Glasscock v. Permian Oil Co.

185 S.W.2d 740, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 1071
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 16, 1944
DocketNo. 4405.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 185 S.W.2d 740 (Glasscock v. Permian Oil Co.) 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. Permian Oil Co., 185 S.W.2d 740, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 1071 (Tex. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

SUTTON, Justice.

The suit is a vacancy (a boundary) suit. J. A. Glasscock was the original plaintiff, and some sixty-seven individuals and concerns were named as defendants. The State, under the statute, intervened.

So far as the suit on this appeal is concerned, it is prosecuted by Glasscock in pursuance of his valuable, preference, property right to acquire the oil and gas lease on a strip of land 92 vrs. east and west and 1209 vrs. north and south claimed to be vacant and to lie between Survey 104, T. C. Ry. Co., on the west and the M. D. Bryant strip on the .east located in Pecos County.

Plaintiff filed his suit August 15, • 1940, under the Act of 1931, Chapter 271 as amended and now embraced in Art. 5421c, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. Various defendants, yho are appellees here, filed pleas of res adjudicata, estoppel by judgment, judicial estoppel and stare decisis. The trial court granted motions to try these special pleas separately and on the trial thereof rendered judgment for the defendants. From that judgment Glassciock and the State have appealed.

Glasscock presents two points. Number One is the Court erred in sustaining the special pleas because the evidence, opinions and decisions introduced are insufficient to establish such pleas, and Number Two, that the court erred in refusing to follow the reservation of the Supreme Court made in Stanolind Oil & Gas Co. v. State, 129 Tex. 547, 101 S.W.2d 801, 104 S.W.2d 1, wherein the Supreme Court expressly reserved the location of the Southeast Corner Section 70, Block 1, I. & G. N. Ry. Co. lands in Pecos County.

Glasscock in his brief says:

“If the Dod, or car spring corner at S. E. 70 is accepted as being the true original Kuechler corner at the S.E. 70, then this vacancy does not exist. If, however, we are permitted to prove the location of the original Kuechler corner at S.E. 70, which we allege to be approximately 143.3 vrs. West of the car spring corner, then the vacancy, approximately 92 vrs. wide and 1209 vrs. long, is established.”

The corner relied upon to establish the vacancy is 143.3 vrs. west and 86.7 north of the car spring corner.

The question, therefore, is; Is the S.E. Corner of Survey 70 established as a matter of law at the Car Spring or Dod Corner? If it is, then the trial court correctly rendered judgment for the defendants, because as said by Glasscock, in such circumstances the vacancy cannot exist.

Very much has been done in and written about the area involved in this suit and the territory in the vicinity thereof, commencing with the Fred Turner case, Smith v. Turner, Tex.Civ.App., 13 S.W.2d 152; Tur *742 ner v. Smith, 122 Tex. 338, 61 S.W.2d 792. The so-called River Surveys, that is to say, those embraced in Block 1, I. & G. N. Ry. Co. Original Grantee, and lying along the west bank of the Pecos River, were surveyed by Jacob Kuechler in 1876. He established this block by running a traverse in a generally north and south direction along the west bank of the river from which he laid out the surveys embraced in the block by protraction. He marked many of the corners along the river but none on the west because the north, south and west lines were not run on the ground. By 1917 virtually all the evidence of the Kuechler corners had disappeared.

Under instructions from the Commissioner of the General Land Office, Capt. R. S. Dod, of Alpine, went upon the ground in 1917, primarily to determine if there existed a vacancy between Block 1, I. & G. N. Ry. Co.. on the east and blocks west thereof. To do so he undertook to locate on the ground, as originally surveyed by Kuechler, Block 1, the blocks west and Runnels County School Land League No. 3. The final result was the survey and establishment of two vacancies generally known as Yates 34½ and the larger Yates 12341. A rough plat is inserted to show generally the locations in the vicinity; no accuracy is claimed for the plat;

*743 Dod worked over a period of nearly two years. He ran the lines of the river surveys in Block 1 and marked their corners, which markings are to be found on the ground at this time. Dod’s field notes, which were ultimately accepted by the Land Office and upon which patents were issued, for the Yates Vacancy Surveys call for Dod’s marked and monumented corners of the river surveys which they show to adjoin.

The Fred Turner Case was brought, tried and ultimately determined on the theory and established claim that Dod correctly located the larger Yates Survey 12341 from his monumented west lines of the river surveys and the vacancies sought and recovered lay between the west line of this Yates survey and river survey 61 and the true position on the ground of Block 194, G.C. & S.F. Ry. Co. In the Turner case the State recovered and sold to Turner some 560 acres of vacant land.

The Bob Reed Vacancy Survey, recovered by the State in the case of Douglas Oil Co. v. State, 122 Tex. 377, 61 S.W.2d 807 (Id., Tex.Civ.App., 70 S.W.2d 452), calls for river survey 61 in this manner:

“Beginning at the most southerly southwest corner of Sur. 34½, Blk. 194, G.C. & S.F. Ry. Co., a mound of stone in the north line of Sur. 61, Blk. 1, I. & G.N. R.R. Co.,

“Thence west 188.2 varas to the northwest corner of said Sur. 61, a rock mound marked (N.W. 61 DOD);

“Thence south along the west line of said Sur. 61, 701 varas to a stake a northeast corner of Fred Turner, Jr. Sur. No. 1.”

The metes and bounds description contained in the judgment called for Dod lines and corners in both survey 61 and 62.

The state brought a suit in the District Court of Travis County to recover the Fred Turner vacancy surveys and oil previously produced therefrom. The case is called the “Mid-Kansas Case.” A judgment was rendered for the Staté in that case and a large sum of money recovered for the oil produced and taken from the lands from which no appeal was taken.

The lands involved in these cases were and are valuable oil-bearing and producing lands. Each of the cases is discussed in the case of State v. Ohio Oil Co. et al., Tex.Civ.App., 173 S.W.2d 470, commencing with par. (11), page 478 (writ denied for want of merit). That case, we think correctly decides and disposes of the first point made here and no further discussion need be had, because all the surveys in Block 1, the river block, are a part of a system and what is said of the Dod marked lines and' corners of one survey applies to all of them marked by him.

It is hardly necessary to say that Block 1 is a system of surveys, because they were all protracted off of a common base line as heretofore indicated and were a part of a continuous piece of work. Moreover, it has been held they constitute a system, State v.

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