v.
Ellen C. Blake, and F. F. Dawley, Trustee
Plaintiff is the owner of the northeasterly forty-two feet of lot 10 in block 11 in Greene and Col [*166] lege addition to the city of Cedar Rapids and defendants are the owners of outlot A of S. O. Bever’s Second addition to the city of Cedar Rapids. The controversy is over a strip of ground nine feet and two inches in width between these two pieces of ground; each-party claiming that it is a part of his property. What is known as “ Greene and College Addition ” to the city of 'Cedar Rapids was platted in the year 1871. By this plat lot 10 of block 11 therein is shown to have a frontage on Iowa avenue of 60 feet. The division line between this and what was thereafter known as “ S. C. Bever’s Second Addition ” jto said city was the one separating the E. % from the W. % of the N. W. % of section 22, and by these plats this line simply touched the southeasterly corner of lot 10, block 11, leaving a frontage of practically sixty feet on Iowa avenue, which abutted it on the south. In the year 1877 S. C. Bever platted his Second addition to the city, and by this plat the division line between the two tracts was fixed seventeen feet further west than it appeared to be on the Greene and College plat. In other words, a triangular piece was carved out of what was called “ Block 11 ” of the Greene and College tract,- seventy-seven feet in width on Iowa avenue and one hundred and ten feet long on what was known as “ Bever Avenue.” As the lots in the Greene and College addition were but sixty feet in width, it is manifest that there is a discrepancy on the face of the plats of some seventeen feet in the frontage- on Iowa avenue, and of something like seventy-five feet in the frontage on Bever street. This difficulty was discovered many years ago, and the parties in interest endeavored to adjust the matter by private agreement, but were unable to do so. There has consequently been a dispute ever since as to the true boundary- between these parcels of ground, although as a matter of fact, the difficulty' might have been solved at any time by having a surveyor run the line between the Greene and College addition and the Bever addition. This was not done until about the time this suit [*167] was commenced, when'a surveyor was employed by defendants, who ran the section and lot lines, fixing them where the defendants now claim them to be. They thereupon erected a fence upon this line, and this action was then commenced.
Considering all the plats it is manifest that none of the parties who were responsible for them were intending to claim beyond or over the true line between the two eighty-acre tracts of land, which were platted by the respective proprietors. The Greene and College plat made the eastern boundary of lot 9 and a part of lot 10, in block 11, and of the entire plat, the original and true line between the two eighty-acre governmental subdivisions of the land. It would appear from this plat that this line took off but little of lot 10, but, as we have said, the parties made the original government line controlling. And. so, when Bever came to make his plat, he fixed the western boundary of the outlot now owned by defendants, as well as of his entire addition, as the true boundary between the two eighty-acre tracts of land. [*169] True, these plats give the measurements of the outlot on Iowa avenue as. seventy-seven and seventy-nine feet, respectively; but his purpose to claim to the true boundary line, whatever its distance, is apparent. So that there is no implied agreement in the case. Indeed, the testimony, as we have already said, shows a dispute as to the boundary from the time that Bever made his second plat. This clearly negatives any thought of an agreement by implication. There have never been any fences or other structures, erected by either of the parties, marking the boundary between the two lots. Hence there is no room for inferring an agreement by reason thereof, as in the many cases cited and relied upon by appellee. Such possession as is shown was by defendant Blake and her grantors up to and even beyond the line now claimed by her and her trustee, Dawley. There is nothing in the case, save the filing of the Bever plats, to bring it within the rule of Miller v. Mills County, 111 Iowa, 654, and other like cases. And the filing of the plats in itself did not, under the circumstances disclosed by this record, amount to an implied agreement or acquiescence in any boundary other than the true one. The filing of these plats did not mark out upon the ground itself any particular line as being the boundary, and it is only by laying them upon the ground, speaking figuratively, of course, that any boundary is marked out. When that is done, the primary question is: What is the true line between the two eighty-acre tracts of land? That, as 'has been observed, is where defendants claim it to be.
The case must therefore be reversed, and remanded to the district court for such a decree.
Reversed and remanded.