The heirs of J. F. Carter, the appellants, and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Gross, the respondents, own adjacent tracts of land in Bamberg County. The Carter heirs brought this action to (1) determine their property line, (2) recover damages for timber sold by the Grosses, and (3) enjoin the Grosses from using a certain road. The master in еquity relied on the Carter heirs’ surveyor’s testimony to establish the property line and decided the damages issue in the Carter heirs’ favor. The circuit сourt reversed, basing its findings on the testimony of the Grosses’ surveyor, enjoining the Carter heirs from interfering with the use of the road, and assessing costs against the Cаrter heirs. We affirm.
The oldest plat of the land in question was made by J. B. Black in 1873. A. R. Parler, Jr., the Carter heirs’ surveyor, reran the lines on the ground, using a large sweet gum tree to mark a corner of the Carter tract. J. J. Foy, the Grosses surveyor, testified as to his interpretation of the Black plat. The Black plat shows a creek jutting out from a river and a line running through the middle of the creek bed with the notation, “Head the line.” Foy testified a head is “a jutting out body related to the same formation.” He testified furthеr a line running through the middle of the creek bed would place the corner of the Gross tract 100 feet beyond the gum tree. The Carter heirs brought this aсtion when the Grosses sold timber in this disputed area.
Mrs. Lydia Carter, the predecessor in title to the Carter tract, had hired a surveyor to establish the linе in the middle 1950’s. Mr. Alex Nummy, the predecessor in title to the Gross tract, moved his fence back from that line and paid for timber cut beyond it. However, Mr. Nummy testified (1) his fence was not erected to establish his line, but to enclose his dairy cows; and (2) he paid Mrs. Carter only to pacify her: “I didn’t really accept anything. I just told her that if that satisfied her that I would give her the $250.00 and move my fence_I didn’t see where it made that much difference really.” Furthermore, the Cаrter heirs testified they (1) never entered this disputed area nor made improvements, and (2) intended to possess only to the true boundary line.
I. Location of Property Line
In an aсtion “of trespass to try title ... the [plaintiffs] must recover, if at all, on the strength of their own title; and the burden [is] upon [them] to prove just
A. Resurvey
The Carter heirs first tried to establish title to the disputed land by resurvey. The trial court was correct in finding the Parler plat did not control over the Black plat. “The general rule is that where the lines of seniоr and junior surveys conflict, the lines of the senior survey control.” 11 C. J. S. Boundaries, § 61 (1938). cf. Faulkenberry v. Truesdell, 36 S. C. L. (5 Strob.) 221, 225 (1850) (the general rule does not necessarily apply when the senior plat is unclear).
The trial court was also correct in concluding Foy’s analysis was superior to Parler’s because resurveys based on known monuments are controlling. “The relative weight to be given to evidence of location is a matter of law, and they rank in this order: (1) natural boundaries; (2) artifiсial marks, and (3) course and distance.”
Southern Realty and Investment Co. v. Keenan,
99 S. C. 200,
B. Acquiescence
The Carter heirs also tried to prove title by acquiescence. A disputed boundary line can be established by acquiescence of the parties.
Allen v. Johnson,
27 S. C. L. (2 McMul.) 495, 496 (1836). “ ‘It is well established that if adjoining landowners occupy their respective premises up to a certain line which they mutually ... acquiesce in for а long period of time ... they are precluded from claiming that the boundary line thus ... acquiesced in is not the
However, acquiescence is a question of fact determined by the intent of the parties.
Croft v. Sanders, _
S. C. _,
C. Adverse Possession
The Carter heirs also tried to prove title to the land in question by adverse possession. Title tо real property can be acquired by adverse possession continued for a period of ten years. S. C. Code Ann. § 15-67-210 (1976).
However, to be adverse, possession must be “actual, open, notorious, exclusive, hostile, continuous ... and uninterrupted.”
King v. Hawkins,
282 S. C. 508,
II. Damages for Timber Sold
The Carter heirs’ claim for damages for timber sold beyond the line running from the gum tree must fail in light of our conclusion they have not established title to property behind the line running through the middle of the creek bed. We have found no evidence the Grosses actually sold timber beyond the line running from the middle of the creek bed.
III. Injunction from Use of Road
The record contains testimony reasonably supporting the trial court’s finding the road to the Gross tract traversing the Carter tract has been used by the public for more than twenty years without interruption. There is evidence the Grosses, their predecessоr in title, their neighbors, the county, and the school district have used and improved the road. This evidence prevents the Carter heirs from obtaining the injunсtion they sought, and is a proper basis for enjoining them from interfering with the road’s use. A public road can be created by dedication.
Edgefield County v. Georgia-Carolina Power Co.,
104 S. C. 311,
The trial court assessed costs against the Carter heirs. Costs are allowed to the successful party. S. C. Code Ann. § 15-37-20 (1976). We find no merit in the Carter heirs’ argument the Grosses did not succeed.
Affirmed.
