68 Iowa 66 | Iowa | 1885
II. Other objections are made to the abstract and to. the assignment of errors. We need not examine them, because we think that the appeal must be determined upon the merits, and upon the final report. So far as this question is involvéd, the record is complete, and the assignment of error is sufficiently explicit. All questions, therefore, pertaining to the authority to appoint the commission, and whether a proper case was made by the plaintiffs to invoke the action of the' court, and the authority of the court to remand the cause to, the commission upon setting aside the first report, will not be considered.
In the year 1866, D. L. Blakeslee, avIio was then county surveyor, established the corner of said sections at the point now claimed by the defendants; and the evidence shows, without conflict, that this corner was recognized by the adjoining land-owners as the true corner until the year 1875, when other surveys were made at the instance of the plaintiffs, or those under whom they claim, by Avhieh it is claimed that the line should be located some íavo and a half rods to the east of the line established by the Blakeslee survey. But the fences of the respective parties remained upon the line of the Blakeslee survey, and they now so remain. This proceeding Avas commenced in 1883. The evidence shows that a corner was marked at the point flxed by the Blakeslee survey long before that survey was made, and that, from the year 1859 doAvn to 1875, a period of sixteen years, all parties interested acquiesced therein and acted accordingly. Section 3 of the act under which the proceeding Avas had (McClain’s Code, p. 863) provides that the commission may take the evidence of “any person or persons who may be able to identify any original government corner, or Avitness thereto, or government line, tree, or other noted object, or any other legally-established corner, or other corners that have been recognized as such by the adjoining proprietors for over ten
We have examined the evidence with a great deal of care,' and, while we are not prepared to say that the defendants’ possession is adverse, we strongly incline to think that under the rule in the case of Burdick v. Heivly, 23 Iowa, 511; Foulke v. Stockdale, 40 Id., 99; Hiatt v. Hirkpatrick, 48 Id., 78; and Tracy v. Newton, 57 Id., 210, the possession
Eeversed.