150 P. 962 | Utah | 1915
The plaintiff, Mayer, commenced this action in equity to •compel the defendant, Flynn, to remove a certain portion of the latter’s dwelling house from the premises alleged to belong to the plaintiff. The following plat, with a little explanation, will make clear the real situation of the respective «claims of the parties:
The court, in substance, found that the plaintiff was the owner and in possession of the parcel of ground bounded by the figures 1, 2, 3, and 4 as shown on the plat; that the defendant had willfully and wrongfully trespassed on the premises of the plaintiff by erecting a portion of the foundation of the two-story dwelling house aforesaid thereon, and by projecting a portion of the roof or eaves thereof over the roof of the plaintiff’s cottage. In other words, the court, in effect, found that the defendant had encroached on plaintiff’s premises by building a portion of the foundation of his house, together with the superstructure, thereon as shown on the plat. The court m'ade no findings respecting the defendant’s allegations of' ownership of the ground on which his dwelling stands. The defendant contends that the findings of fact are not supported by the evidence, and that they are contrary thereto, in that the evidence does not support the finding that the plaintiff owned or was in possession of the parcel of ground as found by the court and as outlined on the plat, but insists that the evidence shows that the defendant owns the ground
It has become the establishéd rule of this court that in equity cases the findings of the trial courts prevail unless it is clearly made to appear from the record that the findings are against the weight of the evidence. While it is true that in this case the evidence is sufficient to support the findings, yet it is equally sufficient to support findings in
But it is also true that, under the provisions of our Constitution, the parties to every appeal in equity cases have the right to invoke our judgment upon the facts, as well as upon the law, and thus, within the rule stated, we
The plaintiff and his predecessors in interest had been in the actual possession and use of his premises, at least to the extent that same are bounded by the fence and the projection of the roof of his cottage on the east, regardless of where the boundary line was located. Plaintiff had paid the taxes upon
The defendant insists that a government section line passes across both plaintiff’s and defendant’s properties at the point and in the direction indicated by the figures 8 and 9 on the plat, and that such line determines the correctness of defendant’s survey. Upon the other hand, the -plaintiff’s counsel strenuously insists, and spent much time at the hearing to convince us, that said section line is located on the ground some distance to the north and outside both properties, and that therefore the plaintiff’s survey should control. The very fact that there is such a dispute shows the uncertainty of the boundary lines in the town of Bingham Canyon, and it is that uncertainty which determines the error in the court’s conclusions in not limiting the parties to the ground of which they were in actual possession, as pointed out in this opinion.
We remark that, if the conclusions reached by the trial court shall be followed in all cases of disputed and overlapping boundaries in the town of Bingham Canyon, then, in view of the evidence, there would be but few residents who would be certain that they would not be required by some court to remove a portion of their buildings from the premises because claimed by their neighbors, or one or more of them.
It is not true that where, as in this case, boundary lines of coterminous owners overlap, and where there has been a dispute and uncertainty respecting the actual location of such
The judgment is therefore reversed, and the cause is remanded to the district court, with' directions to make findings of fact and conclusions of law in conformity with the conclusions stated in this opinion, and to enter judgment as before stated; neither party to recover costs on appeal.