Held, per totam curiam, that the possessory title of the plaintiffs cast the burden of proof of the true boundary on the defendants who disputed it.
Per Griffith C.J. and Barton J.-The fact that later and more accurate surveys disclosed error in the original measurements of the lengths of the line in question and of other boundary lines was immaterial.
Per Isaacs J.-The fact that the land was Crown land did not in the circumstances affect the burden of proof.
By the Common Law Procedure Act 1885 of Tasmania a Judge may, with the consent of the parties, hear a case without a jury, and in such cases it is provided that a new trial shall not be granted on the ground that the verdict is against the weight of evidence.
Held, that where all the relevant evidence is one way, and there is no con- flict of evidence, the question of weight of evidence does not arise.
Decision of the Supreme Court of Tasmania refusing a new trial Mount Bischoff Tin Mining Co., Registered v. Mount Bischoff Extended Tin Mining Co., No Liability, 8 Tas. L.R., 103, reversed on the evidence.
APPEAL from the Supreme Court of Tasmania.
The appellants and the respondents were the owners of adjoin- ing leaseholds which were worked by them for mining purposes.
The appellants brought an action in the Supreme Court to recover damages for trespass on their property by the respond- ents by their underground workings, and the respondents set up that the then boundary line between the two leases was not in the correct position. The action was, by consent of the parties, tried without a jury by Nicholls J., who gave judgment for the defendants. On appeal to the Full Court a motion for a new trial was refused: Mount Bischoff Tin Mining Co., Registered V. Mount Bischoff Extended Tin Mining Co., No Liability 1.
From that decision the plaintiffs now appealed to the High Court.
The material facts and evidence are fully set out in the judg- ment of the Chief Justice.
Irvine K.C., Waterhouse and M. J. Clarke, for the appellants. As the trial was without a jury, by the consent of both parties under secs. 1 and 2 of the Common Law Procedure Act, No. 2, this Court cannot now consider the balance of the evidence.
18 Tas. L.R., 103.