Gulf Oil Corporation v. Timms

116 S.W.2d 940, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 1110
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 17, 1938
DocketNo. 3258.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 116 S.W.2d 940 (Gulf Oil Corporation v. Timms) 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
Gulf Oil Corporation v. Timms, 116 S.W.2d 940, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 1110 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

WALKER, Chief Justice.

In a suit for partition by the heirs of Mrs. M. E. Tucker, the district court of Gregg county entered its judgment in 1910, dividing a tract of 660 acres of land, a part of the Issac Ruddle and W. B. Chism surveys in Rusk and Gregg counties, belonging to her estate into five lots; each lot was specifically described in the decree of partition by its own field notes— lines and corners located by calls for course and distance. Lots 4 and S, together, constituted a triangle; lot 4 in the south, the base of the triangle, and lot 5, north of lot, 4, the apex. By the calls of the decree of partition, Rabbit creek was the W. B. line of the triangle; the S. W. and N. W. corners of lot 4, and the S. W. and N. corners of lot 5 were in Rabbit creek. The S. B. line of the triangle — the S. B. line of lot 4 — began at the S. W. corner of lot 4 in Rabbit creek, and ran N. 81 E. 1360 varas to its S. E. corner— the S. E. corner of lot 4 — in the W. B. line of lot 2. The E. B. line of the triangle was the W. B. line of lot 2, and on the calls of the decree of partition extended N. 25 W. from the S. E. corner of lot 4 — the S. E. corner of triangle- — 665 varas with the W. B. line of lot 2 for the N. E. corner of lot 4 in the W. B. line of lot 2; and the north end of the E. B. line of the triangle, extended S. 25 E from the north corner of lot 5 — the W. B. corner of lot 2 — 750 varas with the W. B. line of lot 2 to the N. E. corner of lot 4. The N. B. line of lot 4 extended S. 81 W. 930 varas to Rabbit creek for the N. W. corrier of lot 4; from that corner the W. B. line of lot 4 extended in a southerly direction with Rabbit creek to its S. W. corner, the place of beginning. By the calls of the decree of partition lot 4 contained 142 acres; ' lot 5, 74 acres.

In 1912, John Douglas and his wife, negroes who could neither read nor write, acquired title to lot 5 by its description given in the decree of partition; at that time" a Mr. Laird, a white man, owned lot 4, holding it by its description given- in *942 the decree of partition. The wife of John Douglas- died in 1919,' leaving as her heirs three daughters born to her and John Douglas. In 1913,- in a survey, made by Mr. John Choice, a surveyor employed and paid by John Douglas, the N. B. line of lot 4 was located on the ground by the calls of the decree of partition for course and distance from the S. E. corner of lot 4; thus located, this line was established by Choice as a dividing line between lots 4 arid 5. By actual survey lot 4, on its description given in' the decree of partition, contained only 133 acres, and lot 5, disregarding the call for adjoinder with lot 4 for its S. E. corner, and locating its S. E. corner S. 25 W. 750 varas from its corner- — the N. B. corner of lot 2 — contained only 45 acres. Choice found an excess of 456 varas in the E. B. line of the triangle, from the S. E. corner óf lot 4 to the N. corner of lot 5.

In 1929, John Douglas and his three daughters, .joined by their husbands, sold, lot 5 by-its description given in the decree of partition to -Fred Birdsong, .J. B. Parker,- and Gus Pinkerton, who in 1931 executed on lot 5, by its description given in, the decree of partition, an oil and mineral lease to Gulf Production Company; this company developed the land north of the Choice dividing line for oil, and produced from it large quantities of oil.

After the death of John' Douglas his three daughters had lots 4 and- 5 r.esur-veyed, and on a theory of. apportionment-prorated the excess in the E. B. line of the triangle — not the excess in its acreage — between lots 4 and 5; on their theory of- apportionment they -located the N. E. corner of lot 4 in the W. ’B. line of lot 2; N. 25 W. 268. varas from the Choice location of the N. E. corner, and -from that corner -ran the N. B. line of lot 4, S. 81 W. to Rabbit creek; the line thus established they claimed as the dividing line between lots 4 and 5. This line added 29.05 acres to lot 4, giving it an acreage of 162.05 acres;- it reduced the acreage of lot 5 from 74 acres, as given it by the partition decree, to 69.37 acres.

In 1935, the daughters of John Douglas, appellees herein, instituted this suit in trespass to' try title, pleading also the - statutes of limitation, against Gulf Oil Corporation, Fred Birdsong, J. B. Parker, Gus Pinkerton, arid the owners of lot 4, for the title and possession of the 29.-05 acres lying between the N. B. line' of -lot 4 as located by'Choice and its N. B. line as located by appellees on their theory of apportionment; they also prayed for judgment against Gulf Oil Corporation for the value of the oil produced by it from this land. It was the theory of appellees’ petition that the land sued for by them was a part of lot 4, and was not' included in their deeds to Birdsong, Parker and Pinkerton, and that they had title to this land by limitation as against the owners of lot 4. The defendants answered by pleas not guilty, limitation, etc. Gulf Oil Corporation also answered by cross-action in the nature of trespass to try title. On conclusion of the evidence all parties filed motions for an instructed verdict; the motion of defendants was denied, the motion of appellees granted. On the verdict rendered under the instructions of the court judgment was entered in favor' of appellees for the land in controversy, and against Gulf Oil Corporation for the value of the oil produced by it from the land, not .barred by limitation, less certain credits'. From that judgment Gulf Oil Corporation,Birdsong, Parker-,. and Pinkerton duly prosecuted their appeal to the Texarkana Court of Civil Appeals; the case is on our docket by order of transfer by the Supreme Court. -

We sustain the contention of appellants that, on the undisputed testimony,' the Choice line, as located and' established by him in 1913, was madé the dividing line between lots 4 and 5 by the 'parol agreement and acquiescence of John Douglas,, owning lot 5, and Mr. Laird, owning lot 4. The facts are as. follows.: In 1913,. John Douglas, owning lot 5, wanted to fence it, but neither he nor Mr. Laird knew the location on the. ground of the dividing, line. Douglas employed and paid Mr. Choice to locate this line. Choice went upon the ground, and with the assistance and aid of Douglas and Laird, both of them being present and participating in his work, surveyed lots 4 and 5. He found nothing on the ground to mark the N. E. and N. W. corners of lot 4,. nor the S. E.' and S. W. corners of lot 5, nor the N. B. line of lot 4 nor the S. B. line of lot 5, as called for in the partition decree. In making his survey he found the excess in the E. B. line of the triangle made by lots 4 and 5, and the excess 'in the acreage of the triangle,, above the calls for acreage given to-lots 4 and 5 in the decree of -partition. *943 All parties were fully advised of the result of his work; there was no concealment by Choice, nor mistake, nor fraud, nor accident. He was employed to make this survey — the very purpose of his survey was to locate the dividing line between lots 4 and 5. With all the facts before him, with the owners of lots 4 and 5 participating in the survey, he located the N. B. line of lot 4 on its calls as given in the partition decree, and pointed out to the parties that line -as their true dividing line. Both parties accepted this designation as their true dividing line, and the owners of lot 4 have never attempted to withdraw from the agreement as made by Mr. Laird. Immediately after the survey Douglas, claiming the Choice line as his S. B.

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Bluebook (online)
116 S.W.2d 940, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 1110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-oil-corporation-v-timms-texapp-1938.