                             2015 IL App (2d) 141175
                                  No. 2-14-1175
                          Opinion filed October 16, 2015
______________________________________________________________________________

                                             IN THE

                             APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

                              SECOND DISTRICT
______________________________________________________________________________

HENRY SULLIVAN and VERNETTE            ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
SULLIVAN,                              ) of Lake County.
                                       )
      Plaintiffs-Appellees,            )
                                       )
v.                                     ) No. 12-CH-687
                                       )
PEGGY KANABLE, KEN KANABLE,            )
and JAN KANABLE,                       ) Honorable
                                       ) Luis A. Berrones,
      Defendants-Appellants.           ) Judge, Presiding.
______________________________________________________________________________

       JUSTICE McLAREN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
       Justices Jorgensen and Hudson concurred in the judgment and opinion.

                                           OPINION

¶1     Plaintiffs, Henry and Vernette Sullivan, filed a two-count complaint in the circuit court of

Lake County against defendants, Peggy, Ken, and Jan Kanable. According to the complaint, the

Sullivans own and occupy a parcel of residential lakefront property on McGreal Lake in Antioch.

Peggy Kanable owns an adjacent parcel of property on the lakefront to the west. She and her

parents, Ken and Jan Kanable, live on the property. In count I of their complaint, the Sullivans

sought to determine the boundary between the two parcels. In count II, the Sullivans sought to

enjoin the Kanables from discharging untreated wastewater from their property into the lake. In

an earlier appeal taken pursuant to Illinois Supreme Court Rule 304(a) (eff. Feb. 26. 2010), we
2015 IL App (2d) 141175


affirmed a summary judgment in favor of defendants on count II. Sullivan v. Kanable, 2014 IL

App (2d) 140321-U, ¶ 2. Thereafter, following a bench trial, the trial court entered judgment in

plaintiffs’ favor on count I. Defendants now appeal from that judgment, arguing that it is against

the manifest weight of the evidence. We affirm.

¶2     Brian Lee, a licensed surveyor, testified on behalf of plaintiffs. Lee testified that he was

the owner of the surveying firm of R.E. Allen and Associates. Lee had been a licensed surveyor

since 2005. In August 2011, plaintiffs contacted Lee and requested that he conduct a survey of

the property. According to Lee, Henry Sullivan expressed concern about the west property line.

Henry “mentioned that there was an issue with the property next door being staked on the west

boundary line.” Plaintiffs provided a legal description of the property indicating that it is

situated in section 4 of township 46 north, range 10 east, of the third principal meridian.

According to the legal description, the southeast corner of plaintiffs’ land is located on the south

line of section 4 at a point 674.87 feet west of the southeast corner of section 4. Lee testified that

he located the monument marking the southeast corner of section 4. Measuring along the south

line, he found an iron rod placed in the ground 674.91 feet west of that marker. According to the

legal description, the southern boundary of plaintiffs’ property begins at that point and proceeds

west along the southern line of section 4 for a distance of 658.23 feet to the east line of the west

half of the east half of section 4. Lee’s testimony indicates that the point thus described—the

southwest corner of plaintiffs’ property—is located in the lake to the south of plaintiffs’ land.

¶3     To determine the location of that corner, Lee (1) located a monument identifying the

south quarter corner of section 4; (2) ascertained the distance between the south quarter corner

and the southeast corner of section 4; and (3) divided that distance by two. According to the

legal description, the western boundary of the property runs north along the east line of the west



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2015 IL App (2d) 141175


half of the east half of section 4 for a distance of 685.4 feet to the center line of State Line Road

“as formerly located.” Lee identified the east line of the west half of the east half of section 4 as

a line running from the southwest corner of plaintiffs’ property to the midpoint of the north line

of the quarter section in which the property is located. Lee found a monument at the northeast

corner of the quarter section. He did not find a monument at the northwest corner of the quarter

section, but he was able to locate that corner based on prior surveying work in the area. Lee’s

measurement of the distance along that line from the southwest corner of plaintiffs’ property to

what had once been the center line of State Line Road conformed to the legal description.

¶4     Lee testified that, after completing the field work and preparing a plat of survey, he

contacted Ed Peklay, who had previously conducted a survey of defendants’ property. Peklay’s

survey placed the eastern boundary of defendants’ property east of the western boundary of

plaintiffs’ property as determined by Lee’s survey. Peklay had placed an iron rod near the edge

of the lake. According to Lee’s testimony, that marker was 19.1 feet to the east of the western

boundary of defendants’ property. In other words, according to Lee’s survey, that marker was

19.1 feet into plaintiffs’ property.    However, the northwest corner of plaintiffs’ property,

according to Lee’s survey, was at essentially the same point as the northeast corner of

defendants’ property, according to Peklay’s survey.

¶5     Upon reviewing Peklay’s survey, Lee expanded his own to include defendants’ property

and two parcels to the west of defendants’ property. He found corner markers on the west side

of defendants’ property and measured distances between those markers and the east line of the

west half of the east half of section 4. The distances did not conform to the legal description of

defendants’ property. Similarly, the property lines staked out for the two parcels to the west of

defendants’ property did not conform to the applicable legal descriptions.



