Can anyone point me to or provide me with a copy of Diehl v. Zanger 39 Mich 601 (1878)?
It is cited many, many times in other cases, but I can't find it anywhere.
Thanks!
Hmm...
When I search LN I get "No relevant information was found for your request. Please modify or enter another search."
Send me an email and I can get a copy to you.
Jim, since I lived in the Mosquito Capital state for 50 yrs, having surveyed for 30 of them - I know lots of people there. If you still need the info I can provide you with some connections. Likely with people who may have needed this reference and have it in their files. Pretty good bunch of surveyors there who will bend over backwards to help our fellow surveyors.
Not so sure some it will apply to AZ laws, but one never knows.
> Send me an email and I can get a copy to you.
Ditto, as I don't see an email or link to an email in your profile.
The contents are too long to post in the forum.
Jim-
The best I can do is to divide DAW's posting:
Diehl v Zanger 39 Mich 601 (1878)
Posted By da w on 11/14/2006 at 2:45 PM
John C. Diehl and Christine Diehl v. Ferdinand Zanger and Magdalene Zanger.
SUPREME COURT OF MICHIGAN
39 Mich. 601; 1878 Mich. LEXIS 375
October 25, 1878, Submitted; October 31, 1878, Decided
Error to Superior Court of Detroit.
Ejectment. Defendants bring error.
Judgment reversed with costs, and a new trial ordered.
HEADNOTES: Ejectment--Boundaries--Practical location--Resurvey.
In defense to an action of ejectment based upon an alleged mistake in the original survey, evidence is admissible that the existing boundaries had been defined for more than twenty years by buildings, fences, and harmonious occupancy.
A re-survey, made after the monuments of the original survey have disappeared, is for the purpose of determining where they were, and not where they ought to have been.
A long-established fence is better evidence of actual boundaries settled by practical location than any survey made after the monuments of the original survey have disappeared.
Long practical acquiescence in a boundary, between the parties concerned, may constitute such an agreement on it as to be conclusive, even if it had been erroneously located.
Henry M. Campbell and Alfred Russell for plaintiff in error. Long acquiescence and practical location are controlling proof of boundaries, Baldwin v. Brown, 16 N. Y., 359; Reed v. Farr, 35 N. Y., 113; Bower v. Earl, 18 Mich., 367.
Graves, J. Campbell, C. J. and Cooley, J., concurred. Marston, J., did not sit in this case.
Graves, J. This ejectment was brought by defendants in error for a strip of land four feet and seven inches wide, and claimed in the case as being the westerly four feet and seven inches of the easterly half of lot thirty-nine of the subdivision of out-lot one hundred and eighty-two of the Rivard farm in the city of Detroit.
February 7, 1873, plaintiffs in error owned this lot thirty-nine (39), and at that time, by deed, granted to defendants in error the easterly half according to the recorded plat, "together with the dwelling house being thereon," and about a month later they went into possession under the grant and have since occupied accordingly. At the time of the grant a fence which still remains was standing at the east between defendants in error and the adjoining proprietor of lot thirty-eight. The occupancy on each side was bounded by the fence, and defendants in error have continued to hold under their deed from that fence twenty-four feet westerly and to the fence dividing the lot into halves, including a house and barn situated on the parcel.
Defendants in error alleged and gave evidence tending to show that the fence between their occupancy and that east on lot thirty-eight was four or five feet too far east; that they did not know there was any mistake about boundaries; and that the question had not been mentioned between them and plaintiffs in error until a short time before this suit was commenced.
They further gave evidence tending to show that according to a recent survey made by a surveyor of long experience in Detroit, all the lots in the subdivision of out-lot one hundred and eighty-two are out of the way; that the fences and buildings on all the lots are incorrectly located; that the owner of the lot on Prospect street,--which street bounds the subdivision on the east,--has encroached on said street between four and five feet, and that the owners of lots west of that lot, as they actually occupy, respectively encroach on the owner next east to the same extent, and that for three or four blocks the lines of the lots along Prospect street encroach on the street between four and five feet. They also gave evidence tending to show that according to this survey the true line would run through the dwelling house on the westerly half of lot thirty-nine where plaintiffs in error reside.
The plaintiffs in error submitted evidence conducing to show, among other things, that lots thirty-nine and forty, as well as other contiguous lots in the subdivision, had for twenty years and upwards been identified and defined in their position and extent upon the ground by buildings, fences and harmonious occupancy, and that at the very time of the grant to defendants in error the physical evidences of recognized and long admitted bounds which plaintiffs in error contend for, were visible and apparent to everybody. There was no conflicting evidence in regard to these facts. They were not disputed, and there is no evidence that the practical locations and proprietary and possessory recognitions ever deviated until after the remarkable results of the late survey. The evidence was abundantly sufficient to require the case to be submitted to the jury on the defense. If believed, it was competent for the jury to find that the east line of lot thirty-nine had become fixed and established at the place marked by the fence.
