Eshleman v. Malter
Eshleman v. Malter
Opinion of the Court
When the description of a deed calls for a subdivision of a section of surveyed land, the quarter-section corners being lost, and the section exceeding six hundred and forty acres in area, the division lines of the fractions of
This is an action to quiet title to a small strip of land containing about 2.88 acres. Plaintiff being the owner of section 17 of a certain township and range, sold to defendant the west one-half of the northwest one-quarter of said section, and the location of defendant’s eastern boundary line thereof is the point in dispute. It is insisted that the evidence is insufficient to support the finding of the court as to the ownership of the land being in the plaintiff, but upon an examination of the record, we think the evidence in this regard sufficient. The four corners of the section are established by the evidence with reasonable certainty, and these four corners being located any legal subdivision may be readily ascertained. The evidence disclosed that the section contained about 664.43 acres, and that the north line of the section was 82.21 chains in length. Appellant appears to concede that, if the north line of plaintiff’s land exceeds 60 chains in length, then the land in litigation is included in her holding; and that the north line of her land is of greater length than 60 chains is very evident.
When the description of land in a deed calls for a legal subdivision of a section of surveyed land, the quarter-section corners being lost, and the section exceeding 640 acres in area, the division lines of the fractions of the section are determined by a division pro rata of the
The fact that defendant claimed by his answer to have made valuable and permanent improvements upon this tract of land while he was in possession thereof is immaterial to the case, and a finding as to such allegation of the answer was not required. (Helm v. Wilson, 89 Cal. 593.)
For the foregoing reasons it is ordered that the judgment and order be affirmed.
Paterson, J., and Harrison, J., concurred.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.