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2015 IL App (2d) 141175


¶6     Lee testified that he spoke with Peklay. Peklay indicated that the corners he found on the

west line of defendants’ property and on the parcels to the west of defendants’ property matched

the occupation lines of the property. Lee offered the opinion that his own survey (not Peklay’s)

established the correct boundary line between plaintiffs’ property and defendants’. On cross-

examination, however, Lee indicated that his method of surveying the property and Peklay’s

were both acceptable in the surveying profession.        He agreed with defendants’ attorney’s

statement that “one [method] is not necessarily more correct than the other.”

¶7     Peklay testified for defendants that he was asked to survey their property in 2011.

Defendants needed a survey because they were planning to build an addition to their house.

Pelkay testified that he found monuments—specifically, iron pipes—on the west line of the

property. He also found “a corner or two” at the northeast corner of the property. He found no

monument at the southeast corner near the lake. He added that the area was “swampy” and that

the monument might never have been set or might have been washed away. Peklay further noted

that there were “fence lines, occupation lines” on the west side of defendants’ property. Peklay

stated that occupation lines are important in surveying land because they are “what the owners

come to rely on as to be in their property.” Peklay testified that, according to what he had been

taught in continuing professional education programs, “[o]ccupation takes precedence over

measurements.”

¶8     Peklay tried to verify the position of the stakes on the west side of defendants’ property in

relation to the section lines and other adjoining parcels of land.       He discovered that “the

measurements from the section corners would not agree with the occupation.” Peklay testified,

“Based on the occupation, I held the west line of the parcel went over 400 feet which agreed with

a very old survey that the client provided to me also.” Peklay then “set a corner that was on the



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2015 IL App (2d) 141175


line off of the water’s edge.” It appears to be undisputed that, in relation to the boundary

determined by Lee’s survey, the corner that Peklay set near the water’s edge is about 19 feet into

plaintiffs’ property.

¶9      The trial court concluded that the survey conducted by Lee, based on what the court

referred to as the “measurement methodology,” was preferable to the “occupation methodology”

that Peklay used. The court added, however, that “[t]he occupation methodology would be

acceptable to this Court if in this case the Court was not required to make a determination which

will possibly affect other property lines.” The court entered declaratory judgment for plaintiffs

that the boundary between the parties’ properties was as shown by Lee’s survey.

¶ 10    Defendants argue that the trial court’s decision is against the manifest weight of the

evidence.    It is well established that “[a] trial court’s factual determinations will not be

overturned on appeal unless they are contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence.” City of

Marseilles v. Radtke, 307 Ill. App. 3d 972, 976 (1999). “A finding is against the manifest weight

of the evidence only if the opposite conclusion is clearly evident or if the finding itself is

unreasonable, arbitrary, or not based on the evidence presented.” Best v. Best, 223 Ill. 2d 342,

350 (2006). In applying the manifest-weight-of-the-evidence standard, “[a] reviewing court will

not substitute its judgment for that of the trial court regarding the credibility of witnesses, the

weight to be given to the evidence, or the inferences to be drawn.” Id. at 350-51.

¶ 11    We preface our consideration of the evidence presented at trial with a brief summary of

certain general principles of land surveying (gleaned, in part, from scholarly writing on the

subject) that are germane to the issue in this appeal. It has been observed that “[c]onservation

and perpetuity of boundary lines is the primary aim of the law of boundaries.” Robert J. Griffin,

Comment, Retracement and Apportionment as Surveying Methods for Re-establishing Property



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2015 IL App (2d) 141175


Corners, 43 Marq. L. Rev. 484, 484 (1960) (hereinafter Griffin). When establishing boundaries

described using the public land survey system, “[t]he monuments set by the original U.S. survey

establish township, section and quarter section lines; and, the method prescribed by Congress for

the division of quarter sections into fractional parts controls the location of such fractional lines.”

Id. at 489. Under federal law, “the corners of half- and quarter-sections, not marked on the

surveys, shall be placed as nearly as possible equidistant from two corners which stand on the

same line.” 43 U.S.C. § 752 (2012).

¶ 12    A reviewing court in a sister state has explained the roles played by a surveyor retained

by a private client:

                “First, the surveyor can, in the first instance, lay out or establish boundary lines

        within an original division of a tract of land which has theretofore existed as one unit or

        parcel. In performing this function, he is known as the ‘original surveyor’ and when his

        survey results in a property description used by the owner to transfer title to property that

        survey has a certain special authority in that the monuments set by the original surveyor

        on the ground control over discrepancies within the total parcel description and, more

        importantly, control over all subsequent surveys attempting to locate the same line.

