Decker v. Rucker

202 S.W. 1001, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 369
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 23, 1918
DocketNo. 8791.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 202 S.W. 1001 (Decker v. Rucker) 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
Decker v. Rucker, 202 S.W. 1001, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 369 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, J.

This suit involved the title to a strip of land, but was in reality a controversy over the location of the boundary line between a tract of land owned by plaintiff, J. T. Decker, and a tract owned by the defendant, Bill Rucker; the disputed line being the west boundary of plaintiff’s tract and the east boundary of defendant’s tract. The trial was without the aid of a jury, and upon findings of fact and conclusions of law, which were reduced to writing and filed by the trial judge, judgment was rendered in favor of the defendant, from which plaintiff has prosecuted this writ of error. Upon the trial the defendant admitted title in plaintiff to the land in controversy, except in so far as it might be defeated by facts specially pleaded in his answer as defenses to the suit, which defenses will now be noticed. The statutes of limitation of three, five, and ten years were all pleaded, but the court failed to sustain any of those pleas presumably, because of a lack of evidence to support them.

Another defense specially pleaded was that about the year 1900, one Geo. Reaves, who was then the owner of plaintiff’s tract, and H. J. Bingham, who was then the owner of defendant’s tract, by agreement established the boundary line between the two tracts, the location of which was then in dispute between them, and that according to the line as so established defendant is the owner of the strip of land in controversy. But this defense was not sustained by the court and need not be further noticed.

Other defenses pleaded were as follows: First, that during the year 1910 there arose a dispute between D. P. Lester, who then owned the tract now owned by the defendant, and Jno. M. Webb, the then owner of the tract now owned by plaintiff, as to the true location of the boundary now in controversy, and by agreement between them then made the line was located and fixed on the ground, in accordance with which location the land in controversy lies within the boundaries of the land described in Lester’s deed and in defendant’s deed; and that ever since said agreement as to the boundary line the same as then fixed has been recognized and acquiesced in by said Webb and his subsequent vendees, including plaintiff.

Another special defense pleaded was one of estoppel, and is as follows:

“Defendant also says that independent of the agreement set out in the preceding paragraph, that the plaintiff by his own words, conduct, and actions has agreed to the boundary line above described in the following manner: That after plaintiff had purchased the land upon which he now resides, and after the defendant had purchased the land upon which he now resides, the plaintiff knowing that defendant’s deed-called for the boundary line herein described and mentioned, and knowing that said defendant claimed said boundary line as the true division line between the lands of plaintiff and the defendant, stood by and permitted and watched, without protest, the defendant shrub, grub, and plow six acres on defendant’s side of the agreed boundary line, and a portion of the land herein sued for, at an enormous expense to defendant, without in any wise objecting to or protesting against it, and without informing this defendant that he (plaintiff) claimed any portion of said land. Wherefore defendant says that such actions on the part of plaintiff was in fact and in law an agreement that the boundary line herein described was the true division line between the land of plaintiff and the defendant, and that the plaintiff having failed to speak when it was his duty to speak, is now estopped to deny said agreed boundary line and set up another and different one.”

Defendant pleaded further improvements in good faith, and in the alternative prayed for judgment for their value if the land should be decreed to belong to plaintiff.

Following are the findings of fact and conclusions of law filed by the trial judge:

“I find: That plaintiff has a deed to and is the owner of 80 acres of land, more or less, out of the said D. B. Madden survey, and that defendant has a deed to and is in the possession of *1003 50acres of land of tlie said Madden survey, which land lies west of and adjoining the land of plaintiff. That the said tract of land now owned by defendant was originally called and conveyed as a 40-acre tract, more or less. That it was generally understood to contain more than 40 acres. That in the year 1904 R. R. Shelton, who was then the owner of the said 40-acre tract of land, conveyed same to N. O. Spic-er, and just before said Spicer bought said land from Shelton the said Shelton pointed out the four corners to said tract of land, and that Spicer bought same with reference to said corners, and deeded same to said Spicer as 40 acres of land, more or less. That at that time one Marion Shelton, a brother of said R. R. Shelton, owned and was in possession of the land now owned by plaintiff, and had knowledge of and acquiesced in said corners.
“I find corners of said 40-acre tract so pointed out to said Spicer by the said R. R. Shelton were as follows: The southwest corner a gun barrel in ground; the southeast corner a sandstone; the northeast corner a petrified rock in ground; and for the northwest corner, a rock in the ground. That all of these corners appeared at that time to be old and well established. That there is, and was not at that time, a division fence between the land owned by plaintiff and the land owned by defendant, but there is an old fence on the land belonging to plaintiff about 40 or 45 yards east of and parallel to the line between the petrified rock and the said sandstone. That said fence was generally recognized as not being on the line separating said two tracts of land. That said N. O. Spicer sold said 40-acre tract of land to E. R. Spicer, who bought said tract of land with reference to said corners pointed out by R. R. Shelton. That said E. R. Spicer was present when the corners to said tract of land were pointed out to the said N. O. Spicer by said Shelton. That said E. R. Spicer in turn sold same to D. P. Lester, and that in each of the transfers just mentioned said land was deeded as ‘40 acres, more or less.’ That while said D. P. Lester owned said tract of land, he cleared and put into a state of cultivation something like 4 acres alongside and just west of the line between the petrified rock and sandstone, which line was then recognized as the division line separating the 40-acre tract and the 80-acre tract. That at this time one John Webb owned and was in possession of said 80-acre tract. That said Webb knew that said Lester was putting said land in cultivation, and never said anything to the said Lester about being over the line, and never objected to Lester’s clearing said land. That while Lester owned said tract of land, he procured one Thompson, a surveyor, to survey his said land. That while D. P. Lester was having said land surveyed, he called the said John Webb, who still owned the 80-acre tract of land, for the purpose of agreeing upon and establishing a permanent division line between said two tracts of land. That said surveyor located the northeast corner of said 40-aere tract of land at the petrified rock in the ground. That the said D. P. Lester stated to the said John Webb that he wanted to sell his land by' the acre, and for that reason he was having same surveyed. That Lester asked Webb if he (Webb) would agree that said petrified rock should mark and establish the true division line between their said two tracts of land.

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Bluebook (online)
202 S.W. 1001, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/decker-v-rucker-texapp-1918.