Action to determine the boundary line between certain lots in Hughes’ addition to the city of St. Paul. Defendant Perkins had judgment, and plaintiffs Barrett & Zimmerman and defendant Minnesota Pharmaceutical Manufacturing Company appealed from an order denying a new trial.
The facts are as follows: Hughes’ addition is a replatting of a *482part of lots 24, 25, and 26, and all of lots 27 and 28, of Merriam’s Outlots, as shown by the recorded plat. Only that part of Hughes’ addition comprising lots 1 to 22, inclusive, is involved in the present action. To assist in understanding the controversy we here insert a copy of the original Hughes plat:
This is to certify that Curtis A. Hughes & Marietta É. Hughes, his wife, owners of the following described property, Viz: — Beginning at the southeast corner of *483lot Twenty-Four (24) of Merriam’s Outlots, thence northeasterly on the line which divides lots Twenty-Four (24) and Twenty-Five (25) of said Merriam Outlots one hundred & eighty (180) feet; thence, northwesterly on a line parallel to' southwesterly line of said lot Twenty-Four (24) fifty'(50) feet; thence, southwesterly on a line parallel with southeasterly line of said lot Twenty-Four (24) one hundred & eighty (180) feet; thence, southeasterly on southwesterly line of said lot Twenty-Four (24), fifty (50) feet to a point of commencement; also, the southwesterly one hundred & eighty (180) feet of lots Twenty-Five (25) & Twenty-Six (26) and all of lots Twenty-Seven (27) and Twenty-Eight (28) of Merriam’s Outlots — have caused the same to be subdivided & platted & hereafter known as “Hughes Midway Addition to the City of St. Paul, Ramsey Co., Minn.” as shown by this map — & we do hereby give and dedicate to the public and for the public use forever the alley as shown to run through said property as this map indicates. Witness our hands & seals this thirtieth day of April, A. D. 1880.
Marietta B. Hughes. [Seal.]
Curtis A. Hughes. [Seal.]
In presence of Harvey George. Clarence H. George.
Tbe larger figures 24, 25, 26, 27, and 28 indicate the Merriam Out-lots, and the smaller figures, 1 to 22, inclusive, the Hughes lots here involved. The action was brought to determine the boundary between lots 18 and 19, but in fact involves the boundary between all the lots in this part of the plat. All the lots, except 22, have, according to the plat, a frontage of twenty-five feet on University avenue, and lot 22 a frontage of 75.38 feet. The distance between the outer boundary of lot 1 and Fairview avenue, the end of the plat, is insufficient to supply the number of lots given on the plat with the dimensions stated. So that beyond question there was a mistake in the preparation of the plat, or in the original survey, and the purpose of the action is to locate and correct it. The whole controversy in the court below narrowed down to the question whether lot 22 was or was not erroneously designated on the plat as a seventy-five-foot lot. The trial court in effect found that this lot was entitled to a frontage of 75.38 feet; and, if that conclusion be sustained by the evidence and the rules of law controlling the question, the case is at an end.
We are of the opinion that the learned trial court erred in the-conclusion stated. The evidence is insufficient to sustain it. The court relied, in reaching its conclusion, chiefly upon the testimony-( *484of witness Armstrong, county surveyor of Kamsey county. This witness, though apparently fair and candid, seems to have fallen into the initial error of adopting as correct the notation on the plat that lot 22 had a frontage of 75.38 feet on University avenue. Adopting that as a basis, he located a stake precisely that distance from the intersection of Fairview and University avenues, which he assumed was placed there by the original surveyor as the dividing line between lots 21 and 22. He confirms his view of the matter by surveys from the standpoint of other known and ascertained objects; but he did not locate or make any of his surveys or calculations from the point indicated by the plat as the commencement of the addition, namely, the southeast corner of lot 24 of Merriam’s Outlots. And we are impressed that his testimony on the trial was founded entirely upon the assumption that lot 22 was of the dimensions indicated by the plat.
But, conceding for present purposes the correctness of the conclusion reached by the witness, his evidence served only to demonstrate the fact, concurred in by all the parties, that there was a mistake somewhere in the plat. There is not enough land within the platted tract to supply all the lots of the dimensions given on the plat, and this situation is not controverted. Giving to lot 22 a frontage of 75.38 feet results in moving each of the other lots twenty-five feet west, and in the end to completely extinguish or eliminate lot 1. In other words, there is a deficiency of land, and all the lots cannot be accounted for. In such a case the most the court is authorized to do, in the form of correcting the apparent mistake, is to apportion the deficiency among the several lots, and not eliminate one of them entirely, as the trial court in effect did in the case at bar.
The owner of lot 1 has as much, and it would seem a greater, right to have his property remain a part of the plat, as the owner of lot 22; the greater right, because lot 1 was first laid out by the owner of the plat, and beyond controversy, with the intention that it should be and remain a lot of the subdivision of the dimension indicated. The rule requiring an apportionment of either an excess or deficiency of land in such cases is well settled. Martz v. Williams, 67 Ill. 306; Miller v. Topeka, 44 Kan. 354, 24 Pac. 420; Lincoln *485v. Edgecomb, 28 Me. 275; Quinnin v. Reimers, 46 Mich. 605, 10 N. W. 85; Porter v. Gaines, 151 Mo. 560, 52 S. W. 376; Pereles v. Magoon, 78 Wis. 27, 46 N. W. 1047, 23 Am. St. 389. The trial court was therefore in error, even from the standpoint of the testimony of witness Armstrong, in reaching the conclusion, in substance and effect, that lot 22 was entitled to remain with a frontage of 75.38 feet.
However, we are not to be understood as holding that the rule stated should have been applied to the facts in the case at bar. The rule applies more particularly to tracts of land subdivided into smaller tracts of specified and uniform dimensions, and not to a situation like that here presented. Here the owner of a definite tract of land intended, and his intention is manifest, to lay out as many lots of the uniform width of twenty-five feet as the tract would contain. This he proceeded to do, laying off twenty-one twenty-five-foot lots, after which there remained an irregular or triangular piece to be disposed of as a remnant. This he supposed was 75.38 feet at its base, and so noted it upon the plat. This, we are satisfied from the record, was a clear mistake. But it is not necessary to extend the opinion by a discussion of the matter. It is not important.
There is a deficiency of land to make up the number of lots with indicated frontage, and the rule in such a case is that the deficiency must fall upon the last or irregular tract; the remnant of the whole after laying out the lots of a uniform size. Baldwin v. Shannon, 43 N. J. L. 596. In a situation like that the owner of the plat must be deemed to have intended to constitute the irregular remnant a lot by itself, regardless of its dimensions, and a purchaser thereof takes the whole remnant, whether of greater or less area than that indicated by the plat. It cannot be enlarged at the expense of the owners of other lots, nor, if of greater area than shown by the plat, diminished in their favor. Though the rule might in a given case work a hardship to the owner of the remnant lot, yet in the case at bar the combined injury to the owners of the other lots, arising, if defendant be sustained, from the displacement of their improvements and the total elimination of the owner of lot 1, far outweigh any disclosed damage or hardship to defendant. The rule furnishes *486a definite and safe method and guide for the determination of mistakes of this nature, and we adopt and apply it to the facts in the ease at bar; and if on a new trial the fact remains the same the relief stated should be granted.
Order reversed, and a new trial granted.
Jaggard, J., took no part.