The opinion of the court was delivered by
Burch, J.:Minnie E. Swan owns a portion of section 31, township 33, range 9, in Harper county. The appellant, George, owns another portion and the appellant, Martin, owns the remainder of the section. Acting under the statute, Swan notified Burchfiel, the county surveyor, to survey her land and permanently establish its corners and boundaries. It appears that the region in which this section lies was surveyed by the government in 1871. The visible marks of this survey having been generally obliterated, although some still remain, *337in 1884 another survey was made by the same authority, which is known as the Tweedale survey. Many of Tweedale’s corners are still in existence, and the results of his work are still evidenced by trees, hedgerows, vestiges of 'fences, old roads, buildings and other objects located according to it. In 1894 Ben Lee, the then county surveyor, made a survey of several sections along the county line, including the one whose boundaries are in dispute. His survey was a distinctly original and independent effort. He ignored the government surveys, and even went so far as to refer in his report to government corners as witness marks to corners which he established in the same neighborhood. The Lee survey was not appealed from, and Burchfiel conceived it to be his duty to relocate it, as far as possible, on the ground. The result was that George loses 13.86 acres and Martin loses 10.75 acres as compared with the Tweedale survey. A private surveyor employed by George and Martin was able to locate the Tweedale survey with only negligible variations. An appeal was taken from Burchfiel’s report, but the district court confirmed it and this appeal followed.
The county surveyor misconceived his duty. The notice to him called for a survey of the Swan land and the establishment of its corners and boundaries. In making- such survey he should have been guided by the statutory rules, which read as follows:
“In reestablishing missing comers, where no bearing or witness tree or trees can be found, the. county surveyor or his deputy shall establish said missing corners in accordance with the government survey. (Gen. Stat. 1909, § 2261.).
“In the resurvey of lands surveyed under the authority of the United States, the county surveyor shall observe the following rules, to wit: First, section and quarter-section corners, and all other corners established by the government survey, must stand as the true corners. Second, they must be reestablished at the identical spot where the original corner was located by the *338government surveyor, when this can be determined. Third, when this can not be done, then said corners must be reestablished according to the government field-notes, adopting proportionate measurements where the present measurements differ from those given in the field-notes.” (Gen. Stat. 1909, § 2271.) ‘
Thé county surveyor has no authority to pass judi-. cially upon the ownership, notices, service, appearances, and other jurisdictional facts essential to the validity of a previous survey irrespective of an appeal from it. For some extrinsic reason such survey may not have been binding upon the parties named in the record, and for-other reasons it may not be binding upon present claimants. The primary purpose of invoking fresh action may be to supplant a survey good on its face but in fact void with a valid one, and it is not for the surveyor to say whether or not the earlier one is final and conclusive. Consequently the Lee survey presented itself to Burchfiel merely as evidence to be considered in ascertaining where missing corners had been established by the government.
The more difficult question is whether or not the appellants are concluded in this proceeding by the Lee survey, which the present county surveyor undertook to reproduce. There is nothing in the abstract indicating that the parties to the Lee survey were not bound by it or that the parties now interested are not privies in ownership. It may be assumed, therefore, in support of the judgment of the district court that the appellants were denied relief because of the statute which reads as follows:'
“The corners and boundaries established in any survey made in pursuance of an agreement, or in any survey where no appeal is taken from the surveyor’s report, and such corners and boundaries as are established by the decree of the court, shall be held and considered as permanently established, and shall not thereafter be changed.” (Gen. Stat. 1909, § 2275.)
This statute was evidently intended to prevent the *339reopening of a settled boundary controversy against the will of any one interested. It does not, however, preclude resurveys by agreement or submission by one owner to an official resurvey procured by another. In either of these cases the second survey will supersede the first, notwithstanding the statute. A survey from which no appeal has been taken is like a final j udgment. A party may take his chances and sue again upon an adjudicated cause of action. By bringing such a suit, he elects to disregard the former judgment and would not be heard to say, in reply to an aggressive answer, that his cause of action already had been adjudicated. The defendant in such a suit may waive the defense of res judicata, and should he choose to do so the cause must be tried and determined as if it were an original one. The same principles apply here. The notice called for a survey of the Swan land and the establishment of its corners and boundaries generally. It was, therefore, a demand for a survey according to law. The appellants might have enjoined the survey on the ground that the Lee survey was final (Washington v. Richards, 78 Kan. 114, 96 Pac. 32), but they chose to allow it to> proceed. When they found that it was a mere reproduction of the Lee survey and not a survey made according to statutory rules they had the right to appeal and urge before the district court any lawful objection which might be raised to the report. (Washington v. Richards, 78 Kan. 114, 116, 96 Pac. 32.) The objection they did make was that the survey was made in disregard' of the statute, and since the objection is well founded, the survey ought to be set aside. The case of Spacy v. Evans, (Ind. 1897) 48 N. E. 355, is illustrative. A statutory survey was made in 1871 and a hedge was. afterward located with reference to it on what became Evans’ land. The survey was not appealed from and under the statute became conclusive. In 1885 two new surveys were made, which, however, were not binding-on the parties in interest. In 1896 Evans gave statu*340tory notice of another survey, to which Spacy con■sented. This survey located the hedge on Spacy’s land. Spacy cut the hedge and Evans recovered damages in the circuit court for the trespass on the theory that the statute made the survey of 1871 incontestible. Spacy appealed and the supreme court reversed the judgment. The opinion reads:
“Both parties contend that a survey made pursuant to the statute is conclusive unless appealed from within the satutory period, and such seems to be the rule. [Citing cases.] Upon this proposition the appellee seeks to maintain the corners located by the first survey, and the appellant demands an adherence to each of the other surveys. The second and third surveys do not appear to have been made pursuant to notice to or with the concurrence of both owners of the lands at that time. The last survey, that of February 6, 1896, although made upon notice from the appellee, was made with the express consent of the appellant. If, as the parties insist, a survey in pursuance of the statute is conclusive, .as an adjudication of title or the establishment of a line <or of corners affecting title, we know of no rule denying the parties interested the right to waive the effect of :such survey, and, either by agreement or another survey, establish another line or corner. The rule that a ¡survey is conclusive has no stronger force than a judgment or an estoppel in pais, and can certainly be disregarded by the mutual conduct of the parties affected. As illustrated by counsel for the appellant, the appellee •could not procure a new trial by seeking a new survey, and then, because he may not have been entitled to the new trial, or because it did not result to his satisfaction, urge the original survey, and deny his right to the new ■survey.” (48 N. E. 355.)
Private rights only are involved and Swan can not, after demanding a legal survey, maintain the fruits of a resulting erroneous survey by taking the position that .she had no right in the beginning to institute a resurvey.
Under the law the object of every resurvey is to find •or reestablish the lines and corners fixed by the government. The report of the Lee survey indicates on its *341face that he entertained no such purpose and worked to no such end. It is questionable whether his survey is of any validity, although no appeal from it was taken. However, in view of the. conclusions announced above the question need not be decided.
The judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause is remanded with direction to set aside the survey.