Craddock v. Humble Oil & Refining Co.

234 S.W.2d 137, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1701
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 27, 1950
Docket15170
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 234 S.W.2d 137 (Craddock v. Humble Oil & Refining 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
Craddock v. Humble Oil & Refining Co., 234 S.W.2d 137, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1701 (Tex. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

HALL, Justice.

In 1853, the State of Texas patented to the heirs of Joshua Groce one league and one labor of land situated in Wood County, Texas, a part of which is in controversy here.

The land in question is out of the east one-'half of the 761¾ acre tract formerly *139 owned by M. W. Harris. Harris conveyed the west 380¾ acres to Ellison, which is not in question here. On April 10, 1909, Harris deeded to G. W. Dawson a 217 acre tract, which is part of the east half of said 761 ¾ acre tract, same being out of the east portion of the middle third of the Joshua Groce Survey, supra. G. W. Dawson et ux. deeded 50 acres to Juston Wil-coxson on May 1, 1914, which is the same 50 acres involved in this law suit, wherein Juston Wilcoxson and wife deeded to appellant, W. M. Craddock, on April 23, 1919. G. W. Dawson et ux. deeded to W. M. Steward on March 14, 1914, another 50 acre tract adjoining the above now owned by appellant. The same tract is now owned by appellee, Loney Wilcoxson, which was deeded to him on September 10, 1929, by Delila Wilcoxson, who acquired it by deed from W. M. Steward. The south line of appellant’s tract and said appellee’s tract occupy the entire south line of the 217 acre tract formerly owned by Dawson.

On May 31, 1949, appellant filed his third amended original petition against Humble Oil & Refining Co. and others, and, among other allegations, sued for cancellation of an oil and gas lease, damages for drilling an oil well without a valid lease, damages for failure to protect appellant’s premises 'from damage; damages for slander of title allegedly caused by incorrect survey made by appellee Humble, and, in the alternative, sued for removal of cloud from title to 12.08 acres alllegedly lying in the east portion of his tract.

Loney Wilcoxson and wife, together with Hedge and Gross and Gulf Oil Corporation, intervened on June 10, 1949. It is remembered that Loney Wilcoxson owns the 50 acres of land adjoining appellant’s tract, upon which the Gulf Oil Corporation owns a lease and Hedge and Gross hold mineral interests thereunder.

The case was tried to a jury; the jury answered the boundary issue submitted in special issue No. 1 against appellant, and the limitation issues submitted in special issues No.s. 2 and 3, that is the five and ten year statutes of limitation, in favor of appellant. Judgment on the verdict was granted to appellee Humble and judgment notwithstanding the jury’s answers to the limitation issues was granted to intervenors.

Appellant’s appeal consists of sixteen points, the first of which is overruled, wherein complaint is made because the trial court erred in refusing to grant him judgment.

We will discuss appellant’s points one,, two, three, four, five and nine conjunctively, which are respectively as follows: ¡

2. “The court erred in refusing to submit to the jury appellant’s requested Special’ Issue No. 1, or some similar issue, it being the province of the jury to find the location; of the line between the two tracts of land in question.”

3. “The court erred in submitting to the jury Special Issue No. 1, as submitted, the same being a general charge, on the weight of the evidence and being in effect a peremptory instruction.”

4. “The court erred in fixing the boundary line as a matter of law.”

5. “The court erred in instructing the jury to disregard all calls in deeds to the land in question.”

9. “The court erred in decreeing to-L. Wilcoxson title to land different from that described in his deed, increasing his-acreage and differently describing more land than prayed for in his pleading and to-appellant less land than conveyed to- him* and setting out a new description thereto;, thereby setting aside the deeds and by decree executing new and different conveyances.”

It is necessary at this point to briefly state a record description of some of the' material calls in the deeds heretofore referred to. As heretofore stated, the south line of appellee Wilcoxson’s tract and appellant’s tract occupy the entire south line-of the 217 acre tract which Harris conveyed to Dawson, thus the south line of said' 217 acre tract and the south line of the Emma Jager tract (which she purchased ■from M. W. Harris) constitute the entire south line of said east 381 acre tract formerly owned by Harris. A material call in the deed from Harris to Dawson of the 217 acre tract is as follows: “Thence South *140 1733½ varas for the S. W. corner of this tract, being the S. E. corner of -said 380¾ acre tract; thence East 770 32/100 varas the S. W. corner of a 50 acre tract sold to Mrs. Emma Jager.” It is noted that Harris deeded to Jager on April 1, 1909. It is also noted that the 50 acre tract that Dawson conveyed to Steward is junior to the Jager tract but senior to appellant’s tract, which Harris deeded to Dawson, Dawson to Jus-ton Wilcoxson, and Wilcoxson to appellant. It is also noted in the deed from Dawson to Steward, which is the tract owned by ap-pellee Wilcoxson, being the senior tract to that of appellant’s, the following calls:

“Being 50 acres out of the south East corner of said 217 acre tract and beginning at the South East corner of said 217 acre tract; thence north with the east boundary line of said tract 727.6 varas to a point in the east boundary line thereof; thence West parallel with the South boundary line of said 217 acre tract 385.16 varas to a point; thence south 727.6 varas parallel to the boundary line of said 217 acre tract to a point in the south boundary line of the said 217 acre tract hereinbefore referred to, said point being 385.16 varas from the South West corner of said 217 acre tract; thence east 385.16 varas to the point of beginning; said containing 50 acres of land.”

The following calls are noted in the deed from Dawson to Juston Wilcoxson, former grantors of the land now owned by appellant:

“Beginning at the SW corner of tire said 217 acre tract, out of the said Joshua Groce league and labor survey, as a beginning corner; thence East along the south boundary line of the said 217 acre tract 385.16 vrs. to a point in the said South boundary line of said 217 acre tract, the SE corner of this tract, and said point also being the SW and the beginning corner of a certain 50 acre tract or subdivision of the said 217 acres heretofore conveyed by the same grantors herein to W. M. Stewart; thence North parallel with the West boundary line of the said 217 acre tract 727.6 vrs. to a point, the NE corner of this tract, and also being the NW corner of the said tract 50 acres heretofore conveyed to the said W. M. Stewart; thence west parallel with the South boundary line of the said 217 acre tract 385.16 vrs. to a point in the West boundary line of said 217 acre tract, the NW corner of this tract; thence South along the west boundary line of the said 217 acre tract 727.6 vrs. to the place of beginning, containing 50 acres of land.”

Appellant’s requested special issue inquires of the jury to determine which of three lines does it find from a preponderance of the evidence is the correct boundary line between the 'Craddock tract and the Wilcoxson tract. The three lines outlined in appellant’s requested special issue are: (1) The line set out by surveyor Compton ■as being 286.76 east of the southwest corner of the Craddock tract; (2) the line set out by surveyor Rest as being

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Bluebook (online)
234 S.W.2d 137, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/craddock-v-humble-oil-refining-co-texapp-1950.