Evddemcet!
This is an action in ejectment. The dispute concerns the boundary line between certain lots in the city of Edina. The ^aS ^een here kef°re [227 Mo. 152.] As on the former trial, the judgment was for plaintiff, and defendants appeal.
The only plat of a survey in the record is called the “Robinson Survey,” was offered by plaintiff and shows the southwest corner of the original town of Edina is also the southwest comer of section 18, township 62, range 11. The Robinson Survey shows 16 blocks. Block 1 is the southwest block in the plat. Blocks 2, 3 and 4 lie, in order, north of block 1 and between 1 and 2, 2 and 3 and 3 and 4 are streets platted as sixty-six feet wide.
The length of the west line of each of blocks 1, 3 and 4 is platted as four chains. That of block 2 is platted as 4.02 chains. Clay street runs between blocks 1 and 2; Jackson, between blocks 2 and 3; Smallwood, between blocks 3 and 4; and Marion street runs north of block 4 and has a platted width, at the northwest corner of that block, of fifty-five feet.
*197Survey No. 77, which, played such an important part in the former trial and the former hearing in court, was again relied upon by respondent, though not offered in evidence as an official survey.
The surveyor who made it testified he was following the Robinson Survey, that he began at the southwest comer of section 18-62-11 at the “nigger head rock” which has been immortalized by this litigation. As on the former trial, it appears there is no plat or field notes calling for this rock, but the surveyor above mentioned had previously used it in other surveys.
He testified he verified its location at the southwest corner of section 18-62-11 by running south 111 links to a limestone rock, there being a call in “the field notes,” supposedly those of the survey of section 18, for a limestone rock 111 links south of the southwest corner of that section. To this part of his testimony and that concerning other marks, corners, buildings, etc., further reference will be made in the course of the opinion.
The surveyor also testified that the actual; measured distance from the southwest corner of the section and original town to the northwest corner of the inclosure on block 3, as shown by survey No. 77, is 925.58 feet, and that this distance corresponds exactly with that called for by the Robinson Survey; that the actual distance from the northwest corner of block 3 north across Smallwood street to the southwest corner of block 4, as inclosed, is 74 1-3 feet; and that the actual length of the west line of block 4, as inclosed, is 251 1-3 feet.
As platted, block 4 is divided into two equal parts by an alley miining north and south through its center. Both the east and west halves of the block, as thus divided, are divided into five lots — lots 1 to 5, inclusive, lying in the west half and fronting west- on First street, and lots 6 to 10, inclusive, lying in the *198east half and fronting east on Second street. Lot .1 is the southern lot in the west half, and 2, 3, 4 and 5 lie north of it, in order. Lot 6- is the southern lot in the east half, and 7, 8, 9 and 10 lie north of it, in order. Each of these lots has a platted frontage of 52 4-5 feet, and of these respondent owns lots 4, 5, 8, 9 and 10 and appellants own lots 1, 2, 3, 6 and 7. The lines in controversy are those between lots 3 and 4 and lots 7 and 8.
The surveyor mentioned testified that his measurements disclosed that the true line between lots 3 and 4 was “about eight feet” south of appellants’ fence, and the line between lots 7 and 8 was “about ten or twelve feet” south of appellants’ fence. It may be noted here that the platted distance from the southeast corner of block 1 to the northeast corner of block 4 is 3.3 feet greater than the platted distance from the southwest corner of block 1 to the northwest corner of block 4.
This surveyor also testified that respondent’s north fence was some twelve feet north of what he fixed as the true north line of block 4 and of lot 5 of-that block. He did not measure to the north boundary of the original town, as shown by the plat, nor did he make any measurements of the actual occupancies of respondent and appellants.
For appellants there was in evidence actual measurements of the inclosures of respondent and appellants. One witness who made measurements testified, and the plat made by him disclosed, that the west line of block 4, as inclosed, is 253% feet; and the east line 259 feet; that appellants’ frontage on the west side of the block is 149 feet and respondent’s frontage on the west side is 104% feet. Appellants ’ frontage on the east side is 105 feet and respondent’s frontage on the east 154 feet.
■ Respondent’s case depends absolutely upon the testimony of the witness who surveyed the property *199for her and made survey No. 77. In making this survey this witness testified that his purpose was to follow the calls in the Eohinson Survey, accepting it as accurate. The questions are whether he used the correct beginning point as called for by that survey; and, if so, whether he accurately followed the calls of that survey for courses and distances.
