Ballard v. Stanolind Oil & Gas Co.

80 F.2d 588, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 3362
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 10, 1935
DocketNo. 7635
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 80 F.2d 588 (Ballard v. Stanolind Oil & Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ballard v. Stanolind Oil & Gas Co., 80 F.2d 588, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 3362 (5th Cir. 1935).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, Circuit Judge.

The suit was in equity over a narrow strip of oil land, containing 4.17 acres. It was brought by plaintiff, an oil company, against defendant, a land surveyor, to quiet title and remove the cloud which defendant had cast on plaintiff’s title and possession by obtaining leases from plaintiff’s remote grantors to the strip by assuring them that the land they leased him [589]*589was not included in their prior lease under which plaintiff claims.

Plaintiff pleaded that by mesne conveyance it was the owner of oil leases on and that it was in possession of a solid block of land consisting of sixty acres out of the Hathaway and Hooper surveys. It alleged that it had acquired this land from one Skipper, who in turn had obtained it by two leases, each executed on April 28, 1930. One, from Harley and wife, to 60 acres out of the Hooper survey, called for its south line to be Arthur Christian’s north line. The other, to 104 acres more or less, was from Arthur Christian and others. It purported to be out of the Henry Hathaway survey, and called to begin at its north-cast corner. Plaintiff pleaded • that the north line of the Hathaway was one and the same line with the south line of the Hooper, and the north line of the Christian lease was one and the same line with the south line of the Harley lease. It further alleged that it had taken possession of and was developing these two tracts when on April 3, 1933, Christian and wife, and on January 6, 1934, Leak and Hurst, Skipper’s grantors, purported to lease to the defendant as a part of the Hooper survey the strip of land in controversy. Defendant, after obtaining a permit to drill on the land, had proceeded to drill on it, and when stopped by an injunction from the federal court, had drilled to about 1,600 feet and had expended in connection with the drilling some $4,339. He therefore, in addition to answering and filing a cross-petition in the suit, prayed that if it went against him, he have judgment for his drilling expenses.

Defendant’s claim, as made consistently throughout all the controversy, in the court below and here, is this: That the strip in question is actually located in the Hooper survey. That the common grantors, record owners in the Hathaway survey, acquired title to and owned the strip in controversy only by limitation. That though by their lease to plaintiff’s grantors they did \ intend to convey the strip, they, by describing the granted land as in the Hathaway survey, confined the grant to that survey. That they were therefore free to and they did convey to him by their lease a good title to the minerals in the strip.

If defendant is right in his contention, the situation will be greatly different from what plaintiff and its grantors had all along, before this controversy arose, supposed it to be. Instead of having, as they had without doubt intended to do, granted to Skipper by their first lease all of the land they owned up to their north boundary, grantors find themselves still owners of a part of it by a limitation title they never before asserted as such. Instead of having as it had supposed it had, a solid block of land, composed of two tracks in the Hathaway and Hooper surveys, plaintiff finds itself holding two separated parcels with a thin wedge driven between. Plaintiff therefore insisted below, and insists here, that while viewed simply as a boundary suit the evidence is overwhelming in its favor that the land is in the Hathaway and not in the Hooper survey, questions of boundary aside, it should have a decree, because the instruments in its chain of title fairly construed in their own light, in the light of other instruments to which plaintiff’s grantors are parties, and in the light of their actions, include the land in question. It insisted too, that defendant is a disturber and a willful trespasser; that his expenses for drilling on the disputed strip had been litigiously incurred, and were of no benefit to plaintiff; that he is without equity for their reimbursement.

The District Judge agreed with plaintiff on all points. lie filed full conclusions of fact and law. In these he gave controlling influence to an old fence called 'for in some of the instruments, and shown to have been long on the ground. He thought this the best evidence the case afforded after nearly one hundred years from the .making of the original surveys, as to where their true boundary line was. He thought, too, that the parties having definitely called for the fence in some of their deeds, having always treated it as their boundary line, and having undoubtedly intended to convey up to it, had in law done so, whether the fence was or was not on the original survey line. Definitely then, rejecting defendant’s contention that the strip in question was in the Hooper, rather than in the Hathaway survey, and finding with plaintiff on that point, he further found that the question which survey the land lay in was immaterial, for that the instruments under which plaintiff claimed, in law embraced and carried title to the strip, in whichever survey it lay. He found, too, that defendant was not a good-faith im[590]*590prover, but a willful trespasser and dis-entitled under Guffey v. Smith, 237 U.S. 101, 119, 35 S.Ct. 526, 59 L.Ed. 856; Houston Production Co. v. Mecom Oil Co. (Tex.Com.App.) 62 S.W.(2d) 75, to recover his drilling expenses.

We have carefully examined the record and have reviewed the-findings in its light. We find nothing there which would warrant us in overturning the findings or the decree. Plaintiff was in possession of the property when defendant obtained his lease from the common grantors, under circumstances warranting no other-conclusion than that it, and the parties to the instruments it held under, had intended to grant and receive the property in question. Some of the instruments contained field notes definitely tied to the old fence. Others, to objects on the ground, conforming to the fence. WTiat latent ambiguity, if there was any in the references to the Hathaway survey, what uncertainty there was as to intention was overcome by the definite references in some of the instruments to fence and branch. In such circumstances, in the face of long possession and claim to a line marked by fence and by occupancy to the fence, a heavy burden rested upon defendant to show that instead of this strip being in the Hathaway survey, and instead of the common grantors claiming it to the fence line as record owners of the Hathaway, it was in the Hooper survey and the Hathaway owners were claiming it only by limitation. Schiele v. Kimball (Tex.Civ.App.) 150 S.W. 303.

Plaintiff assumed the burden of fixing the fence as the boundary line' between the owners in the two surveys, and of establishing by its surveyors that it was on the original survey line. The defendant, controverting this, undertook by calls for other surveys to show the contrary. Neither plaintiff’s nor defendant’s surveyors found any original marked tree or object. Plaintiff’s surveyor did not claim to have done so. Ballard did indeed say that he had dug up a buried old red oak stump at a point where, if the line had been located as he located it, a red oak tree, called for in the original field notes, would have been found. This, like a great deal of the other hypothetical evidence of both surveyors in the case, is merely surmise and speculation. Besides, the District Judge heard all the witnesses orally and the greatest weight should be attached to his finding that the stump Ballard found was not an original bearing tree.

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Bluebook (online)
80 F.2d 588, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 3362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ballard-v-stanolind-oil-gas-co-ca5-1935.