2 P.2d 373 | Cal. | 1931
The three actions above named were tried together, and involve only one question, to wit, the ownership of a tract of land lying between the meander line and the waters of Clear Lake. The respective plaintiffs had judgment and the defendant appeals.
The actions were brought to quiet the title to lots 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 of section 29, township 15 north, range 7 west, M.D.B. M., abutting on Clear Lake, the plaintiffs alleging ownership to the actual water-line on the lake, irrespective of the meander line, as shown by the original survey of the property in dispute. The tract in dispute involves approximately 83 acres, of which the plaintiff Iantha C. Anderson claims to be the owner of 39.50 acres. The plaintiff John Russel Anderson alleges ownership to 43 acres of the tract, and the plaintiff Baylis Estate Company, a corporation, alleges ownership to approximately 2.25 acres. The record shows ownership in the plaintiff John Russel Anderson of lots 1 and 2; ownership in Iantha C. Anderson of lots 3 and 4, save and except a certain portion thereof owned *416 by the Baylis Estate Company, lot 5 being owned also by the Baylis Estate Company.
Section 29 was originally surveyed in December, 1897, by George Tucker, a regularly licensed United States surveyor, and the plat thereof was subsequently filed in the office of the surveyor-general at San Francisco, California, and approved by the surveyor-general on the eighteenth day of December, 1876. In 1925 a resurvey of the premises involved was made by William H. Thorne, which survey was approved by the United States supervisor of surveys, on the twenty-sixth day of January, 1926, and by the Acting Commissioner of the United States General Land Office on March 16, 1926. The following plat shows the difference in the respective surveys:
[EDITORS' NOTE: PLAT IS ELECTRONICALLY NON-TRANSFERRABLE.] *417
The Tucker survey began at point "A" and ran a line westerly to a point marked "B"; thence northerly to a point marked "C", returning to the point of beginning. What is known as the meander line of Clear Lake was run as follows: "A" to "D"; thence to point marked "E"; thence to point marked "F"; thence to point marked "C". This latter line was described on the plat as the meander line of Clear Lake, and the plat filed with the United States surveyor-general and in the office of the interior department, shows the water-line of Clear Lake coincident with the meander line of the survey made by Tucker in 1875. It being discovered later that the meander line of the lake, as run and platted by Tucker, did not actually coincide with the water-line of the lake, a resurvey was made in 1925, which resurvey gives the meander line indicated on the plat as running from "E" to "G" and from "G" to "F", and running a line from "F" to "E", incloses a tract comprising a trifle over 83 acres, the respective plaintiffs alleging ownership to portions of the 83 acres as heretofore described, by reason of their ownership of lands described in the Tucker survey to which we have referred. A duly certified copy of the plat of the original survey made by Tucker in 1875 was admitted in evidence, and the meander line of the survey and the plat coincide as to the water-line of Clear Lake, that is, the original plat does not show the existence of any land between the meander line of the survey and the actual water-line of the lake.
The patents issued by the United States government, under which the respective plaintiffs claim, describe the land conveyed by lots numbered as we have indicated on the plat, containing so many acres according to the official plat of the survey of the lands returned to the general land office of the surveyor-general, etc. In other words, the lands were conveyed according to the plat of the survey thereof made by Tucker, which describe the lands as extending to and abutting upon the waters of Clear Lake.
The court found that a patent was issued to Algernon Sidney Jones for 126.1 acres, and that there were approximately 41 acres between the meander line of said land and Clear Lake, which said 41 acres were included in said patent *418 to Algernon Sidney Jones from the United States of America, and that 38.78 acres of the same lies between the meander line of the plaintiff Iantha C. Anderson and Clear Lake, and is a part of the land conveyed by said patent.
As to the property claimed by the plaintiff John Russel Anderson, the court found that the United States government issued a patent to Harvey W. Grigsby for 155.79 acres, and that there were approximately 42.72 acres between the meander line of said land and Clear Lake, and which said 42.72 acres were included and conveyed by the patent to Harvey W. Grigsby.
The court further found that as to the Baylis Estate Company the 2.25 acres claimed by said estate were covered by the patent issued to Algernon Sidney Jones, as above stated.
The plaintiffs in this action claim the property through mesne conveyances from the patentees named. Following the Thorne survey a patent was issued by the United States government to the defendant, which includes the land indicated on the plat to which we have referred, as follows: Beginning at point "E"; thence to point marked "G"; thence to point marked "F"; thence to point of beginning.
The meander line of the Tucker survey, according to which the plat was made, filed and approved, as heretofore stated, is as follows:
"Beginning at meander post on south boundary of township 17.70 chains east of corner to sections 32 and 33.
