Carmichall v. Stanolind Oil & Gas Co.

256 S.W.2d 129, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 2328
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 22, 1952
Docket6169
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 256 S.W.2d 129 (Carmichall v. Stanolind Oil & Gas Co.) 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
Carmichall v. Stanolind Oil & Gas Co., 256 S.W.2d 129, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 2328 (Tex. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

PITTS, Chief Justice.

This is a suit to remove cloud from title to three tracts of land totaling approximately 370 acres situated in Garza County, Texas, by seeking a revocation and setting aside alleged awards attempted to be made of the same as vacant unsurveyed school land by Honorable Bascom Giles, Commissioner of the General Land Office of Texas, on August 2, 1949, to F. L. Carmichall and Lee W. Davis. Appellees, Stanolind Oil & Gas Company, Seaboard Oil Company, Republic Natural Gas Company, each being a corporation of the State of Delaware with permits, respectively, to do business in Texas and having offices in this State, and George Beggs, an individual, filed suit on August 24, 1949, against Carmichall and Davis, alleging title to the said land in themselves and seeking to cancel, revoke and set aside the alleged purported awards and made the said Land Commissioner and the Honorable Price Daniel, Attorney General of Texas, party defendants to the suit and caused each of them to be served as required by Article 5421c, Section 6, Subdivision (j), Vernon’s Annotated Civil Statutes. The action was tried before the court without a jury and judgment was rendered for appellees as party plaintiffs cancelling the alleged awards, together with any and all patents pursuant thereto, from which judgment all the party defendants perfected an appeal except Lee W. Davis and his interest in the matter is before us by reason of the appeal perfected by the Attorney General and the Land Commissioner.

The law governing such a matter says in part:

Subdivision (j) “Any person, firm, or corporation aggrieved by any action taken by the Commissioner under the provisions of this Act, or with reference to any application to purchase or lease vacancies, may institute suit in the District Court of the county where any part of the land is situated, but not elsewhere, and there try the issues of boundary, title and ownership of any alleged vacancy involved ‡ # ⅜ tJ
Subdivision (e) “ * * * no presumption shall obtain in any suit involving the existence of a vacancy, as a result of the action of the Commissioner in this respect [that is, the claiming of a vacancy].”

The record is a voluminous one consisting of three volumes of statement of facts and six volumes of exhibits well and consistently bound, together with the transcript. It reveals that the land in question is located within an original unified survey made by an authorized surveyor by the name of John E. Elgin during July and August of 1873 which survey included Block 2, T. & N. O. Ry. Co. Survey and Block 5, G. H. & H. Ry. Co. Survey, from which unified survey Elgin prepared and filed field notes for the lands situated in the said Blocks based on sufficient ground locations there made by him. In 1901, under the direction of the Commissioner of the General Land *131 Office and in accordance with the field notes and the monuments found on the ground of the Elgin survey, F. M. German, Garza County’s official surveyor, made a ground survey of the alleged common line ■between Blocks 2- and 5. These are the surveys upon which appellees here rely for recovery. German fixed the said line by prorating the excess distances north-south and east-'west between Elgin’s ground monuments found in Blocks 2 and 5 and appellees contend that the land in question is the excess land there prorated. Appellants concede that:

“ * * * German prorated the excess allocating 72 varas per section between the southwest corner of Section 79 of Block 5 and the southwest corner of Section 37, Block 2. His is the only survey in Block 5 which can be used to locate Elgin’s lines and therefore it is agreed -that the corners of Block 5 as shown by German must be accepted.”

(Both corners above referred to are still marked by stone monuments placed there by Elgin during his original survey). However, appellants rely for recovery upon a survey later made in December of 1905 by George Williams in pursuance ' of the provisions of an Act passed by the 20th Legislature April 2, 1887, Chapter 115, § 3, as a result of which survey Williams did not seek to align Block 2 with Block 5. They contend that the Williams’ survey was the only authorized resurvey made on the grounds to establish Elgin’s locations made and that the Williams’ survey therefore established the official boundary lines. Appellants further contend that no common line existed between Blocks 2 and 5 but that the land in question constituted vacancies existing between the said two Blocks. They admit the location of the east line of Block 5 by German to be correct but they contend that “the west line of Block 2 cannot be pulled over to meet the east line of Block 5”.

Appellants charge, in effect, 'that the trial court erred in holding that the land in question was excess land, that no vacancies existed as claimed by appellants and that such purported vacancies would be in conflict with prior awarded or patented surveys. Appellants further charge that the survey lines of ten million acres of land will be disturbed and the rights of many people jeopardized-if the trial court’s judgment is permitted to stand. However, the issues here presented are determined by the facts presented in this case and they will have no bearing upon any other action unlike the one at bar. ■

Upon request the trial court made and filed its findings of fact and conclusions of law in support of its judgment and such will be hereinafter referred to as they may apply.

Based upon his ground unified survey, Elgin filed in the State Land Office his field notes of Block 2, T. & N. O. Ry. Survey and Block 5, G. H. & H. Survey, as well as those of other blocks surveyed at the same time, on dates ranging from November 1873 to March 1874. In addition thereto he likewise prepared an official map reflecting all of his survey and filed it in the State General Land Office on December 20, 1873. Garza County was then a part of Scurry County and the said map appears in the' General Land Office indexed as “Scurry County Rolled Sketch No. 1”. Elgin’s survey of Blocks 2 and 5 constituted a single system of surveys done at the same time or both done in August 1873 so near the same time as to constitute a single continuous survey. In Block 2 Elgin located Sections 1 to 72, both inclusive, and in Block 5 he located Sections 1 to 106, both inclusive. In each Block the sections werej consecutively located with the field notes of each section calling successively for a corner or line of the preceding section.

Within less than two years after Elgin’s survey was made of Blocks 2 and 5 all odd numbered sections therein about which we are here concerned were patented on Elgin’s original field notes and those patents have never been changed, surrendered or modified. The even numbered sections in the said Blocks, as located by Elgin, are therefore locked in place by the odd numbered patented sections therein definitely established. Some even numbered sections at *132 least in Block 2 were sold on Elgin’s field notes before the George Williams survey was made.

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Bluebook (online)
256 S.W.2d 129, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 2328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carmichall-v-stanolind-oil-gas-co-texapp-1952.