Herpel v. Malone
Herpel v. Malone
Opinion of the Court
This is an action of ejectment. The question in controversy concerned the true location of a certain section line. Twenty-five years ago D. A. Pettibone, a practical surveyor who had then had upwards of ten years’ experience, undertook to run this section line, and did so to his satisfaction with the original field-notes before him. He found bearing trees and a blazed line which he believes to be the true line. He was acting at the time in part for John Malone one of the defendants. He was a witness on this trial, and gives many reasons for his belief that he did not err in locating the line. If he was correct, the plaintiff was entitled to recover.
On the other hand Harrison Carey, the county surveyor, had recently, by direction of the board of supervisors of the county, proceeded to “ establish ” — to use the statutory phrase —the section corner on which the line in question depends, and he locates the line differently. He also professed to be guided by the field-notes.
The judge was in error. The question was peculiarly one of fact; and however well satisfied the judge may have been of the truthfulness and reliability of Mr. Pettibone’s evidence it was not competent to treat it as undisputed and indisputable. „ The defendants were contesting it, and the evidence, of Mr. Carey had certainly some tendency to detract from its force. What weight should be given to the testimony of either of these witnesses only the jury was competent to determine.
A new trial is ordered.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Catharine M. Herpel v. John Malone
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published