Angelina County Lumber Co. v. McKnight

265 S.W.2d 246, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 1939
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 11, 1954
Docket3117
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 265 S.W.2d 246 (Angelina County Lumber Co. v. McKnight) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Angelina County Lumber Co. v. McKnight, 265 S.W.2d 246, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 1939 (Tex. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

McDONALD, Chief Justice.

-.This is'a boundary dispute case between adjoining . owners of. land in the Joseph Durst. Survey in Angelina County. Appellant.Dumber Company owns a 548-acre tract, and appellee McKnight o-wns a 615-acre tract, which adjoins,appellant’s tract on the northwest. . Appellant and appellees hold under.common source of title, appellant’s.-chain of title being the senior.

It is believed that the schematic diagram below will aid in an. understanding of this case.. It is not .a part of the rec *247 ord, is not constructed to scale; ■ but- is in-: serted for the purpose'of illustration only. Appellant contends thatr the line A-B -on the diagram is the true location of the boundary line while appellee contends that the line C-D is the true location of the line. ; ■

' The-''controlling question for determination by this court, therefore, is whether or not there was' sufficient competent evidence to sustain the jury’s finding that the true line between appellant’s and appellee’s property was -line C-D as shown on- the schematic diagram.' - ■

| Trial was to a jury;- which found the- line to be- the line C-D on 'the diagram, as contended for by appellee. • Judgment- was upon the verdict and decreed to appellee the' approximately 90-acre tract in the disputed area. Appellant ■ appeals. - upon- 31 ■■ points.

Points 1 through 29 present the following contentions:: (1) That the line between - appellant’s and appellee’s property is located by the undisputed, evidence, as ■ a matter of law, on the line A-B (diagram), as contended - for by appellant. (2) That the jury’s finding -is1 against all the -evidence of probative value. (3) That the original grantors of both tracts intended the line to be as contended for by ’ appellant. ¡(4) That admission of téstimony as to the railroad iron found in the Tindle field' and the- wagon thimble at the north end of the boundary line contended for by appellee' was error 'materially injurious to the rights of appellant. ■

In "connection with the above appellant earnestly urges that testimony of the witness- surveyor Spiearey is discredited testimony and should-• not .-be considered'because he, varied certain portions of his testimony from that testified to" on a previous trial of this'cause.

A review’ of the record is necessary.

■ Both appellant and appellee offered a surveyor witness, who had made surveys in an attempt to locate the true boundary line. Surveyor Spearey testified for the appellee and fixed the true line - between Points- C and D on the diagram. • Surveyor Collins testified for appellant 'and fixed -the true boundary line represented -here between points A and B on the diagram.

The witness Roy Sanders- testified that in 1923 he and appellee McKnight- purchased- from- the Fisher family ' (original owners of- the Joseph Durst Survey) the 'timber on the'M. A. Fisher tract (now ap-pellee’s ■ property); that they had a man named Goodwin to blaze the line between the 'Hdrrison (out of which? appellant’s property is1 carved) and-the-Fisher‘tracts; that he-and-appellee'had a surveyor named Gibson survey the line between -the Harrison tract (out of which appellant’s -property' is carved) and the M. A. Fisher (now ■appellee’s "property), and-that that survey went to'á railroad iron 30 steps out1 in 'the Tindl'é field, which was fixed as'the northwest corner- of ’ the' Harrison' tract (Out of which appellant’s property %' carved) ; that the line as run by' Gibson correspond *248 •ed: to the line as blazed by Goodwin; that he and appellee proceeded to cut the timber to -this line; that they purchased the timber again on this tract and’ cut to this line, and that on neither occasion was the question. ever raised as to the cutting of the timber down to said line. ..

C. W. Fisher, Jr., grandson of Green Fisher, who settled on the Joseph Durst Survey, testified that in 1915 his father pointed out to him the northwest corner of the Joseph Durst Survey; that his father also -pointed out to him the northeast comer of the Joseph Durst Survey, and that he had in turn pointed out these two corners to the appellee McKnight.

The witness Ben Wilson testified that in about 1910 he and his father purchased the W. T. Wilson Survey, which lies northeast of the Jos.eph Durst Survey; that they located a corner on the. southeast boundary of the Wilson Survey and that corner is a common corner with the northeast corner of the Joseph Durst Survey, and that he and a surveyor surveyed :the ground and found same at a pin oak marked with an “X” and two hacks above. ■ The fieldnotes of the Joseph Durst Survey called for a pin oak as above described at the northeast corner. .

Frank Spearey, appellee’s surveyor, testified he surveyed the lands in question and fixed the boundary at points represented by C-D on the schematic diagram. He located the southeast corner of the Joseph Durst Survey (as shown on his map which was introduced in evidence and which is similar to the schematic diagram), and from, there located Point C as the southwest corner of appellant’s land. He found hack markings on the line .C-D. He found no hack markings on the line claimed by appellant. He blocked a hickory off where he placed the south line of the Joseph Durst Survey and counted about 100 rings from a hack scar. He said that in his opinion it was marked by the original surveyor of the Joseph Durst Head-right. . lie testified that the finding of the railroad iron and the wagon thimble at Points C-D did not change the location where he had placed the northwest boundary of appellant’s, property in the first trial of this cas.e, and that the railroad iron and wagon thimble were- found within %o ,of a vara at one point and 2 varas at another point of where he. located the line. C-D’on the first trial. He blocked a blazed hickory at the line established by him as the northwest line of appellant’s property and counted approximately 54 rings from the blaze. Appellant’s tract was surveyed in 1898.

(Trees, when hacked or blazed, have a deep cut mark into the bark and outer ring. Trees normally, put on one ring per year. Surveyors arid woodsmen are abie to take a section from a tree and by counting the rings from the outside back to an apparent, blaze or hack mark, tell approximately how many yeárs. have elapsed since the hack mark was made. Rainfall or drouth of .course vary to s&me extent the number of rings that a tree will acquire; that is to say, two rings,in.an extremely wet year and no rings 'at all in an extremely dry year; however, the overall average generally is one ring per year.)

Appellee McKnight testified that the corner that Spearey started, from on his súr-vey of the Joseph Durst Survey is the recognized corner, and that C. W. Fisher had pointed the corner out to him as the corner his father had pointed out to him as being the recognized corner. Appellee McKnight testified that he did not know of the existence of the railroad iron and the wagon thimble when Spearey set the boundary line in the 1949 survey and prior to the first trial; that upon learning of their existence he looked for them and' found them.

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Bluebook (online)
265 S.W.2d 246, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 1939, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/angelina-county-lumber-co-v-mcknight-texapp-1954.