Boothe v. McLean

267 S.W.2d 158, 3 Oil & Gas Rep. 1449, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2450
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 19, 1954
Docket3048
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 267 S.W.2d 158 (Boothe v. McLean) 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
Boothe v. McLean, 267 S.W.2d 158, 3 Oil & Gas Rep. 1449, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2450 (Tex. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

’ GRISSOM, Chief Justice.

J. M. Boothe, Sr., and wife, Lydia Grabow,Haines arid husband, arid Jake L. Hamon, William P. Castleman and Warren Petroleum Corporation sued William J. McLean and others in trespass to try title to the minerals in a strip of land 260 feet wide, subject to roadway and railroad easements, out- of the north end of Survey 179 in Scurry County. The court rendered .judgment that plaintiffs take nothing and J. M. Boothe, Sr., and wife, and Jake L. Hamon and .William.-P. Castleman, hereinafter called the Boothe plaintiffs, and Lydia Grabow Haines and husband and Warren Petroleum Corporation, hereinafter called the Haines plaintiffs, perfected separate appeals.

The controversy is over the title to the minerals in-said 260 f.oot strip of land, subject to the. following easements: (1) on the east, a 60 foot county road, .sometimes known as highway 7, which had been used for the prescriptive, period in 1915, there being no conveyance of a right:of way; (2) in the middle, a 100 foot right of way occupied by the Sante Fe Railway Company for railroad.purposes; (3) on the west, a 100 foot strip, formerly occupied by the Roscoe, Snyder & Pacific- Railway Company, *160 hereinafter called the Róscoe Railway, for railroad purposes. The latter right of way was abandoned in 1949, the tracks were removed and it is no longer used for railroad purposes. The strip, over which there were the three right, of way easements, angles generally north and south across Section 179. In the north end of Section 179, adjoining said 260 foot strip on the east, Boothe owns the fee title and Hamon and Castlernan own the oil and gas leasehold. Lydia Grabow Haines owns the fee title and Warren owns the oil and gas leasehold to the west of said strip, there being a dispute, however, as to their eastern boundary.

The Boothe plaintiffs’ claim to a portion of the eastern part .of the 260 foot strip is based on the application of the rule quoted below to the deed from Grabow to Noder. In Cox v. Campbell, 135 Tex. 428, 143 S.W.2d 361, 366, the court said:

“The rule has been definitely announced in the Warwick and Weed cases that where a deed conveys by specific field notes land abutting on a street or public highway of railroad right' of way, it conveys ' title to the property to the center of the street, public highway, or railroad right of way; and such rule is not overcome even though the field notes describing the land stop at the side line of'the street, public highway, or railroad right of way, unless a contrary intention is expressed in plain and unequivocal terms.” •

In Joslin v. State, Tex.Civ.App., 146 S.W.2d 208, 211 (Writ Ref.), the court said:

“While the intention of the parties to a grant, where ascertainable, generally controls’, the following significanlanguage is used iic the Rio Bravo case ([Rio Bravo Oil Co. v. Weed], 121 Tex. 427, 50 S.W.2d [1080] 1087, 85 A.L.R. 391) : ‘The prime object and purpose of such rules (of construction) is to enable them to ascertain and give effect to the true intention of the parties unless such, intention is inconsistent with some settled rule of law.’ (Italics ours.) And the ■ settled rule of law therein announced and followed in Cox v. Campbell, supra, is that, absent an express reservation, the grant is conclusively presumed to go to the center of the non-navigable stream, highway or railroad right of way. There being no such reservation in the grant, under such rule of construction, other evidence as to what was the intention of the parties becomes unimportant.”

In Cantley v. Gulf Production Co., 135 Tex. 339, 143 S.W.2d 912, 916, the court said:

“Applying the foregoing principles announced by this Court to the facts involved here, the conclusion is inescapable, from the language used in the conveyance from Douglass and. his children to the grantees, that it was the intention of the grantors to include this strip of land in such ■ conveyance. Any other construction of such conveyance would nullify the rule announced in the decisions above cited, and which has become the public policy of this State.”

In Texas Bitulithic Co. v. Warwick, Tex.Com.App., 293 S.W. 160, 164, the court said:

“Therefore we think the courts are exactly right when they say that a deed does carry the property to the 'center of the adjoining street unless such deed contains a clause- which expressly declares the contrary intention or contains some other declaration equivalent to such an express declaration.” See also 11 C.J.S., Boundaries, § 35, p. 586. ' '

Those claiming under Scurry County must depend on the same rule.

The three McLeans, brothers and sister, owned all of Section 179 when the two-' railroad right of way easements and the 60 foot roadway easement were acquired some time prior to 1915. The record title to Section 179 is shown as follows: (1) the three McLean heirs are the agreed common *161 source of title; (2) prior to 1915, the two railroad rights of way were condemned and the rights of the public in the 60 foot county road vested by prescription; (3) in 1915, in a partition suit between said three McLeans, William J. McLean was awarded the north end of Section 179. The minerals in dispute are in the north part awarded to W. J. McLean and within said 260 foot strip. ' The middle of said section was awarded to Annie McLean, now Freeman, and the ’ south end was awarded to Milton B. McLean. (4) In 1924, William J. McLean conveyed the north part of the section to A. F. Grabow. (5) In 1929, A. F. Grabow conveyed to D. P. Yoder the east part of the north end of Section 179, adjoining on the east the 60 foot county road. Said county road is the east side of the 260 feet in controversy. (6) The title of the Boothe plaintiffs is deraigned under D. P. Yoder. All subsequent conveyances in their chain of title contained the same description as the deed to Yoder. (7) Grabow died intestate leaving a wife and two daughters who, in 1932, partitioned his property by agreement and conveyed all of the north end of Section 179, except that previously conveyed to Yoder, to Lydia Grabow Haines. In this deed the property was described as follows:

“ * * * all that certain tract or parcel of land situated in Scurry County, Texas, and being out of the ¿North part of Survey-No. 179 in Block No. 3 made by virtue of Certificate No. 9/1825 issued to the Houston & Great Northern Railway Company by patent No. 248 Volume No. 66 and more particularly described as follows, to-wit:
“Beginning at the N.E. corner of said Survey at a mound and four pits;
“Thence W with the N. line of said survey 1900 vrs to the NW corner of same at a mound;
“Thence S with the W line of said Survey 777-1 vrs to the corner of 178 acres set apart to Thelma McLean in partition of said 640 acres;
“Thence E with the N line of said Thelma McLean tract,' 1900 vrs in E line of said 640 acre survey; being NE corner of Thelma McLean 178 acre tract;
“Thence N with E line of said survey 777-1 vrs to the beginning, containing an area of 246.6 acres of land

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Bluebook (online)
267 S.W.2d 158, 3 Oil & Gas Rep. 1449, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boothe-v-mclean-texapp-1954.