Bearden v. Schenecker

240 S.W. 996, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 748
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 11, 1922
DocketNo. 9719.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 240 S.W. 996 (Bearden v. Schenecker) 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
Bearden v. Schenecker, 240 S.W. 996, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 748 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinions

DUNKLIN, J.

This controversy presents the issue of whether or not an oil and gas lease, under which the appellees claim, cov-vered a strip of land consisting of 56/100 of an acre, which strip will hereinafter be referred to as the property in controversy. Appellees, who were plaintiffs in the court below, alleged that the defendants, who are appellants here, were setting up an erroneous claim of title to the land in controversy, free of the plaintiff’s claim of a valid oil and gas lease, and that the defendants’ claim was a cloud upon plaintiffs’ lease which plaintiffs desired to have removed. From a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs for the relief prayed for, the defendants have prosecuted this appeal.

[997]*997The property in controversy was a part of wliat is known as the W. A. Bearden tract, which was allotted to W. A. Bearden out of the Juana Selinas survey in a division and partition of that survey among the several owners of the different tracts therein. Another tract in that survey lying immediately north of and contiguous to the Bearden tract was allotted to N. E. Dabney in the same partition. According to the field notes of the deeds of the Dabney and Bearden tracts so set apart,'it is shown that the south boundary of the Dabney tract and the north boundary of the Bearden tract was one and the same line. W. A. Bearden died, and there was a partition of his tract between his widow and their children. Mrs. Lizzie Queen was one of those children, and in the partition last mentioned, which was by a decree of court, a tract which was described as containing 15 acres was decreed to her. The tract so decreed to her is shown in the accompanying plat and is marked tract No. 2.

According to the plat it appears that tract No. 2 extends' 342 varas north and south, and contains 15 acres. In the decree of partition which adopted and confirmed the report of the commissioners theretofore appointed by the court, lots 1 and 2 are described as follows:

“Lot No. 1, containing 15% acres described by metes and bounds as follows: Beginning at the N. E. corner of said 121-acre tract. Thence S. with E. line of same, 342 vrs. to' another corner of this survey. Thence W. passing corner of this survey at 107 vrs. continuing on 240% vrs. in all, to stake for corner, it being also the S. E. corner of lot No. 2, hereinafter described.
“Thence N. 342 vrs. to the N. line of original 121-aere tract. Thence E. with said N. line 249% vrs. to place of beginning, containing 15% acres of land.
“Lot No. 2 containing 15 acres and described by metes and. bounds as follows: Beginning at a stake in the N. line of said 121-acre tract, 249% vrs. W. from the N. E. corner, the same being the N. W. corner of lot No. 1. Thence S. 342 vrs. to the S. W. corner of lot No. 1. Thence west with the N. line of lot No. 3 and continuing on 247% vrs. in all to stake. Thence N. 342 vrs. to the N. line of 121-acre tract. Thence E. 247% vrs. to place of beginning.”

As shown by other portions of'the commissioners’ report, the tract referred to as “said 121-acre tract” was the W. A. Bearden tract above mentioned, and, according to the report of the commissioners and the decree of the court, tract No. 4 was described as containing 79.9 acres. The commissioners further reported that by actual calculation the W. A. Bearden tract, contained a total of 125 acres instead of 121.3 acres. The oil and gas lease under which plaintiffs claim as assignees was executed by Mrs. Lizzie Queen and 'her husband to L. 0. Turman, on November 20, 1918, which was prior to the decree of partition between the Bearden heirs. In that instrument the field notes of the entire Bearden tract were given, and, after so describing the same, the instrument contained the following:

“The said 121.3 ac^es belonging to several heirs and the partition of said land being in process of adjustment, it is understood that, in the event the partition of said land has been completed at this time, this lease is intended to cover, and does cover, the portion of said 121.3 acres se.t apart, or that may hereafter be set apart, by agreement or any partition suit, to the said Mrs. Lizzie Queen (née Bear-den). It is also understood that the execution of this lease on the one-eighth (%) undivided interest of the said Lizzie Queen (née Bearden) gives to the lessee full authority to cause a partition of said land to be made by agreement; or by suit and to cause a portion of said land to be set aside and apart to the said Lizzie Queen in the event the partition now under process of adjustment fails of consummation.”

The trial was before the cou.rt without a jury, and the trial judge’s findings of fact are shown in the judgment rendered.

The dotted line on the plat north of the heavy line indicating the north boundary of the Bearden tract was found by the trial judge to be the true north boundary of the Bearden tract, and the land in controversy is a strip lying between the dotted line and the north boundary of the Lizzie Queen tract and the extensions of the east and west [998]*998lines of that tract to points of intersection with the dotted line. The southeast corner of lot No. 1 in the plat is a well-established corner, about which there is no controversy. If the northeast corner of the Bearden tract is located where the trial judge found it to be, namely, at the east end of the dotted line, then the distance from the southeast corner of tract No. 1 to that corner is S42 varas, plus 19.5 varas, or 19.5 varas farther north than called for in the field notes of the Bearden tract.

The finding of the trial court that the true location of the north boundary of the Bear-den tract is the dotted line is challenged by appellants, and that is the first question to be determined here.

[1, 2] The deed to W. A. Bearden to his tract and the one to N. E. Dabney to his tract were both dated February 1, 1886, and the proof showed without controversy that shortly after that date Dabney built a fence on the line indicated by the dotted line of the plat for the purpose of inclosing his land on the south, and that ever since that time that line has been recognized and acquiesced in as the true and correct boundary between those two tracts by the respective' owners. Under such circumstances it can hardly be doubted that the claimants under the Dabney deed own no title to the land in controversy, and that as between them and the claimants under the Bearden deed the title is vested in the latter. But independently of such recognition by the owners of the two respective tracts of the dotted line as the true boundary between those two tracts, we are of the opinion that there was other competent evidence sufficient to sustain the court’s finding that such was the correct boundary. W. T. McArthur testified that he was one of the chain carriers at the time the surveyor surveyed the Dabney and Bearden tracts, and whose field notes were used in the deeds above mentioned to those two tracts, and that the lines of both tracts were run out at the same time. He further testified, in effect, that he assisted in driving a stake in the ground to mark the northeast corner of the Bearden tract and the southeast corner of the Dabney tract. ‘The stake so driven has since disappeared, and cannot be found on the ground.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
240 S.W. 996, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 748, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bearden-v-schenecker-texapp-1922.