Crawford v. Humble Oil & Refining Co.

150 S.W.2d 849, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 341
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 17, 1941
DocketNo. 11156.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 150 S.W.2d 849 (Crawford 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
Crawford v. Humble Oil & Refining Co., 150 S.W.2d 849, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 341 (Tex. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

GRAVES, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the District Court of Austin County, sitting without a jury, decreeing that appellants take nothing in their suit herein against the appellee for $250,000 damages, “and for title to and possession of all of the oil, gas, and other minerals, and the mineral-estate in, under, and upon 9 acres of land off the southeast end of all or part” of a specifically-described 54½ acres of land, out of the W. C. White League in Austin County, known as the Calvin Jackson Homestead Tract.

The trial court supported its judgment by extended findings of fact, which embody all the essential facts agreed to by the parties in a written “stipulation” filed by them at the trial, and upon which the appealed-from judgment was predicated, together with this single conclusion of law:

*850 “I conclude as a matter of law that title to the oil, gas, and other minerals on, in, and underlying the whole of the 54½ acre tract of land, which includes the nine acres sued for herein, is vested by defeasible fee simple estate in defendant Humble Oil & Refining Company, and that no title to said 54½ acre tract, or any part thereof, is vested in the plaintiffs, or any one or more of them.
“(Signed) M. C. Jeffrey,
Judge Presiding.”

Since, in the opinion of this court, the “stipulation” so made by the parties — unusual as it self-evidently is — goes to the base of this litigation, thereby removing from determinative effect the vast bulk of the proceedings brought here on appeal, recourse will at once be made to what are thought to be its controlling provisions.

Indeed, the reaches of that stipulation are thought to leave for decision upon the appeal only these structural inquiries, as thus stated in the appellee’s brief:

“(1) Whether or not the instruments under which appellee holds sufficiently describe the land to place in motion the five-year statute of limitation, and
“(2) Whether or not the deed to Humble Pipe Line Company from Sander, dated September 12, 1928 ‘had the effect under all the circumstances and conditions occurring subsequent thereto of destroying the possession of said Sander or his assigns of the underlying minerals and the mineral estate in said lands.’ ”

In other words, it is considered that the material substance of the controversy gets down to such two inquiries, as the reasonable effect and meaning that should be given to these dominating features of the trial-stipulation, to-wit:

“(1) Sander, his tenants and assigns have openly and notoriously cultivated, used and peacefully enjoyed the same without interruption and without the filing of a suit to recover the estate or any portion thereof under such facts and circumstances, sufficient to mature title in him and his assigns to all of the land described in the deed to Calvin Jackson under the five year statute of limitation as against all the plaintiffs herein; if it be held, determined or decreed that the deeds to A. A. Sander described the lands sued for herein in such manner as is required by the five year statute of limitation and the court decisions construing the same.”
“(2) Á. A. Sander, his tenants and assigns, with privity of estate between them * * * remained in possession of and openly and notoriously used, occupied and peacefully enjoyed the land sued for herein, as well as the whole of the 54½ acre tract, for a period in excess of ten consecutive years from and after October 23, 1919, in such manner and under such circumstances as to mature in said Sander or his assigns full fee simple title to the whole estate in said lands as against all plaintiffs herein, unless the deed to Humble Pipe Line Company from said Sander, dated September 12, 1928, had the effect, under all the circumstances and conditions occurring subsequent thereto, of destroying the possession of said Sander or his assigns of the underlying minerals and the mineral-estate in said lands.”

If the quoted provisions embody the talisman with which to unlock the problems of this litigation, as, inferably from its findings, the trial court also thought, it will be unnecessary to go afield into other considerations.

Of course, both the stipulation and the court’s findings of fact go much further into all details of the transactions with which the trial below had to do; but from the perspective of appellate review, it seems plain that if the incidents of either the 5 or 10-year statutes of limitation, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. arts. 5509, 5510, were sufficiently made out in favor of the appel-lees’ claim to the land (or mineral estate) sued for, both of which defenses were pleaded and relied upon by it, it would be a work of supererogation to follow into all the other winding trails that were explored in the trial court.

It seems conclusively clear, after a careful examination of the whole record, that title was shown to be in the ap-pellee, under both of the cited statutes —that is, that each of the questions so posed, supra, should be answered (as in support of the judgment rendered) to the effect that the appellee’s muniments of title did sufficiently describe the land to make the 5-year statute applicable in its favor, and that Sander’s deed of September 12th of 1928 to the Humble Pipe Line Company did not have the effect of destroying the possession of himself, or *851 his assigns, of the mineral estate in the lands.

“The instruments under which appellee holds” and “the deed to Humble Pipe Line Company from Sander, dated September 12, 1928”, together with the attending circumstances, out of which the two questions trader consideration arise, are, in brief, sufficiently and correctly outlined by these further quotations from the appellee’s brief and the record:

“A. A. Sander acquired the old Calvin Jackson homestead containing 54⅛ acres of land by two deeds, one from H. Miller which conveyed ‘nine acres of land out of the W. C. White League, Abstract No. 101, in this county, and part of the Calvin Jackson homestead.’ Appellants, by this appeal question the sufficiency of the description in this deed. The other deed was from Ora Lee Kelly and one of her various and sundry husbands, conveying 45½ acres, describing the whole 54½ acre tract, and excepting nine acres from the operation of the deed. The sufficiency of this instrument as a conveyance is not questioned.

“Sander at once entered upon the whole of the 54½ acre tract, and fenced it. Sander’s acts, thereafter, are thus expressed by the ‘stipulation’ itself;

“ ‘On the 23rd of October, 1919, the said A. A. Sander entered upon the 54½ acre tract of land described in the deed to Calvin Jackson, and enclosed the whole of said tract with a substantial fence, which he and his tenants and assigns have maintained from said date to the present time, and’ ”; then follow the recitations copied, supra, under our numbers (1) and (2), respectively.

The deeds to the whole 54½ acres having thus come into A. A.

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Bluebook (online)
150 S.W.2d 849, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-v-humble-oil-refining-co-texapp-1941.