Judges: Beucb
Filed Date: 2/25/1915
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
(after stating the facts as above). Although there are numerous assignments of error in this ease, the real and only controversy is over the location of the original monument at the quarter line running east and west through the section, and in this connection whether the learned trial court erred in rejecting the following offer of proof: “The plaintiff now offers to prove by the witness on the stand, John Q. Burbank, that in the summer and fall of the year 1874 he was employed by one James C. Blanding; that the said James 0. Blanding then held a contract with the United States to subdivide into sections and quarter sections congressional township No. 129 in range 49, now embraced in Greendale township, and to do other surveying of the same kind and character; that in the year 1874, and on or about the month of September of said year, he, the said witness, while still in the employ of the said James 0. Blanding, himself in person surveyed and ran the section line separating sections 3 and 4 in said township, and himself in person made the field notes of said survey and also ran all the other lines subdividing the said township into sections and quarter sections; that the said line separating said sections 3 and 4 as originally surveyed by the said witness as above stated was run in a straight line from north to south and from south to north, and that there was in fact in running said line no variation to the east from a straight line; that the digging of the pits and the building of the mounds and placing of the stakes in connection with the survey of the said township as aforesaid, by the said witness, were dug, built, and set under the direct supervision of the said witness, and among others the pits, mound, and stake at the quarter line or half section corner at the southwest corner of the northwest quarter of section 3, and the southeast corner of the northeast quarter of section 4, and that the said mound was built and a proper stake inserted therein on the section- line as srrrveyed by this witness as before stated, a.nd that the
To this offer the following objection was made: “To the offer as contained in exhibit “J,” taken as a whole, the defendant objects upon the ground that said offer is an offer to prove things as to which the witness has not shown himself competent to testify; that no proper foundation has been laid for the testimony of the witness upon the matters and things contained in the offer; upon the further ground that there is contained in said offer matters and things irrelevant and immaterial to any issue involved herein; that the said offer contemplates proof of a survey by a person not shown to be a competent person to make said survey under the laws of the United States, and a person shown by the record not to be authorized to make said survey or to take any part therein, and that as the said offer tends to contradict by parol the records in the Department of the Interior in regard to the making and return of the official survey; that in so far as said offer attempts to prove a survey by anyone except the deputy surveyor acting under his oath of office, it is irrelevant aiid immaterial, and the record now is shown that the official survey finally adopted by the government was the survey of James C. Blanding mentioned in the offer, and not the survey of this witness; and upon the further ground that this witness has not shown himself competent to testify, and could only testify as to his conclusion as to the connection of James C. Blanding with any other or different survey that may have been made of the lands in question.”
The objection of respondent is to the effect that appellant, to establish the fact that the original survey was on a straight line between the section corners, introduced in evidence a certified copy of the field notes
There would, we believe, be much merit in this contention if the plaintiff and appellant were in any way seeking to dispute the survey or the field notes which were certified to by James C. Blanding. The offer of counsel, however, was not to dispute the record, but rather to corroborate it, and to overcome the contention of the respondent that the survey which had been made according to such notes, and which would apparently seem to have been made along straight lines, was not in fact so made. We find, indeed, nothing in the field notes certified to by Blanding which locates the quarter section mound at the point which is contended for by the respondent, or which would lead anyone to believe that it was not in a straight line with the section mounds, which are conceded to have been in a straight line with one another and with those which preceded them. The offer of appellant, in short, was not to dispute the record at Washington, but to show that a line that was run between two fixed points was — what it should have been and what everyone would have a right to assume it to have been — a straight line. The situation, indeed, is a peculiar one. The respondents base their claim upon the proposition that in making the original survey, for some unaccountable reason, the transit man deflected his instrument to the east until he came to the quarter section line and then deflected it again to the west, and that not only did he violate the geometrical maxim that a straight line is the shortest distance between two given points, but the ordinary rules of surveying, and seeks to prove this by the testimony of outside witnesses as to their remembrance as to the location of a mound which was claimed to have been placed at the quarter section line. The appellant, however, is not allowed to prove the falsity of this attack upon the plain import of the original survey in the records at Washington as they would usually be construed and understood, and this by the testimony of the very
It is true that in order that titles may be established with a reasonable degree of certainty, the courts have uniformly held that the record of what the survey actually is may not be contradicted, and that the report or record of the government surveyor is final, except where the monuments may be definitely located.
■ It is also true that under the law and his contract, a deputy surveyor is required to include as a part of his record of the government survey the names of his chainmen, flagmen, and mound builders, and that in the report made by Mr. Blanding the name of the witness does not appear. We do not believe, however, that the report as to names of the assistants was ever intended to be final and conclusive, and we are quite sure that this part of the report may be contradicted where such contradiction is not made for the purpose of disproving the survey, but merely for the purpose of explaining it. “Whether,” says the Supreme Court of the United States in Russell v. Maxwell Land Grant Co. 158 U. S. 253, 259, 39 L. ed. 971, 973, 15 Sup. Ct. Rep. 827, “a survey ... is correct or not is one thing, and that, as we have seen, is a matter committed exclusively to the Land Department, and over which the courts have no jurisdiction otherwise than by original proceedings in equity. While, on the other hand, where the lines run by such survey lie on the ground or whether any particular tract is on one side or the other of that line, are questions of fact which are always open to inquiry in the courts. In the case before us the offer was not to show that the land in controversy was one side or other of the line established by the survey. On the contrary it was conceded that it was within the limits of the survey, and the offer was simply to show that that survey was inaccurate, and that the lines should have been run elsewhere; but this is not a matter for inquiry in this collateral way in the courts.”
The evidence sought to be introduced was, in our opinion, based upon a more accurate foundation than that of the witnesses who merely testified as to their remembrance of the location of the quarter section
The evidence sought to be introduced was, we believe, competent. It was really as high a quality of evidence and as conclusive as could under the circumstances be obtained. It was in support of, and not in contradiction to, the natural import of the field notes and of the government survey. It was opposed, it is true, by the testimony of numerous witnesses, but that testimony was, like the testimony as to all monuments and boundaries which have long since departed, and which is based upon remembrances alone of a long past fact and upon conclusions merely, by no means conclusive.
We are, indeed, not prepared to hold that a certificate of one holding a government surveyor’s contract, and to the effect that he has made a certain survey in strict accordance with the laws of the United States and his contract and manual of instructions, is in all cases conclusive of the fact that he himself personally operated the transit and personally ran the line. The field notes and record of the survey are, for many good reasons, held to be conclusive, but even this rule does not apply where there is a conflict between the field notes and the monuments, and where such monuments can be definitely located. The courts, indeed, at any rate those of our western states, may take judicial notice that large surveying contracts were taken even by men who were absolutely ignorant of the use of transits and compasses, and that the exception, rather than the rule, was for the contractor to run the instrument himself instead of employing transit men to do the work. We cannot, as judges, be ignorant of that which we, as men, must know.
So, too, the case is in no way different from one in which the location of a monument is in dispute and a bystander who saw it located in
Tbe judgment of tbe District Court is reversed and tbe cause is remanded for further proceedings according to law.