157 Iowa 237 | Iowa | 1912
— Eeference to the following plat will aid to an understanding of the case.
This is a plat of an addition to Des Moines known as Kauffman Place. The plaintiff is the owner of the north half of lot 22, and the defendants are a the owners of the south half thereof. This lot faces east on
The stakes which have been referred to were pointed out to plaintiff as the monuments fixing the boundaries of his proposed purchase, and he accepted them as such. If these stakes, or either of them, represented the monuments erected as a part of the original survey, then we have a case of conflict and discrepancy between the monuments upon the ground, on the one hand, and the field notes and plat as recorded, on the other. In such a case the law seems to be well settled that the survey upon the ground as ascertained by monuments then made to mark the boundaries of the lots is controlling, and the paper plat and field notes must give way thereto. Root v. Town of Cincinnati, 87 Iowa, 204; Bradstreet v. Dunn, 65 Iowa, 248; Ufford v. Wilkins, 33 Iowa, 110; McDaniels v. Mace, 47 Iowa, 510. To the same effect see Olson v. City of Seattle, 30 Wash. 687 (71 Pac. 201); O’Farrel v. Harney, 51 Cal. 125; Holst v. Streitz, 16 Neb. 249 (20 N. W. 308); Flynn v. Glenny, 51 Mich. 580 (17 N. W. 65); Marsh v. Mitchell, 25 Wis. 706; Turnbull v. Schroeder, 29 Minn. 49 (11 N. W. 147); Burke v. McCowen, 115 Cal. 481 (47 Pac. 367); Morrow v. Whitney, 95 U. S. 551 (24 L. Ed. 456).
The defendants do not controvert the legal propositions here involved. Their main contention is that the evidence fails to identify the stakes in question as being the monuments made upon the ground at the original survey. The ease here is therefore made to turn upon this question of fact. The trial court held the evidence sufficient in that regard. Prom a careful reading of the evidence we also reach the conclusion that the identity was sufficiently proved. It is true that there is no specific identification by any witness who saw the stakes at the time of the original survey. But it is not legally necessary that the proof of the identity should be in that form. It is undisputed that the engineer
We think the monuments or stakes upon the ground are sufficiently proved to have been a part of the original survey, and that they must accordingly control.
We reach the conclusion upon the whole case, therefore, that the decree of the trial court was right, and it is accordingly, — Affirmed.