Smith v. Almond

102 So. 330, 157 La. 265, 1924 La. LEXIS 2205
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 1, 1924
DocketNo. 26484.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 102 So. 330 (Smith v. Almond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Almond, 102 So. 330, 157 La. 265, 1924 La. LEXIS 2205 (La. 1924).

Opinion

OVERTON, J.

Plaintiff and defendant are the owners of contiguous estates. One of plaintiff’s estates lies in section 9, township 12 north, range 9 west, and one of defendant’s in section 8 of the same township and range; the section line common to sections 8 and 9 being the boundary between these two estates. The other of plaintiff’s estates lies in the N. % of the N. W. Vi of section 8, in the aforesaid township and range, and the other of defendant’s in the S. % of the N. W. Vt of that township and range; the *267 line dividing tlie N. % of the N. W. % from the S. % of the N. W. % of section 8, being the boundary between these two estates.

As differences arose between Smith and Almond as to where the section line ran, dividing the estates first mentioned, and as to where the line ran dividing the estates secondly mentioned, plaintiff instituted the present suit against defendant for the purpose of establishing the boundaries between the properties owned by him and by defendant. R. E. MeKnight, a surveyor, was appointed to make a survey for the purpose of enabling the court to establish the boundaries in dispute. MeKnight made the survey, prepared a plat and procés verbal of it, and made report to the court accordingly. Defendant moved the court to homologate the survey made by MeKnight, and plaintiff opposed the motion to homologate it. The motion was tried, and judgment was rendered approving MeKnight’s survey and establishing the lines between the lands of plaintiff and defendant accordingly. Plaintiff appealed to the Court of Appeal of the Second Circuit, and obtained judgment there, setting aside the judgment of the district court, and remanding the ease, with directions that another survey be made, and giving certain instructions as to the manner of making it. MeKnight was again appointed to make the survey, and Gaienne I-Iyams, who was also a surveyor, was appointed to assist in making it. The survey made by MeKnight and I-Iyams met with defendant’s approval, and defendant, therefore, moved the court to homologate it. Plaintiff opposed its homologation. Judgment was rendered by the district court homologating the survey, and plaintiff appealed. The Court of Appeal of the Second Circuit affirmed the judgment appealed from, and plaintiff applied to this court for writs of certiorari and review for the purpose of having the judgment of the Court of Appeal reviewed. The application was granted, because the issue Indirectly involved the lines of an entire township, and because it seemed to us that the judgment of the Court of Appeal, affirming the judgment of the lower court, was erroneous.

The estates, as we have seen, between which the boundaries are to be established, are located in township 12 north, range 9 west. This township was laid out or surveyed in 1S14 by John Dinsmore, Jr., a deputy surveyor of public lands. The field’notes and the plat made by him show that he ran his lines due north and due south and due east and due west. Dinsmore did not sectionize the township, but merely surveyed and established the township lines. The work of sectionizing it was done in 1825 by James M. McCauly, a deputy United States surveyor. The field notes made by McCauly do not indicate that he differed with Dins-more with respect to the work done by him. However, in 1835, J. C. Naylor, who does not appear to have been a United States surveyor, nor to have been acting for the government, made a resurvey of the boundaries of the township. In making this survey, he reached the conclusion that Dins-more did not run the eastern boundary due north, as he said he did, but that, in fact, he ran the last four miles of that boundary north one degree east.

MeKnight and Hyams, in making their survey, adopted Naylor’s view. After establishing what they considered to be the southwest corner of section 36, they ran north, 80 chains, to what they considered to be the southwest corner of section 25; thence west 80.20 chains, to what they considered to be the southwest corner of section 26; thence north, 80.30 chains, to what they considered to be the southwest corner of section 23; and thence west, 80.04 chains, to what they considered to be the southwest corner of section 22. At this point they were two miles north of the southern boundary *269 óf the township. ' Hence, as Naylor hád said that the last fonr miles of the township had been run north one degree east, and as they themselves had reached the conclusion that Naylor’s view was correct, instead of running due north, they ran from this point north one degree east, 80.31 chains, to what they considered the southwest corner of section 15; thence due west, 79.92 chains, to" what they considered to be the southwest corner of section 16; thence north one degree east, instead of due north, to what they considered to be the southwest corner of section 9 and the southeast corner of section 8, the sections in which the estates involved herein lie. From this point they continued their course north one degree east to the northern boundary of the township.

In running from the southwest corner of section 36 to the northern boundary line of the township, neither McKnight nor Hyams point to any marks as evidencing a survey made by the government. In fact, both of them say that they found no marks at all on the interior of the township, evidencing such a survey. When they reached the northern boundary of the township, they concluded that they had reached the corner on that boundary common to sections 4 and 5. They reached this conclusion for two reasons, one of which was that the line they had run, assuming that it was correctly run —and they believed it to have been so run — ■ led them to what should have been that corner. The second reason was that this point checked with the original government mark at the half-mile corner, lying north of this point, in the township above it. The result of the survey was that the section line, common to sections 8 and 9, was thrown considerably east of the line that plaintiff considered was the true boundary between those sections, and, consequently, the western boundary of plaintiffs property, in section 9, was thrown farther east than he considered that it, in fact, lay. Hence, his opposition to the homologation of the survey.

We find no difficulty in holding that plaintiff is correct in his opposition to the homologation of the survey. It is the duty of a surveyor in making his survey to reproduce the lines as originally run as closely and accurately as possible. ,The question is; Did McKnight and Hyams so reproduce the section line, constituting the boundary between the estates of plaintiff and defendant, lying in sections 8 and 9? We do not conclude that they did. This they could not have done in pursuing the course adopted by them, for the simple reason that they departed from the field notes made by Dins-more, in establishing the eastern boundary of the township, and from the field notes made by McOauly, in laying out the section lines, by running north one degree east after reaching the second milepost, from the southern boundary of the township, instead of due north, as called for by those notes. In so departing it will be recalled that they found no government markings on the interior of the section, indicating that they were on the proper course, or. confirming their line.

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Bluebook (online)
102 So. 330, 157 La. 265, 1924 La. LEXIS 2205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-almond-la-1924.