Seybold v. Burke

111 N.W.2d 143, 14 Wis. 2d 397, 1961 Wisc. LEXIS 275
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 1961
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 111 N.W.2d 143 (Seybold v. Burke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seybold v. Burke, 111 N.W.2d 143, 14 Wis. 2d 397, 1961 Wisc. LEXIS 275 (Wis. 1961).

Opinion

*400 Fairchild, J.

1. The boundary described by the deeds. The circuit court found that the true common boundary between the Burke and Seybold lands is a line parallel to the quarter line as shown in the survey of F. R. Wincentsen, and that the quarter line bears south Io, 55' east from the accepted center quarter corner of section 14. A map of the Wincentsen survey was attached to the judgment.

A government resurvey was made in 1929, presumably because several lakes were inaccurately meandered in the original survey. The certified copies of the original government survey, among the records of the register of deeds were received by reference, but not included in the record on. appeal. No map of the 1929 resurvey appears to have been introduced. The surveyors who testified assumed that a particular point was the quarter corner at the center of sec-, tion 14. There was no testimony as to how its location had been determined, and all the parties to the action apparently accepted it as correct. Upon the record made in this action, it is proper to presume that the point accepted as the center is at the intersection of the north-south quarter line (connecting the mid-point of the north line of the section with the mid-point of the south line), and the east-west quarter line (connecting the mid-point of the west line of the section with the mid-point of the east line). 1

*401 Wincentsen, the county surveyor, testified that he made a survey in 1948 for the owner of other land. He located a point on the ice of a lake which he treated as the quarter corner on the south line of section 14. He ran a line from that point to the assumed center quarter corner. He determined that this line had a bearing of south 1°, 55' east (mean magnetic bearing adjusted for declination). He apparently determined the quarter corner on the lake by doubling the distance from the southwest government corner (which he found) to the one-eighth corner determined by another surveyor. He also found the southeast government corner of the section and measured the distance from the southwest to the southeast corners. He found that the point he treated as the quarter corner was eight feet west of the exact midpoint of the south line, but the resulting error in the quarter line, swinging it a little to the west, was favorable to Sey-bold.

Assuming as we do for the purpose of this action that the point he assumed as the center quarter corner was on the north-south quarter line, the line he ran from the center point to the mid-point of the south line of the section was sufficiently shown to be the quarter line referred to in the Do riot deeds.

Of course the 1929 resurvey occurred after the Doriot deeds, but there is no evidence that it located the section corners at different points from those in the original government survey. It was the duty of the government surveyors in 1929 to re-establish the original corners. 2 It must be presumed in the absence of evidence to the contrary that the surveyors performed their duty. 3

*402 One of Mr. Seybold’s witnesses, Surveyor Kowalke, was called to testify as to the location of Mr. Seybold’s fence in 1955. Pie had been in the area while making a survey for an owner of land west of the quarter line. He testified on cross-examination that he had found the southwest and southeast government corners of section 14, located the midpoint of the south line on the ice, and run a line from the mid-point to the assumed center of the section. The bearing of this line was south Io, 7' east. Wincentsen explained that the 48' difference between the bearing as determined by Kowalke and the one determined by himself might have been due to Kowalke’s having taken a solar observation to determine true north.

Plaintiff Seybold produced no evidence to support his claim as to the proper bearing of the north-south quarter line except as might be inferred from a certificate made in 1919 by D. H. Vaughan, county surveyor. In it he stated' that in 1916 at the request of Doriot he made a survey of the description conveyed to the Seybolds. The location of a blazed tree and stake was testified to, apparently with the supposition that they were on the quarter line as determined by Vaughan although there is no reference to them in the certificate. Seybold testified that he set monuments where Vaughan set stakes showing the west boundary of the Sey-bold land. Vaughan’s certificate may be competent evidence under sec. 59.64, Stats. It, however, shows no bearings for the quarter line, nor does it refer to any monuments from which he may have worked other than the center of section 14.

The court’s determination that the Wincentsen survey correctly shows the quarter line is amply supported, and it is conceded that the Burke-Seybold common boundary is parallel to it. No claim is made that the east boundary of the Burke land, as conveyed in 1918, is different from the west *403 line of the Seybold land as conveyed in 1915, although the length of the line in the two descriptions differs. In the Seybold deed, its length is given as 950 feet, and in the Burke deed as 1,130 feet.

2. Acquiescence. Mr. Seybold testified that in 1917 he placed the concrete monuments at each end of the boundary to which he now claims, bearing south 5° west, and that in the same year he built a fence along the claimed boundary. Mrs. Burke denied the existence of the fence, admitted seeing the monument near the lake, but thought its location had been changed. Other evidence as to the fence will be mentioned in connection with the claim of adverse possession. Seybold contends that the boundary was established by Mrs. Burke’s acquiescence in the boundary he marked, whether or not the fence existed for as long as twenty years. He cites Nagel v. Philipsen. 4

The court concluded there was no evidence that Mrs. Burke ever saw the fence. Assuming that the existence of the fence and the significance of the monument near the lake were known to Mrs. Burke, acquiescence in such boundary would, as decided in Nagel v. Philipsen, supra, make out a prima facie case that the Seybold fence was on the correct boundary. The prima facie showing would, however, be overcome by the proof previously discussed, that the boundary referred to in the Doriot deeds was a different line.

The other situations pointed out in Nagel v. Philipsen, supra, where an owner may be bound by acquiescence in a marked boundary are not in this case, i.e., a fence erected on an agreed boundary after a dispute and acquiesced in b)^ the adjoining owners for a long time thereafter; a fence or stakes erected by a common owner who then sells the adjoining parcels with the representation that the marked boundary is the true one; estoppel of an adjoining owner *404

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Bluebook (online)
111 N.W.2d 143, 14 Wis. 2d 397, 1961 Wisc. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seybold-v-burke-wis-1961.