The plaintiff and the defendants owned adjoining parcels of land in the town of Middlebury, the plaintiff’s property being situated west of the defendants’ property. The plaintiff, claiming that the common boundary between the properties was lost, brought an action pursuant to General Statutes §47-34 to establish this boundary and to quiet title to the boundary as so established. Judgment was rendered for the defendants on the ground that the plaintiff’s claims were not supported by the evidence.
The disputed area consists of a rectangular piece of land located along the southerly boundary of the adjoining properties. The plaintiff claimed that he owned approximately 23 acres of land and that the lost boundary was located along the easterly line of the rectangular piece. The burden was on the plaintiff to fix this location.
Velsmid
v.
Nelson,
Because of these deficiencies, the trial court deemed the plaintiff’s evidence insufficient to sustain the burden of fixing the location of the lost boundary. Although the plaintiff’s evidence was not directly contradicted by other evidence, the trial court was not bound to accept it at face value.
Hartford Electric Light Co.
v.
Levitz,
There is no error.
Notes
Although the plaintiff has challenged the finding of subordinate facts in a number of respects, because he has not pursued this challenge in his brief it is considered abandoned.
Tuccio
v.
Zehrung, 172
Conn. 350, 352,
