Stonewall Phosphate Co. v. Peyton

39 Fla. 726
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 39 Fla. 726 (Stonewall Phosphate Co. v. Peyton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stonewall Phosphate Co. v. Peyton, 39 Fla. 726 (Fla. 1897).

Opinion

Mabry, J.:

A bill was filed in this case by appellees against appellant to enjoin the latter from mining phosphate rock on the N. W. ■£ of S. W. i of section 31, township 15 S., R. 19 E., alleged to be the property of appellees. Appellant owned the S. W. J of S. W. \ of the same section, township and range, and claimed that the mining was done on its own land, and not on the property of appellees. No question is presented as to the sufficiency of the bill or answer, and the only point to be settled is whether the testimony shows that the mining was done by appellant on its own land or on the quarter-quarter section owned by appellees. The decision of the lower court sustained the contention of the complainants, appellees here, that the phosphate mine was situated on their land and it was so located by the dividing line between the quarter quarter sections as established by the court. Tr, is now contended that this decree can not be sustained on the ■evidence.

The exterior lines of township 15 south, range 19 E., were established by United States surveys prior to the year 1845, and during that year the western and southern subdivisions of the township into sections were ■completed. The return of the survey to the Survey- or-G-eneral’s office shows that section 31 of the township contained 685 acres, but there was no subdivision of this section further than the establishment of the ;section, and quarter section posts on the exterior [728]*728boundaries thereof. The excess of land in the section has given rise to the contention as to the correct dividing line between the quarter quarter sections owned by the respective parties. The survey of the section, as shown by undisputed testimony, commenced at the northwest corner, and extended south, and upon this fact it is claimed for the phosphate company that the excess of land must be given to the quarter-quarter' section owned by it, the same being in the extreme southwest corner of the section. On the other hand it is insisted that as there was no interior subdivision of the section it should be divided into equal parts, and in support of this position reliance is placed upon the-evidence produced that the officers of the local land deparcment of the government had so divided the section in allowing entries of, and in granting patents to, different portions of same. It is clearly shown by the-testimony of the officers of the land office department and patents from the government to different portions-of the section granted, that it was practically divided into forties of 42 81-100 acres each.

Appellant derived title by mesne conveyance from Teresa Hutchinson who entered with other land the S. W. \ of S. W. i, section 31, township 15 S., R. 10' E., in 1862, and this forty is said to contain 42 82-100' acres, and appellees obtained their title by mesne conveyances from Ida E. Beerbower, who entered in 1885, and the patent to her describes the land as containing-42 82-100 acres. The government has patented all the-land in the section, and the forties therein, other than those mentioned, are described as containing 42 81-100^ acres.

The field notes and plats of the original surveys, and the testimony of three surveyors, besides testi[729]*729mony furnished by the land officers, are before us. Two of the surveyors, testifying for the defense, make-file distance from the northwest corner to the southwest corner of the section, eighty-seven chains and' forty-seven links. The field notes call for eighty-seven and one-half chains. In running this line thejtwo surveyors mentioned state that they found the section and quarter section posts on the western boundary of' the section with the bearing trees as called for by the-field notes. According to their testimony they found not only the location of the government posts by the-witness trees, but also chopped trees showing theoriginalline as run by the original government survey. The survey as originally made, commenced at the-northwest corner of the section and in running south from this point on the western side of the section, the-field notes call for a quarter section post forty chains-from the starting point with designated witness trees. The surveyors say they found the witness trees just forty chains from the section corner which they were-enabled by the field notes to clearly establish. Running south on the west boundary line of the section-from the quarter section post, located as above forty chains from the northwest corner of the section, the-field notes call for forty-seven and one-half chains to* the southwest corner of the section, and the testimony of the surveyors is that they located this corner by the witness trees forty-seven chains and forty-seven, links from the quarter section post. If the testimony of these two surveyors be true, the line of the western, boundary of both quarter-quarter sections taken together can not be less than forty-seven 'chains and* forty-seven links, and the contents of each forty can> not be less than forty-seven acres. It is true that the? [730]*730‘third surveyor who testified in the case says that according to the field notes the two forties owned by the parties, each contained 43 25-100 acres, and in some • other respects he differs from the others, but he saw no bearing trees and other unmistakable evidences of the original line as run by the first surveyors as detailed above, nor does he say that none existed. The positive testimony of the two surveyors who found the bearing trees for the section and quarter section posts at the points of distances, as called for by the field notes, is clearly entitled to 'more consideration than that of one who says he found no bearing trees • and gives no corroborative evidence of facts to sustain his testimony.

The real question on the evidence, we think, is this: -does the fact that the local land office equally divided the section in permitting entries to be made and granting patents therefor, override and control the survey ■ as actually made by the surveyors in the original survey, and which is the basis upon which the land was ■ sold? This is the controlling question in this case, because if the dividing line between the forties is to be ascertained by giving to each one an equal portion ■of the entire section, as indicated by the quantity of land in the patents, then the mining, as is conceded, was conducted on the land of appellees; but if the ■division is to be made according to the survey as originally made on the ground, as shown by the evidence ■of the surveyors mentioned, then appellant did not trespass upon appellees’ land, and the decision was wrong.

To the question, as we have stated it, the law gives :a clear and definite answer. The grant of all lands presupposes an actual survey of them, and the patent [731]*731must be considered as conveying the land as actually-surveyed. Therefore, when it can be shown that a. line was actually run, or division made, by the surveyor in surveying the land, and that such line or-division was marked by corners or natural objects, and such survey is established, the grantee in a patent will' take according to such actual survey, notwithstanding-any mistaken description as to courses and distances, contained therein, or the quantity of land stated to be-conveyed. It is a familiar rule that courses and distances must give way to natural, as well as artificial,, objects when they are inconsistent.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Lopez v. Smith
145 So. 2d 509 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1962)
Conoley v. Naetzker
137 So. 2d 6 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1962)
Altman v. Simon
147 So. 222 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1933)
Pembroke Pembroke v. Peninsular Terminal Co.
146 So. 249 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1933)
Sanders v. Alford Bros. Co.
111 So. 278 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1926)
Hardee Trustees v. Horton
108 So. 189 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1925)
Kirch v. Persinger
100 So. 166 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1924)
South Florida Farms Co. v. Goodno
94 So. 672 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1922)
Propper v. Wohlwend
112 N.W. 967 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1907)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 Fla. 726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stonewall-phosphate-co-v-peyton-fla-1897.