Cleveland v. Obenchain

Decision Date12 October 1886
Docket Number12,681
Citation8 N.E. 624,107 Ind. 591
PartiesCleveland v. Obenchain
CourtIndiana Supreme Court

From the Whitley Circuit Court.

Judgment affirmed.

T. R Marshall, W. F. McNagny and J. W. Adair, for appellant.

M Sickafoose and J. S. Collins, for appellee.

OPINION

Elliott, J.

This case is in this court for the second time. Cleveland v. Obenchain, 89 Ind. 274. It was sent back to the trial court, and after it reached there a trial was had resulting in favor of the appellee.

The first question is this: Is it proper for the court, on an appeal from a survey made by the county surveyor, or the surveyor appointed by the court, to hear parol evidence? This question is answered in the affirmative by the decision in Wingler v. Simpson, 93 Ind. 201, for the principle there asserted rules here. It is a familiar doctrine that parties by acquiescing in boundary lines for twenty years, or by conduct fixing such lines, may be estopped from averring that they are not the true lines. Brown v. Anderson, 90 Ind. 93; Main v. Killinger, 90 Ind. 165; Pitcher v. Dove, 99 Ind. 175. As boundaries may be fixed by possession and by estoppel, it is proper to introduce evidence tending to prove possession for the statutory period, or to prove possession for a shorter period, conjoined with facts constituting an estoppel. It would be a useless waste of time and an unjust burden upon the public to try a case on appeal from a survey solely upon recitals and statements in deeds and records. Parol evidence is often necessary to enable the court or surveyor to ascertain the true boundaries. The object of such a trial is to ascertain and establish the true boundary, and to effect this object it is proper to give evidence tending to prove what the parties have said and done touching the boundary lines.

A land-owner who submits to a survey does not by so doing lose any of his land. In submitting to a survey he does not surrender any valid title that he may have, no matter how it may have been acquired. In not objecting to a survey he does not put himself in the position of surrendering his land, or any part of it. The object of the statute, in permitting the parties to try the correctness of the survey, was not to confine either to a mere paper title, but to permit them to establish the true title and boundary lines, howsoever acquired or fixed. It would produce great confusion and work much injustice if parties could only try the correctness of a survey by the descriptions found in the conveyances. It is a familiar rule that it is not the office of a description to identify lands, but simply to furnish the means of identification. Rucker v. Steelman, 73 Ind 396; Lanman v. Crooker, 97 Ind. 163 (49 Am. R. 437). Parol evidence is, therefore, often necessary to make descriptions intelligible.

There was no error in admitting in evidence the record of the injunction suit to which the appellant was a party. The...

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24 cases
  • Curless v. The State
    • United States
    • Indiana Supreme Court
    • February 16, 1909
    ... ... estopped from averring that they are not the ... [87 N.E. 130] ... true lines. Cleveland v. Obenchain (1886), ... 107 Ind. 591, 592, 8 N.E. 624, and cases cited; ... Wingler v. Simpson (1884), 93 Ind. 201, ... 203, 204, and cases ... ...
  • Krause v. Nolte
    • United States
    • Illinois Supreme Court
    • October 24, 1905
    ...objecting to a survey he does not put himself in the position of surrendering his land, or any part of it.’ See, also, Cleveland v. Obenchain, 107 Ind. 591, 8 N. E. 624. In Riggs v. Riley, 113 Ind. 208, 15 N. E. 253, it was held that ‘a survey establishing a line between adjoining landowner......
  • Urquide v. Flanagan
    • United States
    • Idaho Supreme Court
    • May 28, 1900
    ... ... statutory time, or by conduct fixing such lines, are estopped ... from saying they are not the true lines. (Cleveland v ... Obenchain, 107 Ind. 591, 8 N.E. 624.) Where a division ... line has for the statutory period been treated as the true ... line, it cannot ... ...
  • Curless v. State
    • United States
    • Indiana Supreme Court
    • February 16, 1909
    ...lines for 20 years, or by conduct fixing such lines, may be estopped from averring that they are not the true lines. Cleveland v. Obenchain, 107 Ind. 591, 592, 8 N. E. 624, and cases cited; Wingler v. Simpson, 93 Ind. 201, 203, 204, and cases cited; Brown v. Anderson, 90 Ind. 93, 99;Main v.......
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