after stating the facts, delivered the opinion of the court.
The plat accompanying the majority report of the commissioners first appointed shows that they took as the initial point for their survey a stone situated on the east line of sections 29 and 32, 9 chains south of the North Fork of the Santiam River, the same being 71.16 chains south of the northeast corner of section 29, and from that established the northeast corner of plaintiff’s tract near the Corvallis & Eastern Railroad track. From the records of the county surveyor’s office in Linn County it appears that on August 7, 1890, Fisher re-established the quarter-section corner between 29 and 32, where he planted a stone marked ■“ C S, ” and that on May 6, 1891, he re-established the corner to sections 29, 30, 31, and 32, and the quarter-section corner between sections 30 and 31, by stones planted and similarly marked; and there is evidence on the ground that the quarter-section corner between sections 28 and 33 has been so re-established by him. The defendant introduced testimony tending to show that the quar
From the testimony adduced it is very apparent that the location on the ground of the southeast comer of section 29 is lost, if it were ever established by the United States government survey, and the same may be .said of the quarter-section corner between that and the northeast corner of the section. No one pretends to locate the southeast corner in place. Mr. Woodin thinks it was within six feet of the cross made on the rock by Fisher. He is unable, however, to recall the marking contained upon the stone monument, but relates that he saw the marks, and supposed it was a government monument, and hence that it was intended to denote the southeast corner of section 29; but the stone, whatever it may have been intended for, is not to be found now. Another peculiar circumstance is that Fisher did not attempt to re-establish this as a government corner while he was re-establishing section and quarter corners at the west and the quarter corner at the east. There appears no reason why he should not have re-established this, if he found any evidence or marks on the ground indicating such to be the location by the government survey. So it was properly concluded by the trial court that this was a lost
If reliance could be placed upon the field notes, the southeast corner of section 29 could have been easily ascertained by measurement upon the ground; but they are manifestly inaccurate. Running north they read 8 chains, to the foot of hill east and west, 9 chains to- left bank of Santiam River, 11.50 chains to flag on right bank, 15 chains to foot of hill east and west, 16.30 chains to Minto Pass Trail east and west, 40 chains, set stone, etc., for quarter corner 80 chains, set stone, etc., for corner of sections 20, 21, 28, and 29. Now, by actual measurement the distance from a point 9 chains south to the left bank of the river north to the government monument at the northeast corner of section 29 is only 71.16 chains. This is a physical demonstration, and it absolutely discredits the field notes as respects the east line of section 29. Being thus discredited, who can say with certainty that they are accurate to the south of the river, and that the whole discrepancy lies to the north? If Fisher’s re-established southwest corner be correct, a like inaccuracy occurs. By measurement it is but 16 chains to the left bank of the river, whereas the field notes give it as 25.59 chains, thus making the section line short by more than 10 chains. So it seems that Fisher did not rely wholly upon the-field notes in making his surveys. There is some reason for
There is also other evidence in corroboration of this. Stewart says he knew where the stake stood, and saw it; that it is now upstairs in Henry Hurlman’s house, taken there after it rotted down, but he describes it as an alder. Barzee, who homesteaded the S. % of the S. % of section 30, states that Fisher could not find the corner; that witness showed him where it was; that the tree was in the right direction, and at the right distance from the stake; but that he told him no man in the State of Oregon could find that corner from the field notes. Continuing, witness says that the line is all wrong in there; that Mazier first set the corner off, but when Fisher came in and made his survey he had to set his line fence back. Notwithstanding this testimony, the commissioners have treated the southwest corner of section 29 as a lost corner, and have re-established it from other sources. Gobalet would not recognize it as accurately re-established, while the majority of the commission first appointed did so regard it. Cline regarded it as inaccurate. Barr made a survey, but in doing so assumed that Fisher’s re-established quarter-section corners between sections 28 and 33 and 29 and 32 were correctly located, and ran a line from each to the intersections of the north and south section line, and from the point of contact north to northeast corner of section 29, if we understand the method of his survey, in the absence of the plat used by him for explanation while on the stand, which is not now to be
Affirmed.
