This сase involves a dispute between 2 neighbors over a common boundary. The ownership of some 3-1/2 feet of land is involved. The defendants have fenced the strip. Plaintiff asserts that they unlawfully appropriated it and brings an action.' in ejectment. In answer the defendants contend not only that they have title to the strip but, in addition,, that they have held it adversely for the statutory period.
Defendants claim under a deed granting them land' of the following legal description:
“A piece of land commencing at a point 16 rods east of southwest corner of east half of southeast quаrter of section 7, town 12 north, range 7 east, thence east 64-1/2 feet, thence north 153 feet, thence west 64-1/2 feet, thence south 153 feet to beginning.”
Plaintiff’s deed describes her land as:
“Commencing at a point 328.5 feet east of the sоuthwest corner of the east half of the southeast quarter of section 7, town 12 north, range 7 east, thence north 153 feet, thence east 64.5 feet, thence south 153 feet, and thence west 64.5 feet to place of beginning.”
All of the land involvеd, the east half of the southeast quarter, was once farmland owned by the father <of plaintiff’s husband. The father conveyed property lying to the west of defendants’, the Reese school 'property. In 1912, plaintiff and her husband took title to the remaining farmland. For many years there has been a fence of some kind on the line running 264 feet to the east of the iron stake which has served to divide the Reese school property from the adjoining property. Plaintiff testified that, in 1909, there was an old board fence there, which was replaced by a wire fence, that, in fact, there has been a fence there for 90 years.
In 1939, without the benefit of a survey, plaintiff and her husband agreed to sell part of their property to defendants’ predecessors in title; the portion was determined by measurement and, on it, a house was built which has been occupied by defendants ever since. In 1940, they gave a deed, employing the legal .description that appears in defendants’ deed. In
Following her husband’s death, plaintiff disposеd of the farm and reacquired the land she now holds and on which she now resides.
There seems to have been no serious boundary dispute until a survey was made by the State highway department. As the trial сourt observed, “although the record does not clearly disclose what this survey unveiled, it is a reasonable inference from exhibit 4 and exhibit 13 (Black’s survey of March, 1957, and Martin’s survey of June, 1956) that it disclosеd the overrun of 6.56 feet in the southeast quarter of section 7.”
The overrun mentioned would place “the southwest corner of the east half of the southeast quarter” 3.28 feet east of the iron stake and would cause a corresponding dislocation of all boundaries reckoned from it.
Relations between the parties became strained. Defendants erected what is described in the record as a “Page wire fence.” In the course of erecting this fence, which marked the extent of defendants’ claim to the strip, they destroyed, plaintiff testified (“grubbed out” was her expression), in her absence, the forsythia, mock orange, lilac, hyacinths, and other flowers and shrubs she had planted. The fence erected appears from photographs in еxhibit to be both hog-tight and bull-strong. It was equally effec-
The trial court concluded that “long estаblished occupational lines are not to be disturbed by recent surveys.” This statement is correct and it was correctly applied to the facts before us. Difficulty arises when the descriptiоns in deeds of conveyance must be applied to the land itself. Uncertainties that too often are left unresolved at the time of conveyance give birth to bitter dispute. Boundaries designated by the parties on the ground conflict with boundaries described in their deeds. A recent study has indicated the variety of doctrine brought to bear by the courts and the confusion that has resulted. 1 Funda-mentally, however, the courts have observed a consistent policy, the same policy that is behind statutes of limitation and the doctrine of res judicata, namely, the policy of repose. Their decisions have been guided by the principle that settled boundaries shall be allowed repose and shall not be disturbed. In many cases there are elements of estoppel' and in others there are agreements of the parties. But if the lack of an agreement threatens a settled boundary we do not hesitate to “imply” agreement, sometimes from the conduct of thе parties, or from surrounding circumstances, 2 just as we do in other cases. 3
The doctrine of acquiescence would not permit the line of the old fence, so marked, to be disputed as a boundary between adjoining owners. Nor, it follows, may it be disputed with respect to other descriptions dependent upon its location. Under these circumstances, after such a boundary has been so established, it must be рresumed that descriptions in later conveyances by one of these parties, necessarily involving such boundary, are intended to refer to the boundary so located on the ground and nоt to some other imaginary line or point which might have been taken in the absence of such location. Lapse of time is not involved in the situation, nor a compromise line after disputе, but, rather, an identification of intended location by those who are to be affected.
With respect to the adverse possession asserted by defendants there was much testimony regarding a stone wall near the eastern boundary of defendants’ lot, of picket fences, of gates and other para
Once again we have а litigant praying “special costs or award of special damages for inadequacy of appendix.” For determination of defendants’ compliance with Court Rule No 67, § 6 (1945), as amended, we remand the case for the determination and recommendation to us described in
Greenough
v.
Greenough,
The judgment of the lower court is affirmed. Costs to appellee.
Notes
Browder, The Practical Location of Boundaries, 56 Mich L Rev 487; Browder, Boundaries, Description v. Survey, 53 Mich L Rev 647.
Tillman
v.
Hutcherson,
348 Mo 473 (
Mr. Justice Holmes spolie with insight of conditions “implied” in a contract:
“You always can imply a condition in a contract. But why do you imply it? It is because of some belief as to the practice of the community or of a class, or because of some оpinion as to policy, or, in short, because of some attitude of yours upon a matter not capable of exact quantitative measurement, and therefore not capаble of founding exaet logical conclusions. Such matters really are battle grounds where the means do not exist for determinations that shall be good for all time, and where the decision can do no more than embody the preference of a given body in a given time and place.” Holmes, The Path of the Law, 10 Harv L Rev 457, 466.
