Glasscock v. Bradley

152 S.W.2d 439, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 541
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 5, 1941
DocketNo. 5810
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 152 S.W.2d 439 (Glasscock v. Bradley) 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
Glasscock v. Bradley, 152 S.W.2d 439, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 541 (Tex. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Justice.

Mrs. Abigail Guernsey, the mother of Blanche A. Duncan, on May 25, 1931, executed and delivered to Chester W. Lyles an oil and gas lease covering 21 acres described as follows:

“A part of the tract of land consisting of 100 acres, more or less, conveyed by W. R. Samford and wife to Blanche A. Duncan by deed dated December 6, 1902, * * * being out of the G. F. Penn Survey, and the land covered by this lease being described * * * as follows:
“Beginning at a point in the West boundary line of said tract * * * said point being 600 varas North of the Southwest corner of said * * * tract;
“Thence East 370 varas to a point in the E. boundary line of said 100 acre tract;
“Thence N. with said E. boundary line 320.4 varas;
“Thence W. 370 varas to a point in the W. boundary line of said 100 acre tract:
“Thence S. with said W. boundary line 320.4 varas to the place of beginning.”

This lease was filed for record May 26, 1931, and will be referred to as the Lyles lease.

Subsequently, on February 12, 1932, Mrs. Guernsey executed and delivered two oil and gas leases to G. C. Dunn, Trustee, covering, respectively, 40 acres more or less, of the 100 acres lying north of above 21 acres, and 40 acres, more or less, lying south of above 21 acres. The description of the latter reads: “The South 40 acres more or less (here follows verbatim description above set out of the Duncan 100-acre tract); * * * being that portion of said 100 acre tract lying South of the following described tract to-wit:” (Then follows verbatim description of the 21 acres above set out).

The description of the north 40-acre lease is identical, except that it is called to be north of the 21-acre lease. The south 40-acre lease, filed for record March 8, 1932, will be referred to as the Quad-A lease.

On January 20, 1939, by assignment from Fred Mellen, receiver, to the appellant, Glasscock, filed for record January 23, 1939, the latter acquired title to the Lyles lease. Thereafter, on March 28, 1939, an assignment from the Estado Petroleum Corporation to appellee, Bradley, the latter acquired title to the Quad-A lease; which [440]*440assignment reads to convey “all rights, title and interest of the original lease and present owner in and to said lease and all rights thereunder, together with all personal property used or obtained in connection therewith.” It is agreed that title to the Lyles lease by mesne conveyances is now vested in Glasscock, and title to the Quad-A lease is vested in plaintiff, Bradley. Mrs. Abigail Guernsey is the common source of title.

It is to be observed that the foregoing leases each refers to the southwest corner of a 100-acre tract conveyed by Samford to Duncan. This deed refers to the Calvin deed executed in 1870 which calls for a pine 24 inches in diameter situated in the south boundary line of the G. F. Penn Survey, to mark the southwest corner of the 100 acres. Neither this nor any other bearing tree called for in the Calvin deed can now be found.

In a set of field notes prepared by Cun-yus from his survey on January 27, 1931, which was recorded February 28, 1931, in the Deed Records of Gregg County, he calls for a post oak to witness a stake for the northwest corner; a sweet gum tree bearing 32° E. 20 feet to witness a stake for its southwest comer; a red oak tree and a well to witness a stake for its southeast corner; a stake on Sabine River for its northeast corner; and being 98.2 acres. Cunyus claims that Lyles was with him when he made the survey, and that he furnished Lyles field notes similar to those used in the Lyles lease.

In the summer of 1939, Hackney made a survey in which he purports to have run and measured the lines from the stakes called for by Cunyus which the latter pointed out to him on the ground. In Hackney’s survey he began at the southeast corner as established by Cunyus. Thence ran north 0° 55' 31" east 1434.28 vrs. to the northeast corner called for by Cunyus; thence northwest with meanders of Sabine River; thence west 217.86 vrs. to the northwest corner; thence south 0° 39' 28'' east 1506.97 vrs. to the point located by Cunyus to mark the southwest corner from which a sweet gum stump bears north 58° east 7.2 vrs.; thence north 89° 20' 22" east 366.6 vrs. to place of beginning. Hackney drove an iron bolt in the ground to mark the southwest corner of the Duncan tract as located by him.

Tn this trespass to try title action, pleaded in statutory form, and grounded upon the corners as located by Cunyus and Hackney to mark the southwest corner of the Duncan tract, appellee, W. W. Bradley, seeks to recover of Lonnie Glasscock, defendant below, the title and possession of a ⅞ oil and gas leasehold estate to a .53-acre strip of land 8 vrs. by 374.31 vrs. including an oil well thereon, and the proceeds of the net value of oil produced therefrom between April 1, 1939, and date of trial. The northwest corner of the strip is called to be located 600 vrs. north of the iron bolt, and Hackney’s field notes are used to describe the strip. Plaintiff’s theory as pleaded and in the evidence introduced by him is that the described strip is part of the land included with the leasehold acquired by him from the Estado Petroleum Corporation.

Defendant answered with a general demurrer, general denial, and plea of not guilty. In his evidence defendant further defended upon an asserted agreed boundary line, and an estoppel. At the close of all evidence, each moved for an instructed verdict. The court instructed the jury to return a verdict for plaintiff. The value of the oil produced from the well in controversy had been agreed upon in the course of the trial. In the decree entered, Bradley recovered judgment for title and possession of the strip and the value of the oil produced therefrom.

Appellant, under his fourth, fifth and sixth propositions, asserts that the undisputed facts establish as a matter of law that the south line of the Lyles lease has been established by recognition and acquiescence as being 1640 feet north of the south line of the Quad-A lease, and that from further undisputed acts, conduct and representations of plaintiff’s predecessor in title plaintiff is estopped now to assert otherwise.

In 1931 there was inconsistency as to the south line of the Penn Survey and the north line of the survey to the south called the Dainwood Survey. An application for a mineral lease on an alleged vacancy between the two surveys was made in March 1931. This inconsistency or controversy as to the exact boundaries north and south of the vacancy existed until 1934, when patents issued on the vacancy. Hackney and Elliott both surveyed the area, in 1931. As we interpret Elliott’s map introduced by plaintiff for impeachment purposes of E1-. liott’s surveying testimony, Hackney in 1931 located the north boundary line of the [441]*441vacancy strip approximately 36 feet south of the north boundary line as located by Elliott. This map indicates that the patent issued by the State locates the north boundary line of the vacancy strip approximately 25 feet north of Elliott’s line and some 60 feet north of Hackney’s line, and does not agree with either. This line as established by the State pushes the south boundary line of the Penn Survey north from the line marked by Hackney with the iron bolt.

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179 S.W.2d 413 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
152 S.W.2d 439, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glasscock-v-bradley-texapp-1941.