Gulf Pro. Co. v. Angus Spear

84 S.W.2d 452, 125 Tex. 530, 1935 Tex. LEXIS 343
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1935
DocketNo. 6853.
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 84 S.W.2d 452 (Gulf Pro. Co. v. Angus Spear) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gulf Pro. Co. v. Angus Spear, 84 S.W.2d 452, 125 Tex. 530, 1935 Tex. LEXIS 343 (Tex. 1935).

Opinion

Mr. Judge SMEDLEY

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section B.

This case is similar to Sun Oil Company v. Burns et al., No. 1569-6692 (post 549), and Sun Oil Company v. Bennett et ah,. No. 1571-6875 (post 540), both decided June 5, 1935, in that the pricipal question is whether a small tract of land, 1.81 acres, was included in an oil and gas lease executed by defendants in error Angus Spear and wife to plaintiff in error Devonian Oil Company. Defendants in error other than Spear and wife claim the oil and gas leasehold estate under a lease subsequently executed by the same lessors. Judgment of trial court in favor of defendants in error following an instructed verdict was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals, 76 S. W. (2d) 558.

The oil and gas lease to Devonian Oil Company executed September 12, 1930, on a printed form, contains attached to the lease in the blank space left for description typewritten descriptions by metes and bounds of five separate tracts of land, one of the tracts being thus described:

“A part of the S. P. Hollingsworth Survey; Beginning at the Southwest corner of the original survey; Thence North with west boundary of same 160 yards, a corner; Thence East 181 yards a corner; Thence South — E. 160 yards to the S. B. line of original survey, the same being the North boundary of the Mary Vanwinkle headright survey; Thence West with the S. B. line of the original Survey 193 yards to the place of beginning, containing six (6) acres of land.”

*533 Immediately after the dscriptions of the five separate tracts the lease contains as a part of the printed form the following: “it being the intention to include all land owned or claimed by Lessor in said survey or surveys.”

It is to be observed that the description by metes and bounds is defective or incomplete, in that the course of the east line is not given. This line is described as running “South---E.,” indicating that the line runs east of south,- but that the true course is not known. According to the testimony of engineers the course of this line may be determined by reversing the call for the last or south line and connecting the eastern terminus of that line with the northeast corner. The course of the east line when so constructed is north 4° 8' west. The tract of 1.81 acres in controversy is triangular in shape, having for its west line for a distance of 417.1 feet the east line of the tract described in the lease by metes and bounds, when that line is constructed as above indicated, for its south line a fence along a road, and for its hypotenuse or northeast line a fence running along an old road on varying courses in a southeasterly direction. Both the tract described by metes and bounds and the triangular tract in controversy are in the S. P. Hollingsworth survey, and at the time the lease to Devonian Oil Company was executed, the tract in controversy was possessed and claimed by the lessor.

The contention of defendants in error, which was sustained by the Court of Civil Appeals, is that the particular description by metes and bounds appearing in the lease to Devonian Oil Company and hereinbefore set out defines clearly and without uncertainty or ambiguity the land intended to be leased, and that the added words “it being the intention to include all land owned or claimed by lessor in said survey or surveys” are words of further description, general in their nature, referable to the same land as that particularly described, and therefore cannot control or affect the particular description.

Plaintiffs in error contend: First, that the field note call “South — E.” as the course of the east line of the tract described by metes and bounds, means as a matter of law southeast, that is, south 45 east; second, that the expressly declared intention of the parties that the lease shall include all the land owned or claimed by the lessor in the survey must be given effect and that therefore the lease includes not only the land described by metes and bounds, but also the remainder of the same tract, the 1.81 acres in controversy, which the lessor admittedly either owned or claimed; third, that the insufficiency or uncertainty *534 in the description by metes and bounds existing on account of the omission of the course of the east line may be aided or corrected both by the statement in the lease of the intention to include all land owned by the lessor in the survey, and by the facts and circumstances surrounding the parties at the execution of the instrument, and that from all of these the intention of the parties to include in the lease the disputed tract clearly appears; fourth, that if the lease does not cover the land in controversy, then its failure to cover it resulted from mutual mistake.

1 As to plaintiffs in error’s first contention, it is our opinion, hereinbefore indicated, that the call “South---E.” is not meant to describe the course of the east line of the tract as south 45 east, but rather reflects uncertainty on the part of the draftsman as to the true course. He apparently knew that the line ran east of south, but did not know the extent of its variation. The three dashes clearly appear to be used to show the omission of the number of the degrees by which the line varies from south toward the east. Elsewhere in the typewritten descriptions of the five tracts southeast is written “S. E.”

2 The second contention of plaintiffs in error involves the consideration and application of the rules with respect to particular and general descriptions discussed in Sun Oil Company v. Burns et al. and Sun Oil Company v. Bennett et al., supra. The words in the lease in the instant case stating the intention of the lessor with respect to the land included in the lease do not as plainly disclose a purpose on the part of the lessor to enlarge the description as does the language used in the leases in those cases. There the added clause stated in so many words that the lessor intended to include within the terms of the lease “not only” the land particularly described “but also” all other land owned or claimed in the same survey or surveys. Here the additional phrase states merely the intention to include all land owned or claimed by the lessor in the survey or surveys. It is forcefully argued that the words here used do not necessarily or manifestly have an enlarging effect, but that they have reference to the same land as that particularly described, and amount to nothing more than a statement that the land which has been described is all of the land owned or claimed by the lessor in the survey. On the other hand, the language used in the provision is reasonably subject to the construction that it does not undertake merely to describe in general terms the same subject matter as that covered by; the field note descrip *535 tion, but rather states the intention that the lease, at all events and regardless of the sufficiency or insufficiency of the detailed description, shall be effective to include all land owned by the lessor in the Hollingsworth survey.

It becomes unnecessary to undertake to solve the problem thus presented as to the proper classification of the phrase under consideration, whether as additional description or as a controlling statement of intention, because we are convinced of the correctness of the third position urged by plaintiffs in error.

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Bluebook (online)
84 S.W.2d 452, 125 Tex. 530, 1935 Tex. LEXIS 343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-pro-co-v-angus-spear-tex-1935.