Davis v. Woolverton

184 S.W.2d 659, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 1025
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 21, 1944
DocketNo. 11658.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 184 S.W.2d 659 (Davis v. Woolverton) 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
Davis v. Woolverton, 184 S.W.2d 659, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 1025 (Tex. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

GRAVES, Justice.

This suit arose under the “Vacancy Act of 1939”, Vernon’s Texas Civil Statutes, article 5421c, section 6. The present appel-lees, private claimants thereof as titled land, sought against the present appellants, the State of Texas and Sam W. Davis, maker of “Mineral Application 35812” relating thereto, the cancellation of an order —pursuant to such application — of the Commissioner of the General Land Office, dated October 13, 1942, finding to be vacant unsurveyed school land a tract of 921 acres, described as lying between the Edley Ewing Survey, on the east, and the James Madden Survey, on the west, in Anderson County, Texas, upon the averment that no such vacancy in fact existed. They added counts for removal of an alleged cloud upon their title thereto, and in trespass to recover the land.

All the appellees made common cause against the State and its designated grantee, Sam W. Davis, in the prosecution of the objectives indicated.

*660 The trial court, pursuant to Rule 279, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, over the protests of the appellants, submitted to the jury what it deemed to be all the controlling issues of fact raised by the pleadings and evidence in special issues, which, together with the jury’s answers thereto, were these:

“Special Issue No.. 1.

“Which line do you find to be the true west line of the Edley Ewing Survey as established on the ground by the surveyor W. S. McDonald, in 1835 ?

“Answer this issue by stating: ‘A line running South 1 degree east from the fence corner now at the most Southern Southwest corner of the John Delap Survey’ or ‘On and with a line as run by the Surveyor E. S. Atkinson, extending South from the South line of the John Delap Survey and from a point 731 vrs. East from the fence corner now at the most Southern SouthWest corner of the John Delap Survey.’

“Answer: A line running South 1 degree east from the fence corner now at the most southern south-west corner of the John Delap Survey. * * *

“Special Issue No. Two.

“Which line do you find to be the true east line of the James Madden Survey as established on the ground by the Surveyor W. S. McDonald in 1835?

“Answer this issue by stating: ‘A line running and extending South 1 degree East through the fence corner now located at the most Southern South-West comer of the John Delap Survey,’ or ‘The line run by Surveyor E. S. Atkinson as the East line of the James Madden Survey.’

“Answer: A line running and extending South 1 degree East through the fence corner now located at the most Southern South-West corner of the John Delap Survey. * * *

“Special Issue No. Three.

“Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the east line of the James Madden was placed by the original survey- or, McDonald, in part along the west line of the Edley Ewing Survey as placed by the original Surveyor of said Edley Ewing Survey ?

“Answer: Yes.”

Thereupon, the Court, again over appellants’ protests, giving effect to such verdict of the jury as upholding the appellees’ contentions as to the location on the ground of the lines of the land in dispute, entered its judgment in favor of the appellees against the appellants upon that verdict alone, decreeing .in consequence that no such claimed vacancy existed.

The State and Mr. Davis, in seeking here a reversal of that decree below, in substance contend alone, as they so did below, that the cause should never have gone to the jury in the first instance; nor should such a recovery have been entered for the appellees, in the second, because, under the undisputed evidence, the vacancy they declared upon was shown to have existed as a matter of law, in consequence of which the trial court should have upheld the stated order of the Land Commissioner finding the land to be vacant and unappropriated school land, and should have decreed the title thereto, accordingly, to be in the appellants.

Such being their sole presentment to this court, they raise no other points of error in their briefs, either as to the admissibility of testimony, or in criticism of the court’s charge; nor as to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict rendered.

In other words, the elimination by the appellants themselves of all other inquiries results in the posing to this court—on the review here—of this single question of law: did the evidence raise a question of fact over whether the east line of the Madden and the west line of the Edley Ewing Surveys were located as the appellees contended and the jury found they were? If it did, then admittedly the appellants have no longer any standing in this court, and the challenged judgment for the appellees must be affirmed.

These, among other rules governing such a situation, have been so well established as to have become axiomatic:

(1) The appellate court is bound by the jury’s verdict, if there is any legal evidence to support it. Wixom v. Bowers, Tex.Civ.App., 152 S.W.2d 896.

(2) The evidence must be viewed most favorably toward the appellees in so considering motions of appellants for peremptory instruction before, and for judgment notwithstanding, after the jury’s verdict. National Life, etc., Co. v. Ringo, Tex.Civ.App., 137 S.W.2d 828, writ refused.

This court has accordingly given its most serious consideration to the controversy as thus narrowed, reviewing the vast *661 body of evidence presented; as a result, it is constrained to hold that it was a question of fact for the jury as to whether or not the two one-league surveys involved, the James Madden, which was riparian to the Trinity River on that survey’s west side, and the Edley Ewing, which lay between latitudinal lines to its east, were in effect adjoiners- — that is, that the east line of the Madden and the west line of the Edley Ewing coincided, at least to the extent of eliminating the intervention between them of any such tract as the claimed 920-acre vacancy constituted.

While, as indicated, supra, the evidence took a wide range, the controversy ran mainly around the testimony of the respective surveyors who had surveyed the alleged vacancy area with reference to this controversy — that is, Mr. W. B. Chambers for the appellees, and Mr. E. S. Atkinson for the appellants — both of whom made maps of their work, which were used on the trial for the proponents thereof, and in like manner have been severally attached to the briefs of the parties on this appeal; in addition, both surveyors orally testified fully, so that the jury had the benefit, not only of their interpretations of the record evidence, but also of their findings on the ground itself in so recently surveying the land with the objective indicated.

Both the Edley Ewing and the Madden-leagues were'surveyed by W. S. McDonald in August of 1835, the former before the 4th clay of that month, the latter on the 27th day thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
184 S.W.2d 659, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 1025, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-woolverton-texapp-1944.