 1894. Its records were still, available in 1945. Beasley began his survey at the iron pipe which, we have already mentioned and wMch is located at the. south quarter point of the section. He .particularly checked the accuracy of his work against, the results recorded by a civil engineer by the name of C. L, Marshall, who, in 1917, marked with monuments the center of the section and also the line running ;f rom the center to the quarter section point on the south line. In'carrying on Ms work, Beaslejr used a map prepared by Marshall and found his markers as well as those which were set in the course of earlier surveys. Without a further review of the evidence pertaining to the accuracy of Beasley’s work, we state our confidence in it. It will be observed from the part of the decree which we quoted that the circuit court found that Beasley’s line represented the true boundary line between the properties wMch are in dispute.

We quote the following from Tiessen v, Worthington, 41 Or. 145, 68 P. 424:

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Bluebook (online)
172 P.2d 826, 179 Or. 463, 1946 Ore. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/satchell-v-dunsmoor-or-1946.