19 Or. 560 | Or. | 1890
delivered the opinion of the court.
The matter sought to be established in this suit is the true location of the boundary line between the donation land claims of A. N. King and Daniel H. Lownsdale in Multnomah county, Oregon. In March, 1852, King, Lownsdale, and W. W. Chapman filed upon adjoining donation claims on what was then unsurveyed public lands. The initial point of the King and Chapman claims, as stated in the notifications of the respective parties, is the same, being 3.00 chains east of the southeast corner of the southwest one-fourth of section 33, township 1 north, range 1 east. According to the calls of the notification, certificates, field notes and patent of the King claim, this boundary line runs from the initial point north 20° 15' east 20.60 chains, this line being the one in dispute in this case. The Chapman claim from the initial point, according to tile notification, runs north 20° 15' north 6.15 chains; but the initial point as mentioned in the field notes of the survey, and in the certificate of the Chapman claim, is .04 chains further east than as stated in the notification, and the course as given in the field notes and certificate is north 20° 45' east, in place of north 20° 15' east, as given in the notification. The Lownsdale claim is what is known as a legal subdivision claim. The original plat map of the survey of the claims of King, Chapman, and Lownsdale, as approved by the surveyor-general, shows the eastern
1. The southeast corner of the King claim is the last corner established by the government surveyor in running the exterior lines of the claim. The field notes show the claim was surveyed by commencing at the initial point in the base line and running thence north 20° 15 east 20.60 chains, and so on around the claim to the southeast corner, and thence a certain course and distance to the place of beginning. There is no reason shown in this case why this corner is any more nearly correct than any other known corner of the claim, and certainly no sufficient reason was suggested by counsel why it should prevail over the known initial point of the survey, and we have been unable to find any. The claim that the northwest corner of the Chapman donation should govern in the location of the line in dispute may be disposed of by saying that such corner is nowhere mentioned or referred to in the courses or distances given in the field notes, notifications, certificate or patent of the King claim, nor mentioned as one of the calls in the description of such claim; and besides, the field notes of the Chapman claim show that the initial point of the claim is four links east of the initial point of the King claim, and the course is 30° east of the corner of the King survey, so that according to the field notes of the two claims, the northwest comer
2. The law is well settled in this State that the actual location of the lines and monuments on the ground will control over courses and distances, and if such monuments can be ascertained the courses and distances must give way. Raymond v. Coffey, 5 Or. 132; Goodman v. Myrick, 5 Or. 65; Lewis v. Lewis, 4 Or. 178. The initial point of the King claim being undisputed, if the monument at the northeast corner of the claim as actually located can be ascertained, the boundary line in dispute will be a straight line from the initial point to such corner. Mr. King, one of the plaintiffs, is the only witness who undertakes to testify of his own knowledge concerning the actual location of this corner. He says that he saw Leland, the deputy United States surveyor, who surveyed his claim, set a post at the northeast corner thereof in 1859 or 1860, but that he cannot tell what became of the post or how long it remained, but thinks at least two years; that afterwards he fenced in a small field, the east line of which was on the line as surveyed by Leland, but he would not be positive whether he built the fence while the stake was there or not, but the witness tree was there. “Too long ago; can’t tell when he fenced it, but the fence stood over twenty years and until new Fourteenth-street bridge was built. The fence was thirty or forty feet from the post and a little east of it. And the north end of the fence was thirty or forty feet from the east end of the bridge. Think the fence did not run quite up to the post. There was a pretty steep bank there — a kind of cove. It might be ten or fifteen feet from the post to the end of the fence. The fence run southerly something over two blocks, a block and a half. I would not be positive in this.”
Mr. E. J. Jeffrey testifies that King pointed out the stake to him some tw-enty-one or twenty-two years ago. ‘ ‘My memory is that it was a wooden stake; nothing peculiar
J. E. Oliver, another witness for plaintiffs, says that prior to the building of the new Fourteenth-street bridge, there was an old fence that ran along. ‘ ‘To the best of my recollection, it started off the hill at this side of the gulch, about the end of the bridge in the south side; run north and would intersect B street about thirty feet east _ of Fourteenth-street bridge. That is as near as I can come to it, to the best of my recollection; everything has changed so. In some respects things have changed so in t'hat neighborhood during the last fifteen years that my memory is very indistinct in regard to location; in other it is not. Don’t know where the King east line is other than what Mr. King told me. ”
This is substantially all the testimony of plaintiffs as to the actual location of the northeast corner of the King bla.im. On the part of the defendant, W. S. Chapman testifies that while he was city surveyor from July, 1872, to July, 1874, he ran the east line of the King claim, commencing at the initial point and running on the course and for the distance called for in the original field notes of the survey, and that the line so run would bring the corner about fifteen or twenty feet north of the south line of B street and between seventy and eighty feet west of the west line of old Fourteenth street, and he thinks about
This corner claimed to have been found by Chapman corresponds with the description of this line as found in the field netes of the King survey. It appears from the testimony that soon after the Chapman survey, the old fence referred to by King, Jeffrey and Oliver was torn down and has never been replaced, and that parties owning property south of where the old fence stood moved their fences on to the line as surveyed by Chapman and have maintained them there ever since; and as far as the evidence in this case shows, without objection from King; and further, the testimony of Tufts and Mayer, who were
3. What has already been said about the uncertainty of the southeast corner of the King claim, as a proper monument from which to extend the east line of the claim, applies to the corner at the southwest corner of the Couch claim, with this additional suggestion, that the evidence shows that this corner was established by a surveyor who surveyed the Couch claim, and as a corner of that claim, and not of the King claim. The court below, while finding the northeast corner of the King claim to be as claimed by defendants, nevertheless held that the plaintiffs had acquired title by adverse possession up to the line as claimed by them as against appellants Brigham & Tufts. In this we think there was error. The evidence shows that Mr. King held this possession, under mistake or ignorance as to his true line, and with no intention to claim beyond the true line when discovered. Such a possession is not adverse, and cannot ripen into a title as against the real owner. Caufield v. Clark, 17 Or. 473; 11 Am. St. R. 845.
It follows, therefore, as to these appellants, the decree below must be reversed. And between them and plaintiffs the boundary line established was a line run as follows: Commencing at the point on the base line 3.00 chains east to the southeast corner of the southwest one-fourth of section 33, township 1 north, range 1 east, in Multnomah county, Oregon; running thence north 20° 15' east 20.60 chains to