Gilbert v. Mansfield

85 S.W. 830, 38 Tex. Civ. App. 300, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 461
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 85 S.W. 830 (Gilbert v. Mansfield) 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
Gilbert v. Mansfield, 85 S.W. 830, 38 Tex. Civ. App. 300, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 461 (Tex. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

NEILL, Associate Justice.

The appellee, Laura Mansfield, brought this suit in the ordinary form of trespass to try title, against Kate L. Gilbert, Bobert Grigsby and Philip Binamer (appellants), and Will Tom, to recover possession of the H. T. Sherwood 1,280-acre survey No. 1531.3, situated in the western part of Bandera County.

The defendant Gilbert answered specially that she was the owner of sections 37, 39 and 45 of block 12, Texas Western Narrow Gauge Bailway Company lands, which were surveyed for said railway company and patented to the company on May the 3d, 1887; that, at the time of their survey, location and issuance of patent, they were supposed to be in Edwards County; that the field notes of the sections returned to and filed in the General Land Office described them as situated in Edwards County; that when they were located, surveyed and patented, the division line between Bandera and Edwards Counties had not been surveyed, and its location was unknown; that, by mistake, the surveys were described in Edwards County, when, in fact, each is in Bandera County, and in *302 conflict with the Sherwood survey claimed by plaintiff. She then alleged that plaintiff’s claim was a cloud upon her title to said surveys, and asked judgment quieting her title and removing such cloud therefrom.

The defendants Grigsby and Rinamer each answered specially, claiming respectively sections 43 and 44 in block 12, Texas Western Harrow Gauge Ry. Co., alleging substantially the same matters plead by Kate L. Gilbert, and prayed for the same affirmative relief. Each also plead the three, five and ten-years statute of limitations and improvements in good faith. The defendant Will Tom failed to answer.

' The case was tried without a jury, and judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff against all the defendants for the land sued for, from which all of them, except Tom, have appealed.

Conclusions of Fact.—It is agreed by the parties that on December 2, 1881, the Commissioner of the General Land Office issued, according to law, land certificate Ho. 1424 to H. T. Sherwood for 1,280 acres; that on December the 24th, 1881, Sherwood, for a valuable consideration, assigned said certificate to H. Hamilton, • who, on that day, filed in the surveyor’s office in Bandera County his application, in due form, for a survey of land, the description of which is practically the same as that of the land sued for, by virtue of said certificate; that, by reason of such application, the county surveyor of Bandera County, on January 2, 1882, by virtue of said certificate, surveyed the land described in plaintiff’s petition for Hamilton; that the field notes of such survey were duly certified by said surveyor and recorded in his office in Bandera County, and, with the certificate and accompanying plat, were, on the 20th of May, 1882, duly filed in the General Land Office of the State of Texas; and that the school alternate of such survey was properly made.

That Mrs. Laura Mansfield, plaintiff in this case, is, by a regular chain of transfer and devise, the owner of the H. Hamilton title to the survey of land made by virtue of said certificate, which survey lies wholly within Bandera County.

That the Texas Western Harrow Gauge Railway Company surveys were made in 1877, by the deputy surveyor of Bexar land district; that Bandera County was then an organized county, and a separate land district then and on January the 2d, 1882, when the Sherwood survey was located, having a duly elected county surveyor, separate and apart from Bexar land district; that no one was on the land, nor improvements thereon, nor any evidence whatever in or on any of the county records of Bandera of a prior appropriation of the land by the Texas Western Harrow Gauge Railway Company surveys when the Sherwood location was made.

That the field notes of-survey No. 50, block 12, Texas Western Harrow Gauge Railway Company surveys tie said survey to survey No. 49; that survey 45 is tied to survey 44, and 44 to 43, 43 to 42, 39 to 38, and 39 to 36; that surveys Nos. 37, 39, 43 and 45 of Texas Western Harrow Gauge Railway Company surveys, claimed by defendants in their respective-answers, are each of block No. 12, located for the Texas Western Harrow Gauge Railway Company by virtue of valid land certificate duly issued by the Commissioner of the General Land Office; that survey 14, claimed by defendant Rinamer, is the alternate survey of No. 43.

That all of said surveys Nos. 37, 39, 43 and 45 were located and sur *303 veyed on the 17th of January, 1877, by L. E. Edwards, deputy surveyor of Bexar land district, Edwards County at that time being a part of said district; that the' field notes of said surveys were returned to and filed in the General Land Office on January the 19th, 1877, and they recited that said land was located in Edwards County, Texas; that on May the 3d, 1887, patents to surveys Nos. 37, 39, 43 and 45 were issued by the State of Texas to the Texas Western Narrow Gauge Bail way Company, the patents describing the lands as located in Edwards County and by the field notes filed in the General Land Office.

That defendant ICate L. Gilbert is the owner, by a regular chain of transfers, of the Texas Western Narrow Gauge Railway Company surveys Nos. 37, 39 and 45, and all of survey No. 43 not claimed by defendant Grigsby; that B., Grigsby is the owner, by a regular chain of transfers, of the Texas Western Narrow Gauge Bail way Company title to 213.3 acres of survey 43, as described in his answer; that section No. 44, Texas Western Narrow Gauge Bail way Co., was duly classified as public free school lands, situated in Bandera County, under the laws of 1883, by the Commissioner of the General Land Office, and placed upon the market, and was subsequently reclassified under the law of 1895, and again placed upon the market, and was purchased by defendant Binamer as an actual settler in 1897; that since said purchase Binamer has continuously resided on the land and made all payments due thereon. The county line dividing Bandera from Edwards County was surveyed in 1884.

The facts thus far stated were agreed upon by the parties. The disputed question of fact is, whether the lands claimed by defendants lay within the boundaries of the Sherwood survey. The trial judge held tha evidence insufficient to prove the affirmative of this issue. On the contrary, we believe that it is established by the uncontradicted testimony. Upon this issue W. B. Fletcher testified: “I am county surveyor of Bandera County. I surveyed the H. T. Sherwood survey. • ... In making my survey of the H. T. Sherwood survey of land, I found conflicts with it. I found certain surveys of block. 12, Texas Western Narrow Gauge Bailway Company survey, conflicted with the Sherwood survey as follows: Survey No. 37 conflicted to the extent of 124.3 acres, survey No. 38 conflicted with it to the extent of 37.7 acres, survey No. 43 to the extent of 211.6 acres, survey No. 44 to the extent of 292.5 acres, survey No. 45 to the extent of 5.3 acres. In making the survey of the Texas Western Narrow Gauge Bailway Company surveys I started at the southeast corner of survey No. 20, the southwest corner of survey 21, block 12, Texas Western Narrow Gauge Bailway Company surveys, at which corner I found a marked corner. I had the field notes calling for and describing this corner, and I identified it by the calls for the bearing tree, a live oak, which I think was 47 feet distant.

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Bluebook (online)
85 S.W. 830, 38 Tex. Civ. App. 300, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilbert-v-mansfield-texapp-1905.