141 Ind. 466 | Ind. | 1895
From the special finding of facts in this case it appears that in 1884 one Henry W. Sohl was the owner in fee of a tract of land in the city of Hammond known as “allotment number six;” that,during said year said Sohl, by an oral agreement, sold to appellant a part of said allotment, which part so sold was at the time by the said Sohl staked out and marked off, and the appellant, with the consent of said Sohl, at once went into possession of the same under said agreement, “and during the year 1884, ai\d after said purchase, the defendant (appellant) constructed a dwelling house upon said land within eight inches of the east line thereof, as marked off and fixed by said Sohl, and which was the true eastern boundary of the land so purchased” by appellant; that in May, 1886, said Sohl platted said “allotment number 6” as “H. W. Sohl’s second addition to the city of Hammond;” that after the making and recording of said plat said Sohl stated and represented to the appellant that lots 25 and 2.6, in block 1 thereof covered and included all of the land that said Sohl had sold to the appellant and marked off to him as aforesaid, “and that the east line of lot No. 25, as shown by said plat, was upon the identical line marked and established by said Sohl as the east line of the parcel theretofore sold by said Sohl to the appellant; that said Sohl asked the appellant to reduce their said contract to writing, and appellant “relying upon and believing the statements of said Sohl respecting the location of the east line of
As conclusions of law from these facts the court found that the appellee was the owner of the twelve-foot strip in controversy, and that the appellant should be ejected therefrom and the appellee be put in possession.
Counsel for appellee urges, in support of the conclusions of law, that the right to the twelve-foot strip was adjudicated, or at least that it might have been adjudi
That was a suit to compel the appellee and her then living husband, Henry W. Sohl, to make a deed to appellant for lots 25 and 26 in accordance with the written agreement therefor. This is a suit by appellee to obtain possession of what appellant claims to be the east twelve feet of lot 25. There was no question of boundary in the suit for specific performance. Henry W. Sohl declared, and appellant believed, that the eastern boundary of lot 25 and the eastern boundary of the land sold to appellant by appellee and her husbafid were one and the same line. At the time of the suit for specific performance, therefore, the present controversy did not exist; and it was not until 1892, two years thereafter, that the appellant first became aware of the claim now made by the appellee. There was no plea of former adjudication made in the trial of this case, and we do not think that the facts found by the court make out a case showing such former adjudication. The decree of the court in the former case was only to compel the appellee and her husband to make a deed to appellant for lots 25 and 26. It left the parties in precisely the same situation they would have been had appellee and her husband voluntarily made the deed which the court compelled them to make. But certainly had the deed been voluntarily made, this suit to establish the east boundary according to the terms of the original contract and the acts of the parties might have been brought.
It seems very clear, from the facts found, that the appellee has shown no right in herself or in her husband to the twelve-foot strip in controversy. When one makes an agreement for the purchase of lands, enters and makes valuable improvements upon, and pays for, the same; when the grantor marks out and stakes the bound
In this case the grantor acknowledged the line now claimed by appellant, both after the plat was made as well as before. The line so agreed upon is the true line, and can not now be varied for the reason that the grantor, in making his plat, was mistaken as to the exact location of the line on his paper. The visible monuments erected upon the land by his own hand and built to by his grantee must prevail over the lines drawn on paper.
We think the court erred in its conclusions of law. The judgment is therefore reversed, with directions to the court to restate its conclusions of law, and to enter judgment for appellant.