133 Iowa 470 | Iowa | 1907
In the year 1857 one Bobert Avery, owning a tract of land in Union township, Des Moines county, Iowa, dedicated a portion thereof to the public for use as a cemetery, and evidenced such fact by making and recording a deed of the land so designated to Union township. Since that date the deeded tract has been used as a cemetery. It was never platted into lots or blocks, nor have any distinct parts or parcels thereof ever been sold or conveyed to persons who have buried their dead therein. ■ The custom usually observed has been for each person desiring to do so to select a spot or place not already utilized and mark thereon by stakes or stones the bounds of a family burial plat, and thereafter the exclusive right of such person to the ground so chosen has ordinarily been respected by others. In most cases an open space or pathway of one foot or more in width has been left between the adjacent plats.
About the year 1873 Alfred Hassenclever, husband of the original plaintiff herein, selected a burial plat in this cemetery, in which about that time a member of his family was interred. In 1877 or 1878 one Bomkey, father of the defendant of that name, seems to have taken a plat or lot next north from that of the Hassenclever family and buried a child therein. A year or two later said Eomkey himself died, and was also buried there. Later, and several years before the beginning of this controversy, the surviving Bomkeys, or some of them, put up an iron fence inclosing that part of the ground where members of their family were buried, leaving a space several feet in width between the south fence and the north side of the grave on the Hassenclever plat. In the year 1900 the wife of E. W. Eomkey died, and her body was buried south of the iron fence in the open space above mentioned, leaving a space between this
. Two questions are argued by the counsel for the appellant: First, the fact question as to the location of the line; and, second, the legal question as to the effect of the order by the township trustees.
The decree appealed from effects substantial justice between the parties, and it is affirmed.