Cunningham v. Settegast

24 S.W.2d 520
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 31, 1930
DocketNo. 1894.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 24 S.W.2d 520 (Cunningham v. Settegast) 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
Cunningham v. Settegast, 24 S.W.2d 520 (Tex. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

This suit was instituted by appellees by the usual allegations of trespass to try title against appellant to recover 81.52 acres off the east side of Lot 2 of the A. T. Morse section No. 3 Sn Harris county, as subdivided by J. E. Foster, and as shown upon the plat of said subdivision recorded in volume 15, p. 83, Harris County Deed Records. Appellant answered by pleas of general and special demurrers, not guilty, general denial, and the different pleas of limitation. By way of crossi-action he pleaded in trespass to try *521 title against appellees for tlie title and possession of lot 3 as shown by the Foster plat and subdivision of the Morse section No. 3. Appellees filed no answer against appellant’s cross-action. By a regular chain of title appellees established title in themselves in and to lot No. 2, as described in their petition, and appellant established title in himself to lot 3. As we understand the record, there was no issue as to title; it clearly appearing that appellees, under their evidence, owned lot 2 and appellant, under his evidence, owned lot 3. The patent field notes to section 3 described that section as follows:

“Beginning at the N. W. cor. of J. B. Murphy’s survey at a mound in prairie; Thence south 1,344 varas along the W. line of said survey to the S. W. cor.; Thence west 1,894 varas to a mound in prairie passing N. W. of section No. 2 at 1,668 vrs; Thence north 2,-223 varas to a mound in prairie; Thence east 1,126 varas to a mound on W. line of Talbot Labor; Thence south 719 varas to S. W. cor. of said Labor; Thence east 1,000 varas bo the S. E. cor. of said Labor; Thence south 100 varas to N. line of J. B. Murphy; Thence west 232 varas to place of beginning.”

The Foster plat identifies this section, as it relates to other surveys, as follows: The patent call “thence north 2,223 varas bo a mound in prairie” carries the west line of this section to the south line of the H. H. Gone survey, and establishes the northwest comer of this section in the south line of that survey. At that point the plat indicates the Gone survey. The plat identifies the patent call “thence east 1126 varas to a mound on west line of Talbot Labor” as a common line with the south line of the H. H. Cone survey, establishing a corner for section 3 in the west line of the Talbot Labor, the same being a common corner with the southeast corner of the Cone, as indicated by the plat. The plat then proceeds to locate the east boundary lines of the section in relation to the Talbot Labor and the J. B. Murphy survey, as called for in the field notes of the patent.

By the patent calls the south boundary line of section 3 is 1,894 varas long. The Foster plat locates three lots upon the south boundary line of this section, to wit, lot No. 1 in the southwest corner of the section; immediately east of lot No. 1 lies lot No. 2; and immediately east of lot No. 2 lies lot No. 3, being in the southeast corner of the section. The plat makes the south boundary lines of each of these three lots 631% varas long, that is, one-third of the total length of the south boundary line of the section. The partition. lines between these lots run at right angles with the south boundary line, making each of these three lots a rectangle 893% varas long north and south and 631%’ varas long’ east and west. In describing their lot 2, appellees located it in relation to the southwest corner of the Murphy as follows:

“Beginning on the south line of said survey No. 3 and the north line of survey No. 2 at a point which is 631% varas west of the southwest corner of the J. B. Murphy Survey, which southwest corner of the J. B. Murphy Survey is marked by an iron pin in fence comer and is the established and recognized southwest corner of said J. B. Murphy Survey as originally located, and which beginning point is here designated as the southeast comer of said Lot No. 2 of the subdivision of said Survey No. 3 of said subdivision.”

Having thus located the beginning corner, appellees then described their lot No. 2 by the same calls for course and distance as shown upon the plat. Appellees’ chain of title merely identifies their land as being lot No. 2, as shown by the J. E. Foster plat

Appellant, in his cross-action against ap-pellees, described lot No. 3 as follows:

“Beginning at an iron pipe in fence corner, being the southwest corner of the W. J. Fox Survey, and the Southeast corner of H. T. & B. R. R. Section No. 3; Thence west along fence line on the south line of said Section No. 3 a distance of 642 feet to an iron pipe in fence corner on the Northeast line of B. B. B. & C. R. R. Section No. 8; Thence with fence line on the Northeast lines of B. B. B. & C. R. R. Sections 8 and 7, at 727.6 feet pass iron pipe the North corner of B. B. B. & C. R. R. Sec. No. 8 and the East comer of B. B. B. & C. Section No. 7, in all 1,572.6 feet to an iron pipe the southwest comer of said Lot No. 3; thence North I,377.6 feet to an iron pipe the northwest corner of said Lot No. 3; and the Northeast corner of Lot No. 2 on the South line of Lot No. 5; thence East with the South line Lot No. 5 a distance of 1,753 feet to an iron pipe the Northeast corner of Lot No. 3, and the southeast corner of Lot No. 5, and on the west line of the W. J. Fox survey; thence South along the fence on the West line of the W. J. Fox Survey 2489.6 feet to the place of beginning, being the same property conveyed to R. W. Brahan by H. A. Gillette, by deed dated July 18th 1919, recorded in Yol. 421, page 391, of the Deed Records of Harris County, Texas.”

His first nine deeds under Foster described his land as being lot 3, as shown upon the Foster plat. But the George D. Brown heirs, holding under the ninth deed, in their deed to H. A. Gillette dated the 12th day of July, 1919, described the land as appellant described it in' his cross-action. Gillette deeded the land to Brahan and Brahan bo appellant by this same description.

Appellees offered no verbal testimony in support of their claim. They made no effort to locate upon the ground the “iron pin in fence corner” pleaded by them, nor did they *522 seek to identify any other locative call. They thus failed to locate upon the ground the Murphy southwest corner. They did nothing more than to introduce their chain of title by which section 3 was tied to the Cone survey on the north and the Talbot and Murphy surveys on the east, and the Poster plat showing the subdivision of section No. 3. Appellant offered no testimony identifying the description of his land, as given in his cross-action, but the evidence was sufficient to identify, as a matter of law, the land sued for as being identical with lot 3 shown upon the Poster plat. He offered testimony that he had surveyed his land, and had built a fence upon the lines and corners established by his surveyor, but he offered no testimony locating this fence upon the ground. There was no testimony from any source locating the Pox survey, called for by appellant’s description.

The trial was to the court without a jury, and judgment rendered decreeing to appel-lees lot 2, as shown upon the Foster plat, and to appellant lot 3, as shown upon the Poster plat. The court then proceeded further to tie, by a judicial decree, section 3 to the Murphy survey, making the east line of section 3 a common line with the Murphy west line, and' the southeast comer of section 3 a common corner with the Murphy southwest corner.

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.W.2d 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cunningham-v-settegast-texapp-1930.