The court however refused to regard this evidence as having any force, and in effect withheld it.
He instructed the jury to find for defendants in error. The matter of defense the court thus refused to recognize is within the doctrine which has been expounded and fully approved by this court in several cases. Smith v. Hamilton, 20 Mich. 433; Joyce v. Williams, 26 Mich. 332; Stewart v. Carleton, 31 Mich. 270; Pratt v. Lewis, ante p. 7. And in some of them the impropriety of disregarding the various landmarks which time and actual occupancy and improvements and the behests of usage and general acquiescence have produced, in deference to the disordering achievements of some modern survey, has been distinctly adverted to and explained. This record contains enough to justify such observations. The requests of plaintiffs in error should have been given.
The judgment is reversed with costs, and a new trial ordered.
Jim-
Second part due to number of characters allowed per posting:
Campbell, C. J. and Cooley, J., concurred.
Cooley, J. The judge below took this case from the jury, instructing them that on the facts the plaintiffs were entitled to recover. We think, on the other hand, that if he had submitted the case to the jury on the facts, it would have been their plain duty to return a verdict for defendants.
The controversy concerns part of a lot on a plat of a subdivision of a part of outlot 182, Rivard farm, surveyed by Thomas Campau in 1850, and recorded in 1851. There are forty-eight of these lots in the subdivision. Whether they have all been sold off and improved by the purchasers we are not informed, but it appears from the record that many of them have been. It also appears that there has been a practical location of a street on one side the plat and of other streets across it, and also of the lot lines. The lot the boundary of which is in dispute in this case has been fenced in for twenty years by fences on the supposed lines, and it does not appear that the lines have been disputed until recently. The adjoining lots have also been claimed, occupied and improved according to the practical location of the lines.
This litigation grows out of a new survey recently made by the city surveyor. This officer after searching for the original stakes and finding none, has proceeded to take measurements according to the original plat, and to drive stakes of his own. According to this survey the practical location of the whole plat is wrong, and all the lines should be moved between four and five feet to the east. The surveyor testifies with positiveness and apparently without the least hesitation that "the fences and buildings on all the lots are not correctly located" and there is of course an opportunity for forty-eight suits at law and probably many more than that.
When an officer proposes thus dogmatically to unsettle the landmarks of a whole community, it becomes of the highest importance to know what has been the basis of his opinion. The record in this case fails to give any explanation, but the reasonable inference is that the surveyor has reached his conclusion by first satisfying himself what was the initial point of Mr. Campau's survey, and then proceeding to survey out the plat anew with that as his starting point. Of course by this method if no mistake is made, there is no difficulty in ascertaining with positive certainty where, according to Mr. Campau's plat, the original street and lot lines ought to have been located; and apparently the surveyor has assumed that that was all he had to do.
Nothing is better understood than that few of our early plats will stand the test of a careful and accurate survey without disclosing errors. This is as true of the government surveys as of any others, and if all the lines were now subject to correction on new surveys, the confusion of lines and titles that would follow would cause consternation in many communities. Indeed the mischiefs that must follow would be simply incalculable, and the visitation of the surveyor might well be set down as a great public calamity.
But no law can sanction this course. The surveyor has mistaken entirely the point to which his attention should have been directed. The question is not how an entirely accurate survey would locate these lots, but how the original stakes located them. No rule in real estate law is more inflexible than that monuments control course and distance,--a rule that we have frequent occasion to apply in the case of public surveys, where its propriety, justice and necessity are never questioned. But its application in other cases is quite as proper, and quite as necessary to the protection of substantial rights. The city surveyor should, therefore, have directed his attention to the ascertainment of the actual location of the original landmarks set by Mr. Campau, and if those were discovered they must govern. If they are no longer discoverable, the question is where they were located; and upon that question the best possible evidence is usually to be found in the practical location of the lines, made at a time when the original monuments were presumably in existence and probably well known. Stewart v. Carleton, 31 Mich. 270. As between old boundary fences, and any survey made after the monuments have disappeared, the fences are by far the better evidence of what the lines of a lot actually are, and it would have been surprising if the jury in this case, if left to their own judgment, had not so regarded them.
But another view should have been equally conclusive in this case. The long practical acquiescence of the parties concerned, in supposed boundary lines, should be regarded as such an agreement upon them as to be conclusive even if originally located erroneously. We had occasion to apply this doctrine in Joyce v. Williams, 26 Mich. 332, and need not enlarge upon it here. See also Smith v. Hamilton, 20 Mich. 433; Stewart v. Carleton, supra.
I agree with my brethren that the case should be sent back for a new trial.
Campbell, C. J., concurred.
Marston, J., did not sit in this case.
> Jim-
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> Second part due to number of characters allowed per posting:
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:good:
That was my source as well.;-)
Thanks to all!!!