The appellants brought this action against the appellee in ejectment to recover a strip of land nineteen feet wide, on the west side of their land in section thirty-one, township twenty-one, range eleven east, in Delaware county, Indiana. The court, upon request, made a special finding of facts and stated its conclusions of law thereon.
The court stated its conclusions of law as follows: (1) The law is with the defendant. (2) Plaintiffs are not entitled to any relief in this action. (3) The plaintiffs are not the owners of the real estate described in their complaint, and have no right, title or interest therein and thereto, and are not entitled to possession thereof or to have their title quieted thereto.
The appellants excepted to each of the conclusions of law, and have assigned in this court as errors that the court erred (1) in its conclusions of law and each of them; (2) in overruling appellants’ motion for a new trial. The errors are thus assigned in a number of ways, and are to the effect that the decision of the court is not supported by sufficient evidence and is against the weight of the evidence.
It is true, as appellants say, that the question in the ease is whether the appellants are estopped, by reason of the erection of the partition fence by Beall and Satterfield, from claiming the strip of land nineteen feet wide on the east end of their tract so bought from John E. Reed.
Sylvester Satterfield, a son of the appellee, testified that he was present at the survey, and heard his father and Beall talking about the fence, and both said they were satisfied with the survey; that they would build the fence on the line connected by the two corner stones established by the survey. Upon the examination of this record we find that there is evidence to sustain the findings of the trial court.
we are warranted in disturbing it. Robinson & Co. v. Hathaway (1898), 150 Ind. 679; Fox v. Cox (1898), 20 Ind. App. 61; Blakey v. New York Life Ins. Co. (1902), 28 Ind. App. 428, and authorities cited.
The court, however, did find that when Samuel Beall sold and conveyed the land to the appellee, and thereafter put him in peaceable possession thereof, and when the line fence was agreed upon and built, he continued to occupy the land in controversy in peaceable possession, by and with the consent of his grantor.
The court did not err in its conclusions of law, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.