109 F. 354 | 8th Cir. | 1901
The facts presented by the record upon the final hearing of this case do not differ essentially from those presented on the appeal from the order granting the injunction. Kirwan v. Murphy, 28 C. C. A. 348, 83 Fed. 272, 286, 289; Murphy v. Kirwan (C. C.) 103 Fed. 104. The United States surveyed and platted the land about Cedar- Lake; and then patented the tracts which the complainants now own according to its plats, which showed that these tracts extended to, and were bounded by, the lake. It made no attempt to correct its survey, and gave no warning that it claimed it to be erroneous, until after the complainants nad purchased of its patentees, and had paid full value for the land, on the theory that it extended to, and bordered upon, the lake, and in reliance upon the plats and patents of the government, which disclosed this fact. It is too late now for the United States to correct this survey, and thereby to revoke its grants, after innocent purchasers have bought of its patentees in reliance upon them. Our views upon the questions presented here have been so com