United States v. Paul E. Reimann, and Maybeth Farr Reimann, His Wife

504 F.2d 135
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedOctober 9, 1974
Docket73-1905
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 504 F.2d 135 (United States v. Paul E. Reimann, and Maybeth Farr Reimann, His Wife) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Paul E. Reimann, and Maybeth Farr Reimann, His Wife, 504 F.2d 135 (10th Cir. 1974).

Opinion

BARRETT, Circuit Judge.

Paul E. Reimann, defendant below, appeals from a declaratory judgment rendered pursuant to 28 U.S.C.A. § 2201 in favor of the United States establishing boundaries between his property and that of surrounding national forest lands. .

Reimann is the successor in title to three tracts of land originally patented in 1907 and 1908 pursuant to homestead entries by Parker B. Pratt, Alvaro A. Pratt and Olive A. Pratt. The description of the lands patented to Parker B. Pratt is as follows:

Northeast quarter of the Southeast quarter, the South half of the Northeast quarter, and Lot One, of Section twenty-two, Township one South of Range two East of the Salt Lake Meridian, Utah, containing one hundred seventy-three and ninety-three hundredths acres.

The description of the lands patented to Alvaro R. Pratt is as follows:

Lots Two, Three, and Four of Section twenty-two in Township One South of Range two East of the Salt Lake Meridian, Utah, containing one hundred sixty-three and five-hundredths acres.

The description of the lands patented to Olive A. Pratt is as follows:

Southwest quarter of the Northwest quarter of section twenty-two and the Southeast quarter of the Northeast quarter and the East half of the Southeast quarter of section twenty-one, in Township One South of Range two East of the Salt Lake Meridian, Utah, containing one hundred sixty acres.

Each of these descriptions is followed in the patents by the phrase “according to the Official Plat of the Survey of the said Land, returned to the General Land Office by the surveyor general tt

The above properties are referred to in the record below as tracts 37, 38 and 42, located within sections 21 and 22 of Township One South, Range two East, Salt Lake Base and Meridian, Utah. Reimann acquired his interest in these tracts in 1948. The Government holds nearly all the land surrounding these tracts as part of a national forest established in 1904.

The present controversy concerns the proper location of the northern boundary line of these tracts, separating them from the national forest lands. The amount of land in dispute here involves some 56 acres.

Three official United States Government surveys form the basis of the present dispute. In 1891, A. D. Ferron contracted to survey the arable portions *137 of this township. This resulted in a survey of most of the northern three “tiers” of sections in the Township and included a survey of the southern boundaries of sections 13 through 18 (accomplished via “offset lines”), i. e., Ferron surveyed the “top half” of the township including the “centerline” of the township. This survey was accepted as an official survey in March, 1894.

In 1902, A. P. Hanson was directed to complete the survey of the township, coordinating it with the earlier Ferron survey. Hanson, claiming he was unable to locate Ferron’s corner for sections 15, 16, 21 and 22, stated in his survey notes that he set a new corner for these sections. This new boundary between the sections in the northern and southern “halves” of the township was purportedly located some distance north of the line set by Ferron in 1891. Hanson’s survey was accepted by the General Land Office in June, 1903.

Hanson’s survey was “investigated” in 1924 by H. W. Miller and was determined by Miller and Land Office officials to be “fatally defective” due to the fact that Miller had found only a few of Hanson’s monuments, and also because Miller considered it infeasible for Hanson to have surveyed the area he claimed to have surveyed within the time frame available to him. In 1926 Miller was instructed to “re-establish” the southern boundaries of sections 13 to 18 as surveyed by Ferron in 1891 and to accomplish an “independent resurvey” of those areas surveyed by Hanson “with the usual tract segregations for valid or patented entries in this area, which cannot be conformed to the lines of resurvey.” Miller thereupon reestablished the southern boundaries of sections 13 to 18 on the line of the 1891 Ferron survey, thereby moving the northern boundary of Hanson’s survey of Section 22 to a position some distance south of where this line had been placed by Hanson. Miller made no attempt to make “the usual tract segregations” for any patented land which, under the Hanson survey, would have been partially located north of the Ferron “centerline”, rather he “terminated” the northern boundaries of such tracts on the 1891 Ferron “centerline.” 1

According to appellant Reimann the end result of this “re-establishment” of the Ferron “centerline” of the township was an unlawful condensing of the tracts patented to his predecessors since their lands, as originally patented, were bounded on the north with reference to the Hanson survey of the centerline, such survey being the only official survey of Sections 21' and 22 in effect at the time of patent. It is contended by Reimann that Miller in his resurvey was under a duty to “follow the footsteps” of the Hanson survey in determining the correct boundaries of the tracts here in question (i. e., to accomplish the “tract segregations” as ordered in his resurvey instructions), in order to protect the vested rights of the patentees. Instead, Miller refused to follow Hanson’s “footsteps” north of the 1891 Ferron “center-line” resulting in an illegal infringement of the vested rights of the patentees.

The Government contends, however, that the Ferron survey of the “center-line” of this township, being senior in time, has always stood as the correct northern boundary of the lands patented in sections 21 and 22 overriding, in effect, the mistaken junior line established by Hanson. Under this theory, the Miller resurvey resulted in no interference with vested rights of patentees since the descriptions in their patents were controlled by the official survey in effect at that time, which, due to its priority in time, was the Ferron survey (at least as to the northern boundaries of these tracts) and the Miller resurvey merely re-established these boundaries.

The primary issue on this appeal centers upon which of these two surveys, the 1891 Ferron or the 1902 Hanson, *138 controls as to the description of the boundaries in the patents to these tracts.

At the outset, we note that counsel have cited but one ease directly in point with the problem we are faced with here, nor have we uncovered other' controlling authority through our own research.

We are faced preliminarily with two seemingly inconsistent general rules: (1) “where the lines of senior and junior surveys conflict the lines of the senior survey control . . . .”11 C.J.S. Boundaries § 61, p. 633; (2) “the survey last accepted by the government before parting with title is the controlling survey.” 73 C.J.S. Public Lands § 35, p. 684.

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504 F.2d 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-paul-e-reimann-and-maybeth-farr-reimann-his-wife-ca10-1974.