Brown v. Morrill
Brown v. Morrill
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff brought suit in trover against -defendants in the St. Clair circuit for timber claimed to have been taken and converted by them from land in Oscoda county. The cause was tried before a jury, and •defendants had verdict and judgment. At the time of the claimed conversion the land belonged to Currier & Halleck, who afterwards, and before this suit was commenced, sold the land to the plaintiff, and assigned their right of action.
Upon the trial, practically the sole ground of contention between the parties was upon the location of the section line between sections 7 and 18, town 26 N., range 1 E. The defendants owned the N. W. £ of the N. W. £, and the S. i of the N. W. i, of section 18; and the plaintiff owned the S. W. ¿ of section 7, and the N E. i of the N. W. ¿ of section 18. The map on following page illustrates the situation.
The east corner of sections 7 and 18, at A in the dia.gram, was undisputed, as was also the east corner of sections 12 and 13 of the town west, at C in the diagram. Plaintiff claimed that the section line between sections 7 ■and 18 ran, as shown on the diagram, from A to B, while the defendants claimed that the line ran as shown by the dotted line from A to C.
The plaintiff, to make his case, introduced the field-
■witness trees, both aspen, one north and east, at a distance of 7 feet, which would be on section 7, and one south and east, 10 feet distant, which would be on section 18. It is not claimed by the plaintiff that these Witness trees were found, but that aspens were found dead and decayed at the place indicated by the field hotes. There was no contention but that the corner
The court instructed the-jury as follows:
“If there are visible monuments, as posts, established by the evidence, they will control courses and distances, and are the best evidence as to the location of the line originally run; that is, while the field-notes are supposed and presumed to be correct in their calls for courses and distances, yet if the line as indicated by such fixed monuments, ascertained and established by the-evidence to your satisfaction, differs from the line called for by the courses and distances in the field-notes, the-latter must yield to the former in determining the true-line.”
The court further instructed the jury—
“Monuments always control courses and distances. This is an inflexible rule; but you must be satisfied they are the original monuments, and those so called for by the original survey. All that a surveyor can do is to direct attention towards the ascertainment of the actual location of the original land-marks. * * * The field-notes state the line to be 15.9 chains below the southeast corner of section 12, and the north-east corner of section 13, of the township next west of the meridian-line; and the question is, was it established there, or was; it actually located opposite this corner [between sections 12 and 13], so that the line was continuous across the-meridian line? * * * If you are satisfied from the evidence that the corner was actually established at a different place than called for in the field-notes, that should govern; and this question you are to determine*33 from the evidence of the surveyor and the other experts, and all the evidence given in the case and the facts shown by the testimony."
Plaintiff excepts to this portion of the charge, and contends that “ this rule is not inflexible; that, other things being equal, it may properly be said that monuments control courses and distances, yet the rule should not be stated as invariable, and not subject to any modification;" and insists that his third request to charge should have been given, which, in substance, was that the section line between sections 7 and 18 is at the point B indicated on the diagram.
The defendants offered testimony of witnesses who had been engaged for years in looking land, and were familiar with the woods and the government surveys, and they testified that the corner of sections 7 and 18 of the township east of the meridian line, and 12 and 13 west of it, was a common corner, fixed by the same post, and witnessed by four witness trees, having upon them the usual government marks indicating that the post was identical for the four corners. They also testified that it was plain to be seen that the line ran directly across the meridian, and that, leading east, it was a well-defined line, bearing upon it evidence of having been blazed through by the government surveyors, and that upon such line was a sight tree, notched upon both sides, such as they had only found upon section lines run by the government. There was some contention as to whether the witness trees to the post at point C on the diagram bore the principal government mark, indicating the corner post between sections 7 and 18, and also as to whether the witness trees were of the same specie as indicated by the government survey. It is shown, however, by the testimony, that the corner south of there,
It is claimed on the part of the plaintiff that the rules by which the surveyors were governed, under the act of Congress of 1805, produced double corners upon all the exterior lines of the townships, and that, therefore, it is to he presumed that the post found at point 0 on the diagram, being the corner between sections 12 and 13, was not intended as a corner post for sections 7 and 18. It appears, however, from the testimony of. Mr. Bandall, a surveyor introduced as a witness by the plaintiff, that the post set just one mile south of that point was witnessed by four trees, plainly indicating it as the common corner of those four sections, so that it would seem that the surveyor in making this survey used but one post to establish the corners of the four sections.
We think this some evidence, in connection with the other facts and circumstances, to go to the jury, from which they might determine that the one post set at point C was intended to mark the corners of the four
It is claimed on the part of the plaintiff that the evidence did not tend to show that the witness trees to this post at point C bore the true government mark, as at the roots of the tree the letters “B. F. T.” did not •appear. The witnesses testified that the trees bore the mark, “ T. 26 N., 1 E., S. 7.” It is also claimed that ■one of these trees was not of the species mentioned in the field-notes. There would be great force in the contention that there was no testimony from which the jury would be justified in finding this to be the true corner of the sections if the question rested wholly upon these trees, as the true witness trees, to mark this as the ■corner of sections 7 and 18; but the jury had a right to -consider the other facts and circumstances tending to -establish this point as the true corner of these sections. The location of the corner post one mile south, the one post marking the four corners, together with the fact of ■the blazed line eastward from point C and the sight tree upon that line, added great weight to the other evidence in establishing point C as the true corner. The fact, also, that the plaintiff’s testimony showed that the point claimed by him as the true corner could not be -established by any witness tree and other evidence that the corner had ever been located there, gives strength to the defendants’ claim that that never was established as the corner of the section, but that point C was the true -corner.
We are satisfied that there was some evidence to go to
We find no error in the record, and the judgment must be affirmed, with costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Delamere Brown v. Levi Morrill and Jesse Morrill
- Status
- Published