Let it be conceded that the beginning point he selected was the right one, yet the record demonstrates the inaccuracy of his subsequent proceedings. His testimony and measurements show that the distance from the beginning point to the northwest corner of the inclosure in block 3 is 925.58 feet. ' This, he testified, is the distance between the beginning point and the northwest comer of block 3, as platted. The slight-error apparent in this measurement is negligible. His survey shows the distance from the northwest corner of block 3,- as inclosed, across the street to the southwest corner of block 4, as inclosed by appellants’ fence, to be 74 1-3 feet. It also shows that 'the length of the west line of the inclosures of respondent and appellants in block 4 is 251 1-3 feet. He testified respondent’s north fence, which should have been placed along the true north line of lot 5, block 4, is twelve feet north of the true line. He also testified that the fence which divides the occupancies of respondent and appellants in the west half of block 4 is about eight feet north of the true line between lot 3, owned by appellants, and lot 4, owned by respondent.
The northwest comer of block 3, as platted in the Eohinson Survey and as marked by the inclosures now on block 3 being identical, according to the surveyor upon whose testimony respondent’s case depends, the distance between the beginning point and the northwest comer of block 3 must be accepted as the basis of measurements to the north. The northwest corner of the inclosure in block 3, the error of 4.32 inches being negligible for the purpose of the argument, may *200be accepted as fixed and will be designated as “A.” From this point to the southwest corner of appellants' inclosure on block 4 is 74 1-3 feet. From this last mentioned point to the northwest corner of respondent’s inclosure is, according to respondent’s evidence,; 251 1-3 feet. The sum of these distances is 325 2-3 feeit. The platted distance from “A” to the northwest corner of block 4, as platted, is 330 feet. This distance is made up- of the distance across the street, as platted, north from “A” sixty-six feet and the length of the west side of block 4, which is platted as 264 feet. The fence on the north side of the respondent’s inclosure in the west half of block 4 is, therefore, 4 1-3 feet south of the true line, as platted.
How the witness arrived at the conclusion that respondent’s fence is twelve feet too far north is inexplicable when the measurements upon which the entire probative force of his testimony depends demonstrate it is 4 1-3 feet too far south.
There is another method of arriving at the same result. Each lot is 52 4-5 feet wide according to the plat. Commencing at “A” and adding to the platted width of the street (66 feet), immediately north, the plaítted width of lots 1, 2 and 3 owned by appellants, the result is the distance from “A” to the true north line of lot 3 and is 224.4/eet. If appellants’ fence is on their true line, respondent would have had left, actually inclosed, but 101 4-15 feet front and would have lacked 4 1-3 feet of having inclosed, on the north, all to which she is entitled.
If the measurements given by the witness are correct, it is not possible to accept as possessing any probative force his mere conclusion that appellants' lines are “about eight feet” and “about ten or twelve feet” too far north.
If his measurements are incorrect, or if he started from the wrong beginning point, of course his survey *201and his testimony fall and respondent’s case falls with it.
It may be added that it clearly appears that respondent has in possession a larger proportion of the block than have appellants; that the “nigger head rock” is conclusively shown to have reached its present position by reason of the fact that it was ploughed up in the street and placed there solely to get it out of the way of those working in the street. The limestone rock called for by the field notes as being 111 links south of the southwest comer of section 18 was undoubtedly under “Fisher’s sidewalk,” while the limestone rock found by respondent’s surveyor when he measured south 111 links from the “nigger head rock” was in a ditch and under no sidewalk. To accept the conclusion upon which respondent’s case depends would, according to the surveyor, change every street in Edina save one. The Winterbottom building, a three-story building erected in the fifties, is relied upon as evidence of the correspondence between the present location of the “nigger head rock” and the southwest corner of section 18. There is no satisfactory evidence that this building was erected on any lot line, though the Purveyor who testified for respondent said he had used its location on the theory it had been erected on the south boundary of one of the south lots of the original town. The fact that the same witness testified that he had run a line north •from the “nigger head rock” and struck the corner stone in the west line of the section is of no value since he gave no distance for the line thus measured, and without the distance between the two the corner stone mentioned is valueless as an indication whether in commencing at the “nigger head rock” the witness commenced too far north or too far south.
In view, however, of the fact that the measurements given by the witness demonstrate that he was wrong and that appellants are not in possession of any *202of respondent’s ground, and in view- of the fact that it is upon this witness respondent’s whole case depends, the evidence concerning the position of the “nigger head rock” becomes of little importance.
The judgment is reversed.
Brown, C., concurs.PER CURIAM. — The foregoing opinion of Blair, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.
All of the judges concur.