Aрpeal from an order of the trial court denying plaintiff’s motion for amended findings, conclusions, and judgment, and in the alternative, for a new trial.
This is an action by plaintiff, Lillian A. Danielson Gifford, against defendants, Alta B. Vore and Glenn Yore. The suit was started for trespassing; default judgment was entered and later reopened. Plaintiff in her complaint alleges that she was the owner of certain property; that the defendants owned adjoining property; and that defendants, on about the first of June 1952, wrongfully and without authority, went upon her land and cut and destroyed 200 small trees. In their answer defendants admit that they own property adjoining the property of the plaintiff but deny that they went upon plaintiff’s property and cut any timber or brush thеreon.
The case was tried before the court, which found that the parties owned adjoining lakeshore property but that none of the parties
It is the contention of the plaintiff that the trial court erred in not granting her motion for amended findings of fact in which she asked that the court find that the plaintiff for more than 20 years has maintained an established boundary line between her property and the defendants’ by maintaining thereon iron monuments, a row of rocks painted white, and a border of honeysuckle; also that the location of this northern boundary line оf plaintiff’s property has been acquiesced in by defendants and their predecessors in ownership for more than 20 years.
The principal questions which we deem necessary to consider for determination are whether or not plaintiff has established her ownership of the property in question by establishment of a practical boundary line bеtween her land and that of the defendants or by adverse possession.
We are confronted at the outset with the firmly established rules that, where a trial is before the court without a jury, as here, the trial court is the finder of facts and conflicts in the evidence are to be resolved in that court. In such cases the trial court’s findings are entitled to the same weight as the verdict of a jury and will not be reversed on appeal unless they are manifestly and palpably contrary to the evidence. 1 Dunnell, Dig. (3 ed.) § 411(1,2)., and cases cited therеin.
Upon appeal the burden is on the appellant to show that there is no substantial evidence reasonably tending to sustain the trial court’s findings. H. F. Shepherdson Co. v. Central F. Ins. Co.
The evidence in the case before us is conflicting. Without going into a detailed examination of all the evidence presented, the plaintiff’s testimony in brief is that in 1927 her land was surveyed and at that time iron monuments were placed on the four corners of her
The defendants do not deny that they occupied the land in dispute. Their testimony is that when they bought their property their south line was pointed out to them as being by a pine tree about 50 feet north of plaintiff’s cottage. (This would be at about the south edge of the 80-foot strip which plaintiff claims as her land and upon which she contends that the defendants are trespassing.) Defendants claim that there was a board nailed to the pine tree in question with the initials B. M. painted on it and that the name of a previous owner of their property was Bill McMullen. Mr. Vore testified that there was no row of rocks but that the rocks that were there were scattered and not in any line and that they assumed that the rocks had been
The record here lacks any evidence on which the trial court could ascertain where the actual northеrn boundary line of plaintiff’s property is located. Exhibit 10 shows a sketch of the property. The exhibit is not the claimed survey which was excluded but was admitted with the express understanding that it wаs not a survey but only a sketch of the premises received for illustrative purposes.
While it is true that under the law of this state a practical location may constitute a boundary line, such a boundary line may be established in one of three ways: (1) The location relied upon must have been acquiesced in for a sufficient length of time to bar a right of еntry under the statute of limitations; (2) the line must have been expressly agreed upon between the parties claiming the land on both sides thereof and afterward acquiesced in; оr (3) the parties whose rights are to be barred must have silently looked on, with knowledge of the true line, while the other party encroached upon it or subjected himself to exрense in regard to the land which he would not have had the line been in dispute. Fishman v. Nielsen,
Under this rule there is no evidence in the record that anyone has acquiesced in the alleged boundary line. While it is true that plaintiff testified that she has never had a dispute before over the boundary line, there is no evidence that she had asserted this as her boundary linе to any of defendants’ predecessors in title.
Regarding the second and third methods, there is no evidence of any previous agreement in regard to the boundary line or that аnyone had silently looked on while plaintiff subjected herself to expense in regard to the land which she would not have done had the line been in dispute. We also said in the Fishman case that the evidence to establish such line must be clear, positive, and unequivocal and that the effect of a practical location of a boundary is to divеst one of a conceded title by deed.
With respect to the plaintiff’s acquiring the property in question by adverse possession, it is elementary that such possession must be
Under these principles relating to the practical location of a boundary line and to title by adverse possession and after a careful examination of the record, we cannot say that the trial court’s findings were so manifestly and palpably contrary to the evidence that it should have amended its findings of fact and adopted those offered by the plaintiff. Eather, it appears to us that the case involved a fact issue as to whether plaintiff proved her title to the land in dispute. It is evident from the record here that the trial court was justified in stating in its memorandum to the order denying plaintiff’s motion for amended findings or a new trial that “she did little to perfect her claim of ownership * * * thаt she furnished no up-to-date survey” and that without a survey the court could not say that plaintiff’s evidence was clear and convincing and came within the rules reviewed at the conclusion of the trial. It is our opinion that under the record here the trial court should be affirmed.
Affirmed.
