This is a real action to recover a small parcel of land on the west shore of Sehoodic Lake in Piscataquis County. The demanded parcel is *on a cape of land making easterly into the lake
The land in this vicinity was first surveyed and divided into Ranges and townships, at least on paper, by Samuel Weston in 1794 by direction of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the then proprietor. Samuel Weston under this commission admittedly ran the Range lines east and west from the Penobscot River to the line of the “Million Acre purchase” on the Kennebec. It is also conceded that on these Range lines he established bounds to mark the corners of the townships. The defendant, however, denies that Weston actually ran the north and south lines between the townships, and claims that the north and south line between townships No. 4 and No. 5 was first run at a later date (1803) by Park Holland, who was directed by the Commonwealth to divide township No. 5 into lots. A preliminary question, therefore, is whether Samuel Weston did actually run the north and south line between these two townships under his commission of 1794.
Upon turning to the instructions given Samuel Weston to “survey three ranges of townships” etc., we find the following: “All lines are to be run and well spotted, and the corners of each township marked, the Ranges to extend from east to west and to be numbered the Seventh, Eighth and .Ninth Range, and the townships to be numbered in each Range and to be laid out six miles square excepting those bordering on the Penobscot River.” And again: “And you are to make return of the survey with duplicate plans representing the lines of the townships, a border or margin of the adjoining lands, the rivers, streams, lakes, ponds, and the most prominent heights” etc. No field notes or other return of the survey is shown in this
The defendant, however, points out some parts of the plan representing streams, outlets, etc., which later surveys have shown to be incorrect. He urges that these errors show that Weston could not have surveyed those streams, outlets, etc., and hence his plan thus being shown to be false in these respects cannot be regarded as correct in others. Because he may have laid down the course.of some streams or assumed certain streams to be. outlets, without surveying them in their full length, we do not think it follows that he did not survey or run the boundary lines of the townships shown on his plan which was the main work he was sent to do. The boundary lines were important, essential to the purpose of his survey. The streams, etc., were incidental, collateral. Again, the force of the defendant’s argument as to the correctness of the plan in respect to the line in question is much weakened by the fact that upon the plan the west shore of the lake, in close proximity to the line, is represented with sub
The defendant further contends that no north and south line can now be found on the earth’s surface in that neighborhood with marks indicating an existence as far back as 1794. There is evidence to the contrary, but conceding that no such marks can now be found, we do not think their absence, after nearly a century of lumbering operations and forest fires, overcomes or even contradicts the evidence of the plan.
■ Lastly on this point the defendant calls attention to a letter of Samuel Weston in the case written in 1801 after he had been sent to re-survey a township in Range 7 next south of Range 8 by reason of some mistakes in his former survey of that Range. In this letter he made some statements of what he did in his former survey in 1794. Ignoring the question of the competency of this letter as evidence, we do not find in it any statement that he did not run the north and south township lines, nor any statements from w’liich we think such an inference can be fairly made. Two expressions only are quoted by the defendant. “I surveyed said river (the Penobscot) . and found where to make the corners of the townships on the Range lines.” “After my brother and I had left (the river) and gone to checking off the towns.” Bearing in mind that this letter was not a return of that survey of 1794, and did not purport to give any full account of it, and was not written with the least reference to township lines, we think it cannot be fairly inferred from such casual remarks that he did not do what his official return says he did do.
. We, therefore, think it legally proved by the competent evidence of the plan, practically uncontradicted, that the north and south line between these two townships was actually run upon the surface of the earth by Samuel Weston in 1794. The next question is whether that line was run to the east or west of the demanded parcel. Upon this question the parties have introduced much evidence descriptive of two north and south lines now found upon the surface of the earth about half a mile apart and on either side of the demanded parcel. JEach party contends that spots on trees, peculiar stones, and other indicia now found on these lines support his contention, the plaintiff
All the actors in the survey are long since dead. On the surface of the earth are no indubitable traces of the line. In the case are no records of what was then done except the plan returned by the surveyor, Weston. We have no other contemporaneous description of the line than that pictured on the ,plan. While the survey is the thing and the plan is only the picture, yet when the thing itself has become obliterated and the only description left to us by those who were cognizant of it is a picture or plan made in the line of his duty by a contemporary charged with the duty of making a correct picture, we must assume primarily at least that the thing is correctly represented by the picture. In the absence of other evidence, this evidence of the plan must be taken as sufficient and decisive.
Turning to the plan of this survey, it clearly shows the line in question to have been run so far to the west of Schoodic Lake as to include the demanded parcel, though west of the lake yet within the limits of township No. 4 under the grant of which the plaintiff claims. Comparing the line pictured on the plan with the two parallel lines half a mile apart now found upon the earth’s surface and above described, it very nearly, if not quite, fits in location the western of the two lines, that claimed by the plaintiff; while the defendant frankly admits it does not fit the eastern line, that claimed by him. As between these two lines, therefore, the western line, that claimed by the plaintiff, must bé taken as the true boundary line.
The defendant introduced a survey and plan of Park Holland, who was sent in 1803, before the conveyance of the township, to divide township No. 5 into lots, and who apparently at least laid out a
The defendant also introduced surveys and plans by Moses Green-leaf in 1815, who made a plan of township No. 5 or Brownville. He does not appear to have been employed by the Commonwealth, but by private owners or on his own account. He placed the east line of township No. 5 (Brownville) on the line run by Park Holland in 1803, a half mile east of the Weston line and east of the demanded parcel. But this was after the conveyance of the township in 1805, and hence could not extend its eastern limits beyond the Weston line.
It appears that Moses Greenleaf also in 1816 prepared a map of Maine from various old surveys and plans, upon which map the eastern line of township No. 5 was laid down as east of the demanded parcel. The legislature of the Commonwealth in 1816 authorized the Secretary of State to contract for 1,000 copies of this map for the use of its towns and public offices, and in the resolve recited that the map was “on the whole as correct a map as could be made or was necessary. ” On this map also the east line of township No. 5 is shown to be. so far east as to include in that township all the land, including the demanded parcel, lying West of Schoodic Lake. The defendant urges that the Commonwealth, then owning township No. 4, thereby adopted as its west line and the east line of township No. 5, the line shown upon the Greenleaf map, and thereby acknowledged the title of its grantees of No. 5 to extend east to that line. He cites in support of this proposition Commonwealth v. Pejepscot Proprs. 10 Mass. 155, and Blaney v. Rice, 20 Pick. 62.
The defendant also introduced evidence that the grantees of township No. 5 and their grantees repeatedly conveyed lots in the eastern tier run by Park Holland to the east of the Weston line. While these conveyances indicate the belief of such persons as to the location of the line, they do not change the fact. On the other hand the defendant concedes that most of the maps made after that of Green-leaf in 1816, including the Holman and Rose plan, Chace’s Map of the State, and the Piscataquis County Atlas, show the line to be substantially as upon the Weston plan, and to cut off the eastern tier of lots run by Holland.
The defendant further claims that township .No. 5 is made by the Weston line to be only five and a half miles wide instead of six, as it should have been. This may show that the Weston line was run in the wrong place, but being run and made the boundary, it must stand as such.
It being established by the evidence that the survey of Samuel Weston in 1794 included the actual running of the north and south line between the two townships, and that that running was to the west of the demanded parcel, cutting it off from township No. 5, and including it in township No. 4, the judgment in this case must be for the plaintiff. In other cases involving this same line, the evidence may of course be different, and lead to a different result.
Judgment for the plaintiffs. Damages assessed at one dollar.