65 Wis. 537 | Wis. | 1886
This is an action of ejectment to recover several small parcels of land situated within the recorded plat of the village of Mount Yernon, in Dane county. A trial without a jury resulted in a judgment for the defendant, from which the plaintiff appeals.
The village of Mount Yernon was platted by one Britts, in 1851, and the plat was recorded in 1852. It consists of nine blocks, of uniform size, one of which is reserved as public ground, another for mill purposes, and one half of two others for watercourses from such mill block. The blocks are divided into lots of uniform size. The streets1 are of uniform width, and intersect each other at right angles. Four of them extend northwest and southeast, and four others extend northeast and southwest. An east and west town and section line crosses the plat about the width of a block north of the southerly .corner thereof. The survey of the plat is certified thereon to commence “ at a stone planted in the town line, . . . forty-four rods and twenty-three links west of the south quarter stake of section 34;
However, as eariy as 1852, a stake was found at a point which it is claimed denoted the east corner of Main and Washington streets, and hence the southeast line of Main street. The stake stood there several years; adjacent lots were bought and sold with reference to it; its location corresponded with the location of Main street on the plat with reference to the bridges and saw-mills; and the public authorities, at an early day, commenced the survey of a highway thereat as marking the true intersection of those two streets. Further, several buildings were erected on Main street in 1853 and later, in the vicinity of such stake, and these were located on the theory that the stake stood at the point above mentioned. It does not appear by whom or when the stake was set.
Two surveys of the village of Mount Yernon were put in evidence. These were made in 1883 or later; one by Prof. Conover, at the instance of the plaintiff, and the other by Mi\ Douglas, the county surveyor, at the instance of the
The controlling question is, therefore, 'Which of these surveys gives the correct location of the plat of Mount Yernon? That of Prof. Conover is governed entirely by courses and distances. True, it is certified on the plat that the survey of the public ground commences at a stone planted in the town line at the designated distance west of the quarter post; but Prof. Conover does not say that he found any stone at that point. The stone is not described, its specific location is not designated on the plat, and no witness testifies that he ever saw or heard of it. We cannot presume from anything in this record that the stone was there when Prof. Conover made his survey, or, indeed, that it was ever there. It is quite as reasonable to suppose that the certificate on the plat referred to a stone to be
But these are not the only facts in favor of that survey. There has been long-continued occupation, not only of Main street, but of other parts of the plát, which-harmonize with Douglas’s survey and location of the plat. Two hotels on the respective corners of Main and Washington streets were erected in 1853, or soon thereafter; also a dwelling on the opposite side of Main street. They still remain there, or other buildings stand oh the sites they occupied. The same is true of buildings elsewhere on the plat. Prof. Conover’s survey locates many of these buildings in the streets, and others of them a distance therefrom, when the owners supposed they abutted the streets. It may be observed, in this connection, that Prof. Conover’s survey separates Main street and the saw-mill, leaving a strip two or three rods wide between them, and probably excludes the bridges, or at least some portions of them, from the limits of that street. On the authority of Racine v. J. I. Case Plow Co. 56 Wis. 539, it must be held that the foregoing considerations are conclusive in favor of the accuracy of the Douglas survey. The law on this subject is so fully and clearly laid down in that case by Mr. Justice Oetou that any further statement or discussion of it here is entirely uncalled for. This case is ruled by the judgment there given.
Before closing this opinion, it may be well to refer briefly
By the Oourt.— The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.