It was remarked by Gaston J., delivering the opinion of the court in Carpenter v. Whitworth, 3 Ired., 204, that the “ practice of processioning lands, though recognized in our statute for more than a century, has for many years been so generally disused, that few of the profession or of the bench can claim to be familiar with the law respecting it.” The same observation will bear repetition after the lapse of forty years, since but little aid can be derived from the few subsequent cases to be found in the reports in the interpretation of its provisions. Inasmuch as great strictness is required in following its directions in order to obtain practical and effectual results, the procedure prescribed by the statute has almost become obsolete.
The proceeding before us, commenced in 1875, terminated in a report made to the clerk of the superior court, by whom it was confirmed the following year. It was removed by certiorari in 1879 to the superior court, and heard by the judge upon exceptions taken by the defendant, and from the decision overruling them and affirming the action of the clerk, t.he case is brought to this court.
The processioner’s report of his effort to run the boundaries of the plaintiff’s land and the obstruction offered by the defend*58ant to his survey of lines dividing their respective tracts, is, in our opinion, a substantial compliance with the requirements of the act, and is not obnoxious to the defendant’s objections. He could only prosecute his work up to the disputed line, and when arrested, make report of what lie has done, stating all the circumstances of the case, in order to the further steps prescribed for an authoritative location, and the settlement of the controversy between the contiguous proprietors.
The clerk, substituted for the county commissioners, the immediate successors of the former county court, by the act of 1874- 75, ch. 40, and invested with the same powers, thereupon proceeded to appoint five freeholders pursuant to- the directions of the act (Rev. Code, ch. 88, §6), who, after an ineffectual effort to agree upon a line, made return to the clerk and were discharged and others appointed in their place. These, with the processioner, met at the disputed boundary, as a jury of view, inspected the locality and the natural objects called for in the deed, heard evidence, ascertained and established the line between the contestants, and made return thereof, setting out all the material facts in reference to the dispute, the claims of each, and the grounds of their own conclusion. This report seems to us to be sufficient to show the matter in controversy and the claims of the respective parties as to the proper mode of running the line, according to cases in our reports. Miller v. Heart, 4 Ired., 23; Matthews v. Matthews, Ib., 155; Hoyle v. Wilson, 7 Ired., 166.
The cases heretofore in this court have been deemed defective by reason of the omission to set out the facts explanatory of the controversy and of the conflicting claims of the proprietors, “which,” says Judge HeNDEKSON in Wilson v. Shufford, 3 Mur., 504, “ we consider as the declaration or rather the pleadings of the parties,, setting forth their respective claims,” since it is by comparing the report of the processioner, with the report of the freeholders that the court can see which party prevailed in the claim, and thereby the finding may be reviewed.
In these aspects of the case, the proceeding seems to have been conducted conformably to the act, but it. falls short of its full *59requirements. The purpose is to assure and fix the boundaries of the land of the plaintiff, and if, after notice, no interruption had come from, any adjoining proprietor, the survey would have been around the entire tract. ' The processioner or surveyor (for now all surveyors of the county are made processioners by statute, acts 1872-’73, ch. 57) is required “to malee a plat of each tract of land processioned, and also a certificate of the same, which certificate shall contain the claimants name, the quantity of acres, the corners, length and course of each line” (section 6), and these should be embodied in his report. A complete survey is indispensable to the fulfillment of these conditions, and is essential to secure the practical benefits of the law.
In section seven it is declared that after two processionings the person whose lands are thus run “shall be deemed and adjudged to be the sole owner,” and the evidence is preserved by being recorded “ by the clerk in a xodl-bound book kept for that purpose” Section 5.
The statute makes provision for an interrupted survey; directing how disputed lines shall bo- ascertained; and subjecting the action of the freeholders to a review for the correction of errors. But when the lines are established, the mandate operates on the processioner to go on with his survey and complete it, as if there had been no obstacle in his way. This is, in our opinion, the plain meaning of the law, and this construction is necessary to the production of any useful, practical result.
The processioner’s report stopping at the interruption of his survey, and that of the freeholder’s conforming to it, give no complete enclosing boundary, but running away in a succession of lines and ending at the termination of the last in dispute, never returns to the starting point, ascertaining no definite area or location for the plaintiff’s land, so that the record, thus incomplete, is useless to him.
To be effective, the processioner should have resumed his survey, adopting the lines established for his guidance by the cooperating freeholders, and continued on until the whole boundary, *60the undisputed as well as the disputed parts, was run so that his plat and certificate would embrace all the requisites of the act in like manner as if he had not been obstructed in his work.
This is a fatal defect in the proceeding, and it should have been quashed. There is error in the ruling of the court, and it is reversed and judgment will be here entered quashing it.
Error. Reversed.