122 P. 906 | Utah | 1912
The plaintiff in its complaint alleged that it was the owner and entitled to the possession of certain real property, described in its complaint by courses and distances, “more or less.” It then alleged “that the east boundary line of said real estate, prior to the acts of trespass by the defendants, as hereinafter specifically set forth, was and for more than fifty years immediately prior thereto has been marked by a certain fence, made of posts, wire, willows, hedge, and brush, which fence from time immemorial has been recognized, acknowledged, and acquiesced in as the true boundary line between the real estate above described and* the real estate located immediately east thereof, claimed to be owned by the defendants.” It further alleged that the defendants in 1910 wrongfully broke down and removed the old fence, trespassed upon plaintiff’s lands, injured its freehold, erected on plaintiff’s lands a new fence as and for the boundary line between the properties of the parties, and placed the new fence on a, line about 120 feet west of the old fence line.
The action is one seeking to enjoin the defendants from interfering with the old fence line as the boundary line, to restrain them from maintaining the new fence, and from continuing the alleged acts of trespass. The defendants filed a general denial. The plaintiff by a number of witnesses proved that the old fence line for a long period of time— more than forty years — was recognized, treated, and ac
The defendants adduced evidence to show that they caused plaintiff’s lands, especially the east boundary line thereof, to be surveyed by a surveyor. Thereafter they removed the old fence, and built a new fence in accordance with the survey. One of them testified: “We had a survey made, and afterwards built the fence on the survey.” The east boundary line of plaintiff’s property as shown by that survey, and the line as shown by the old fence line, are discordant. That is what gave rise to this lawsuit. The court found the line to be as shown by the survey, and rendered a judgment for the defendants. Plaintiff appeals.
We think the judgment wrong. In the cases of Holmes v. Judge, 31 Utah, 269, 87 Pac. 1009, Moyer v. Langton, 37 Utah, 9, 106 Pac. 508, Rydalch v. Anderson, 37 Utah, 99, 107 Pac. 25, and Young v. Hyland, 37 Utah, 229, 108 Pac. 1124, we said all that is necessary to be, or that can be, said by us on the question that where owners of adjoining lands have occupied their respective premises up to a certain line, which they and their predecessors in interest recognized and acquiesced' in as their boundary line for a long period of time, neither they, nor their grantees or privies in estate, will be permitted to deny that the boundary line so recognized and acquiesced in is the true line of division between their properties.