                Second, a surveyor can be retained to locate on the ground a boundary line which

        has theretofore been established. When he does this, he ‘traces the footsteps’ of the

        ‘original surveyor’ in locating existing boundaries.           Correctly stated, this is a

        ‘retracement’ survey, not a resurvey, and in performing this function, the second and each

        succeeding surveyor is a ‘following’ or ‘tracing’ surveyor and his sole duty, function and

        power is to locate on the ground the boundaries [sic] corners and boundary line or lines

        established by the original survey; he cannot establish a new corner or new line terminal



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2015 IL App (2d) 141175


        point, nor may he correct errors of the original surveyor.          He must only track the

        footsteps of the original surveyor. The following surveyor, rather than being the creator

        of the boundary line, is only its discoverer and is only that when he correctly locates it.”

        (Emphasis in original.) Rivers v. Lozeau, 539 So. 2d 1147, 1150-51 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App.

        1989).

Although boundaries arising from the conveyance of land are determined with reference to the

intention of the grantor, as expressed in the instrument of conveyance, “[t]he highest and best

proof of this intention, ordinarily, lies not in the words of expression of the deed, but rather, in

the work upon the ground itself, where the survey was made prior to the conveyance.” Griffin,

supra, at 495.

¶ 13    The boundaries for a given parcel might or might not all be created simultaneously.

Thus, “[a] grantee who purchases the entire extent of particular lands owned by the grantor

determines boundaries of his purchase as of the time that the particular parcel was carved out of

some larger tract.” Id. at 488. On the other hand, “[a] grantee purchasing only part of the lands

of his grantor will determine the common boundaries as of the time of the conveyance, while he

will determine the boundaries on the perimeter of the grantor’s original tract with reference to

the time that they were created.” (Emphases added.) Id. Accordingly, “[e]ach line of the same

parcel must be considered separately, and a determination of the proper surveying method to be

used must be made with respect to each line of the parcel.” Id.

¶ 14    Mindful of these principles, we conclude that the trial court’s decision to rely on Lee’s

survey to establish the boundary is not against the manifest weight of the evidence. Defendants

argue that Peklay’s methodology was superior to Lee’s. Defendants note that “a surveyor’s job

is not to re-establish a property line; rather, a surveyor’s job is to retrace the original steps of the



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2015 IL App (2d) 141175


original surveyor.” According to defendants, “that is precisely what Mr. Peklay did, and that is

the reason why occupation holds over measurements.” Defendants’ argument is not persuasive.

First, Peklay did not provide a complete explanation of the supposed principle that occupation

controls over measurements.      We note that the legal description for defendants’ property

specifies the place of beginning as the southeast corner of the west half of government lot 1.

From there, defendants’ east property line is described as proceeding along the east line of the

west half of government lot 1 for a distance of 685.4 feet. (This description corresponds exactly

to the description of the west property line of plaintiffs’ property.)         The property-line

descriptions proceed counterclockwise (i.e. east property line to north property line to west

property line to south property line). The south property line is described as running east along

the south line of the section for a distance of 400 feet to the place of beginning. Here, Peklay

resolved an apparent discrepancy between the occupation line on the west and the described

measurements of the property by repositioning the place of beginning set forth in the legal

description of defendants’ land, so that the described dimensions of the property remained

unchanged. But if, as Peklay testified, occupation lines control over measurements, it is unclear

why those dimensions should not have yielded.

¶ 15   As noted, the original survey of a given parcel “control[s] over all subsequent surveys

attempting to locate the same line.” Rivers, 539 So. 2d at 1151. We acknowledge that an

occupation line might be of value in setting the boundary between the properties on either side of

that line.   Occupation lines might also correspond to improvements on property.            “The

evidentiary value of improvements depends upon the probability that their builders had, at the

time of construction[,] a better means of knowing where the original lines were located than is

now available.” Griffin, supra, at 500. The evidentiary value in determining other boundaries



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2015 IL App (2d) 141175


seems doubtful, however.     As noted, “[e]ach line of the same parcel must be considered

separately, and a determination of the proper surveying method to be used must be made with

respect to each line of the parcel.” Id. at 488. The record does not indicate when various

boundaries were established or whether they were originally created by common parties, so it is

difficult to conclude that the boundary between the parties’ properties was created with reference

to, or should be controlled by, the boundary between defendants’ property and property on the

west side of defendants’ property.

¶ 16   Lee located the boundaries of defendants’ property, pursuant to the legal description of

the property, with reference to government survey monuments and a properly placed marker for

the point of beginning. There is no indication that the boundaries measured in accordance with

the legal description conflicted with any occupancy lines on or adjacent to plaintiffs’ property.

Nor is there any indication that the measurements conflicted with any other controlling element.

There is no indication that Lee made any mistake in measuring the distance from the section

corner to the place of beginning on the southeast corner of the property. Nor is there any

indication that Lee made any mistake in measuring the distance from that point to the southwest

corner of the property. As noted, Peklay essentially located the place of beginning without

reference to government survey markers, instead placing it at a location that would accommodate

the occupation line on the west of the property with the described 400-foot measurement of

defendants’ south property line. Under the circumstances, this method appears to be arbitrary

and inferior to alternative methods of determining the place of beginning of defendants’ land.

¶ 17   For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the circuit court of Lake County is affirmed.

¶ 18   Affirmed.




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