Yuma County v. Maricopa County

172 P. 276, 19 Ariz. 475, 1918 Ariz. LEXIS 104
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 1918
DocketCivil No. 1453
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 172 P. 276 (Yuma County v. Maricopa County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yuma County v. Maricopa County, 172 P. 276, 19 Ariz. 475, 1918 Ariz. LEXIS 104 (Ark. 1918).

Opinion

ROSS, J.

This is an original proceeding instituted by Yuma county against Marieopa county under the provisions of paragraphs 2381-2385 of the Civil Code of 1913, which, among other things, authorize and empower this court to take jurisdiction of disputes arising “between two counties respecting the location of the boundary line between such counties, ’ ’ and also make it the duty of the court, in its judgment, to “define and designate the true boundary between the two counties.”

It is alleged in the complaint that the boundary line between the two counties is fixed by law along 113 degrees 20 minutes west longitude; that the defendant has extended its sover-' eignty and jurisdiction over a strip of land 4.215 miles east, and west in width, and 103 miles in length north and south, to the west of and adjoining said meridian line, and has wrongfully exercised sovereignty and jurisdiction over such strip of land ever since 1890. Por a second cause of action the plaintiff seeks to recover from the defendant county taxes that have been collected by defendant upon the property located in said disputed strip of land.

The answer admits that the true boundary line between the counties, as fixed by law, is 113 degrees and 20 minutes west, but alleges that it was so indefinite as to make it impossible to determine where such line was upon the ground, and that by reason thereof a portion of said territory adjacent to said [477]*477boundary was claimed by both counties; that in 1889, pursuant to paragraphs 369, 370, and 371 of the Revised Statutes of 1887, and to Act No. 42, 15th Legislative Assembly, and acting thereunder, the boards of supervisors of Yuma county and Maricopa county, deeming it necessary that the boundary separating said counties should be defined so that it could be easily determined jointly by the supervisors of the two counties, caused the same to be surveyed its entire length and marked upon the ground with posts one mile apart. Thereafter, in 1889, the boards' of supervisors of both counties approved said survey, and adopted, approved, and established the line so marked as the boundary line between the counties, and that both counties have ever since recognized and accepted said line as the boundary. Defendant also pleads estoppel and laches and limitation.

The plaintiff filed a reply to the answer, denying that in 1889 the true boundary line was so indefinite as to make it impossible to determine where such line was upon the ground, or that it was at all indefinite; also controverting the legality and regularity of the proceedings by the boards of supervisors, and alleging that they had acted without jurisdiction.

The pleadings were several times amended, and it is possible that they present other issues, but we do not deem it necessary that they be further stated in -this opinion.

The Honorable John H. Campbell was appointed by the court referee to take testimony, with directions that he render findings of fact and conclusions of law. Upon the report of the referee being filed, the defendant moved for a judgment thereon. The plaintiff moved to set aside the findings of fact and conclusions of law, and for a rehearing; also filed exceptions to the findings and conclusions. The case was submitted to the court upon these motions.

The substance of the findings of fact is that the statute fixes the boundary between the counties as meridian 113 degrees 20 minutes west longitude; that prior to January 1, 1889, the boundary had not been marked on the ground or defined so that it might easily be determined; that during 1889 the boards of supervisors of said counties, acting together, caused the surveyors thereof to jointly survey such boundary line, and to mark the same its entire length, and that said boards of supervisors approved and adopted said survey as the boundary line between said counties; that the [478]*478line so surveyed and marked is not the true line separating said counties as prescribed by statute, but is something more than four miles west of meridian line 113 degrees 20 minutes west longitude; that from and after said survey was approved the officials of both counties, and the inhabitants thereof, acquiesced in and recognized the line so surveyed as the boundary, without protest, until 1907, when the board of supervisors of plaintiff advised the board of supervisors of defendant that the line as surveyed and marked was not the true line, and requested that another survey be made, and that similar requests have been made from time to time since 1907, all of which have been refused by the board of supervisors of defendant county; that no other action or proceeding has been taken by plaintiff, other than requests for another survey, until the institution of this suit; that defendant has, at all times since the approval of said survey, exercised jurisdiction over the territory lying between the true boundary line as defined by statute and the line as so surveyed and marked, and has levied and collected taxes upon the property there situated; that the lands in dispute have been arid and sparsely settled, and the board of supervisors or other officials of plaintiff did not discover that the true boundary line as defined by statute was not defined and marked by said survey until on or about the year 1907.

The referee’s conclusion of law is that “the plaintiff county should not recover in this action, for the reason that the county surveyors of the counties of Yuma and Maricopa, in making the survey and in marking the line as aforesaid, were the agents of the legislature of the territory of Arizona in determining the position on the surface of the earth of the meridian line 113 degrees 20 minutes west longitude, and having determined the same, though erroneously, the determination is binding upon said counties and relief may only be given by the legislature.”

We are to determine whether the legal conclusion by the learned referee is the law under the facts as found or not, there being no material dispute as to the facts.

We will inquire, first, as to whether the determination of the board of supervisors of the boundary line in 1889 was binding and conclusive upon the counties; and, second, if so, whether the legislature has notwithstanding made it the duty [479]*479of the court, in its judgment, to define and designate the true boundary dividing the counties.

Paragraph 2373 of the Civil Code of 1913 describes the western boundary line of Maricopa county as coincident with the east boundary line of Yuma county,- and defines it as meridian line 113 degrees 20 minutes west longitude. Paragraph 2380, Id., describes the eastern boundary line of Yuma county as meridian line 113 degrees 20 minutes west longitude, “along the western boundaries of Pima, Maricopa, and Yavapai counties. ’ ’ These sections have been carried forward in the different revisions of the statutes unchanged since February 14, 1871, the date Maricopa county was created. The true statutory dividing line between the counties, then, is 113 degrees 20 minutes west longitude. The legislature, the only authority in the sphere of creating counties and fixing their boundaries, has so said; and unless it has, in the exercise of that exclusive and supreme power, by some act of its own or by its authorized agent, changed the boundary, such meridian has always been and is now the true boundary between plaintiff and defendant.

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Related

Maricopa County v. Pima County
267 P. 601 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1928)
Navajo County v. Apache County
221 P. 837 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
172 P. 276, 19 Ariz. 475, 1918 Ariz. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yuma-county-v-maricopa-county-ariz-1918.