19 S.D. 167 | S.D. | 1905
This action was originally commenced by by Richard S. Tyler as plaintiff, who died subsequently to the findings and judgment in this action hereinafter referred to, and the present plaintiffs were substituted for the deceased under the statue. For convenience we shall designate the said Tyler as plaintiff in this opinion. The appeal in this case is from an order granting a new trial. The case was tried in the court below by the Honorable A. W. Campbell, at the time judge of the Fifth Circuit, who retired from office in January, 1902. The findings and conclusions of law were in favor of the defendant, and judgment was entered accordingly. Subsequently a motion for a new- trial was made before the Honorable J. H. McCoy, who succeeded Judge Campbell as judge of the Fifth Circuit. The motion was granted, and from the order so made by Judge McCoy this appeal is taken.'
The order for a new trial having been made by Judge McCoy, who took no part in the trial of the case, does not carry with it the presumption usually connected with such an order, namely, that the ruling of the trial court in granting or denying the motion would only be reversed in case of an abuse of the court’s discretion; and the principle to be applied to such 9, case is thus stated by this court in Sands v. Cruikshank, 15
The controversy, as will appear from an examination of the case, is as to the ownership of a .triangular piece of land situated north of the north line of White Rock, in Roberts county. It is claimed by the plaintiff and respondent in this case that the line dividing sections 3 and 10 of township 128, range 47, ran north of the premises in controversy, and that consequently the same constituted a part of said section 10, owned by the plaintiff. It is claimed by the defendant and appellant that the line between the two sections ran south of the said premises, and consequently the same was a part of section 3. The court found, m substance, as follows: That on the 1st day of August, 1896, and for'a long time prior thereto, John E.
It is contended by respondent, in support of the, order made by the trial’ court, that the findings of fact were not sup ported by the evidence, and that the preponderance of the evidence was clearly in favor of the respondent’s claim of owner-ership, ana therefore that the learned circuit court was right in granting the new trial. It is contended, on the other hand, by the appellant, that while the evidence was conflicting, neither the trial court nor this court can say therefrom that there is a preponderance of the evidence against the findings of the trial court as made by Judge Campbell. The evidence in the case at bar is very voluminous, extending over nearly 200 pages of closely printed abstract, and we shall not attempt
It appears from the record that much of the evidence of the surveyors on the part of the plaintiff was based upon the field notes of the original survey, while much of the evidence of the surveyors on the part of the defendant was based upon their observation and knowledge of the original mound made by the government surveyors, and obtained by them while making the survey of the township, and while in the employ of the government as such surveyors, as well as upon the field notes of such survey, and it would seem that their evidence was entitled to the greater weight from the fact that they claim to have the knowledge and informationof the original mound as located by the government survey, and had frequently observed the same. The same may be said of the nonprofessional witnesses. Apparently those testifying for the defendant as to the location of the original monument in the center of the highway before the same was laid out and constructed were more familiar with the location of that corner, and had more frequently observed and noticed it, than the witnesses on the part of the plaintiff; and the most of them were able to give better reasons for their recollection of the locality of the mound than the witnesses for the plaintiff. And the fact as staled in the McG-ray case, supra, that the surveyor who laid out and platted .the town site of White Rock for the plaintiff, Tyler, in July, 1884, adopted the center of the highway as the north line of the town site of White Rock, has a very material bearing as to the location of that corner. In the trial of this
In view of the fact, therefore, that the learned circuit judge who tried this case heard all of the evidence, and had an opportunity to observe the demeanor of the witnesses, their
The order of the circuit court granting the new trial is reversed.