Court Opinion

ID: 7109324
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:24:36.0672+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:41.059496
License: Public Domain

Sherwin, J.
A public highway was established over the plaintiff’s land in 1895. The road was worked, and bridges and culverts built thereon, and it was traveled and used by the public, until closed by the plaintiff’s fencing a portion of it. After the plaintiff had fenced this highway, the board of supervisors, by resolution, ordered a resurvey thereof, on the ground that the field notes of the original survey were inaccurate, and did not conform to the actual survey .and plat, and the road as opened, worked, and used, and on the further ground “that the location of said road as originally surveyed and established cannot now be accurately ■determined. The county surveyor was thereupon instructed to resurvey said road, and to replat the same, and to cause ■such road above described to be so platted and surveyed,, and the field notes of the same returned, so as to conform to the original survey and plat.” This survey was made by the county surveyor. His plat and field notes were returned, showing .that his survey followed the “line as the same was ■originally worked and traveled and bridges built thereon.” It did not, however, follow the courses and distances shown by the original field notes. There can be no question about the error in the original field notes. The surveyor who laid out the road and made these notes testifies that they are not correct, and do not correspond with the highway as actually laid out and staked, and accounts for this error by saying that his instrument was out of repair and inaccurate. There is *578evidence before us tending to show that the road, as actually opened, bridged, traveled, and worked, follows the original survey and location as staked at the time. If this is true, and no evidence contradicts it, there was no change in the location thereof by the resurvey. There was no attempt made to change the actual location of the road. The object was to ascertain where it was already established. The plaintiff, by obstructing the traveled way, basing his action, as we gather it from the record, upon the courses and distances shown by the erroneous field notes, raised the question as to the true location of the highway, and we think the action of the board fully supported by section 1518 of the Code, and that the resurvey was properly confirmed. Blair v. Boesch, 59 Iowa, 554. The judgment of the district court is affirmed.