216 Miss. 652 | Miss. | 1953
This case involves a controversy over a boundary line, but singularly enough, each party is denying that he owns the strip of land in controversy.
After a hearing at which both complainant and defendant testified and each party introduced a surveyor to support their positions, the chancery court executed a decree which found that the portion of the concrete wall which had collapsed was entirely upon the lands of the complainant Perry and that its condition was a nuisance and' created a danger to the occupants of complainant’s property and to defendant’s property. Complainant’s bill was dismissed, and he was directed to remove at his expense the eastern 88 feet of the concrete
Appellant argues that this decree is against the overwhelming weight of the evidence and is against the physical facts as testified to and as evidenced by certain photographs in the record. We have considered carefully the evidence, and have, concluded that it was ample to support the decree below. Without lengthening this opinion by considering the evidence in detail, several factors particularly support the chancellor’s conclusions. He was warranted in finding, as he apparently did, that the survey of Polk, who testified for the defendant, correctly located the property line, and in not accepting the survey of Eustis, who testified for appellant. The Eustis survey was based upon a starting point of a certain iron pin which Eustis found south of the curb on Arthur Street, which he thought was the northeast corner of the Perry lot. Prom that pin he went south 63.2 feet and then measured the line dividing the parties’ lands by turning at right angles. He did not verify the correctness of the location of the iron pin as being the true northeast corner of the Perry property. It was not checked against other established points in the Vicksburg survey. The trial court under such circumstances was justified in concluding that the starting point of the Eustis survey was not adequately established as correct. Burton v. Buttler, 107 Miss. 344, 65 So. 459 (1914); compare Boyd v. Durrett, 62 So. 2d 319 (Miss. 1953). Nor did Eustis otherwise verify the boundary line. On the other hand, Polk’s survey, which the trial court apparently acceptéd, did not rely upon this iron pin, because Polk testified that in view of the changes in the width of Arthur Street, the pin was not a reliable starting point. Hence Polk authenticated his lines with that of other property owners in the area.
Moreover, Polk testified that in making a survey of the property in 1947, considerably before this action was instituted in June, 1950, he ascertained that the concrete
Affirmed.