*419In Section 33
N. 57 deg. W. 15.50 chains to corner to sections 28, 29, 32, 33. West 14.00 chains. Thence In Section 29 N. 1 deg. W. 8.00 chains N. 13 deg. E. 10.00 " N. 20 deg. E. 11.00 " N. 57 deg. E. 6.00 " North 4.00 " N. 80 deg. W. 53.00 " S. Jones cabin S. 3 deg. chains. S. 60 1/4 deg. W. 28.50 " to fractional corner to sections 29 and 30."
Approximately fifty years later a different plat was filed after the Thorne survey, indicating a different meander line, as we have shown by the lines running from points "E" to "G", "G" to "F" and "F" to "E". The testimony shows that the land included within the Thorne survey and lying between the meander line of the Tucker survey and the waters of Clear Lake was rocky, covered by liveoak, chamisal and manzanita trees, and was of little value, the testimony being to the effect that the land at the time of the Tucker survey was not worth over $1.25 an acre, or an aggregate sum of $100, was not suitable to cultivation, and during all the years intervening between the Tucker and the Thorne surveys was used only for pasturage purposes. Some of the trees thereon were cut for use as firewood. Following the Thorne survey the defendant and her husband built a cabin on one corner of the disputed tract. Taxes were paid upon the disputed premises by the plaintiffs in this action for a number of years. The trial court, however, did not make any finding as to adverse possession by any of the parties hereto, and we have found nothing in the testimony which would justify such finding.
[1] The claim of the plaintiffs, as we have stated, is based upon the survey made in 1875, and carried with it all the lands lying between the lots mentioned in the patents and the actual water-line of the lake. The claim of the defendant is based upon the theory that the 83 acres of land is sufficient in size to warrant and demand a finding that the Tucker survey was fraudulent and that no title or claim of ownership to the disputed premises can be based thereon. The trial court found against the claim of the defendant, holding that there was no basis for setting aside the Tucker survey, or holding that it was the result of either mistake or fraudulent act, and that under the law the water-line, and not the meander line, constituted the true boundary of the patented lands, and that the subsequent patent based upon a survey made fifty years later conveyed no title.
[2] The patents issued following the Tucker survey purported to convey the land according to the plat on file in the general land office, which plat gave the waters of Clear Lake as the boundary line. In 9 C.J., page 180, section 50, the rule with reference to such conveyances is thus *420
stated: "When maps, plats or field notes are referred to in a grant or conveyance they are to be regarded as incorporated into the instrument and are usually held to furnish the true description of the boundaries of the land." It will be noticed that the rule here stated reads — "maps, plats or field notes", not "maps, plats and field notes". [3] In the instant case the deed refers to the "official plat", and does not mention the field-notes. The plat gives Clear Lake as the boundary. Hence, the application of the rule set forth in section
In Craig v. White,
In Foss v. Johnstone,
In Maginnis v. Hurlbutt,
Appellant bases her claim for reversal upon the cases of JeemsBayou Fishing Hunting Club et al. v. United States,
In deciding the Lane case the court used the following language, which is pertinent here: "The official plat made from such survey does not show the meander line, but shows the general form of the lake adduced therefrom and the surrounding fractional lots adjoining and bordering on the same. The patents, when issued, refer to this plat for identification of the lots conveyed, and are equivalent to, and have the physical effect of a declaration that they extend to, and are bounded by the lake or stream." This language is quoted from the case of Mitchell v.Smale,
In the case of Barringer v. Davis, 120 N.W. 65, a case referred to in the citations which we have given, it is held that the meander line is not the limit of the land conveyed when the lands border upon a body of water, but that the shore line constitutes the true boundary. On pages 66 and 67 of the volume cited are two maps or plats showing the lands in controversy. The original survey made in 1875 *425 called for 154 acres. A resurvey made in 1901 added 104 acres. The court held that the original patents conveyed the lands in controversy. This case is also reported in 141 Iowa, 419, 433. It would appear from the opinion and the plats in the Barringer case that the acreage involved was considerably larger than that with which we are dealing.
In the case of Rue v. Oregon Washington R. Co.,
In the case of Mitchell v. Smale, supra, the patent covered 4.53 acres. As platted it was held to carry title to 25 acres. InSherwin v. Bitzer,
In Schlosser v. Cruickshank et al., 96 Iowa, 414 [65 N.W. 344], the opinion discloses that there were 100 acres between the meander line and the shore of the lake. It was there held that the patent under the cases which we have cited carried the boundary line to the shore of the lake.
In Schmitz v. Klee,
In Greene et al. v. United States, 274 Fed. 145, 149, andLoucks et al. v. United States (U.S. v. Lane),
Some minor questions were presented as to errors in the admission of testimony, but they are not such as to affect the application of the legal principles enunciated by the foregoing cases, and in view of what we have heretofore stated, we think that the judgment of the trial court should be affirmed, and it is so ordered.
Richards, J., Seawell, J., Curtis, J., Langdon, J., and Waste, C.J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.
A petition for a writ of certiorari was denied by the Supreme Court of the United States on January 25, 1932.