Haile v. Johnson

133 S.W. 1088, 63 Tex. Civ. App. 199, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 73
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 3, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 133 S.W. 1088 (Haile v. Johnson) 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
Haile v. Johnson, 133 S.W. 1088, 63 Tex. Civ. App. 199, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 73 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

*201 CONNER, Chief Justice.

Mrs. Jennie Johnson, joined by her husband, Ed. Johnson, instituted this suit against C. C. Haile, W. G. McCarty, and others unnecessary to name, to recover parts of section 3, A. C. H. & B. surveys in Dickens County, of which she alleged she had been dispossessed by the defendants.

It js undisputed that Mrs. Johnson is the owner of said section 3, and that the defendant McCarty is the owner -of the west one-half of section 4 of the same surveys, which adjoins survey 3 on the east. C. C. Haile was in possession and claiming land on the north of the sections named. The real controversy was over the boundaries of sections 3 and 4, the plaintiffs contention being that the true location of section 3 was north and east of where defendants insisted they were.

Defendants severally pleaded not guilty, and the defendant McCarty in addition thereto pleaded that if the plaintiffs’ contention should prevail, his co-defendant C. C. Haile and one, B. F. Whitaker, not originally sued, would be in possession claiming to own parts of his west one-half of section 4, and he prayed that Whitaker be cited, and that in event of plaintiffs’ recovery he have judgment against Haile and Whitaker for such parts of his half section as it should be found they possessed. Whitaker was made a party and both he and Haile excepted to McCarty’s cross-action for misjoinder, and pleaded not guilty as to all parties. The case was submitted to a jury upon special issues, and the verdict and judgment was favorable to the contention of Mrs. Johnson and the counter claim of McCarty. The defendants C. C. Haile and B. F. Whitaker appeal.

The case has been given careful consideration and we find ourselves unable to approve all of the many proceedings assigned as error. Surveys 3 and 4 in controversy are about midway in the northern tier of surveys of a block of land, irregular in form but 'approximately ten miles square, which was located and surveyed in the early part of 1876 by Jasper Hays. The record discloses no marked lines or corners among the northern tiers of surveys, including those in controversy, by which they can be located, their locality and situation only being ascertainable by course and distance as called for in the field notes from certain objects called for along the south line of the block, and which it is claimed were found and identified. As originally returned to the district surveyor, the field notes of Hays called to begin for his initial point two hundred varas north and about thirty-three hundred varas west from the southwest corner of section 207 in a block of surveys extending north and south that had been previously surveyed by Armstrong. This corner of section 207 is identified by a marked post oak, which throughout the trial was referred to as the post oak corner, and about which there is no dispute. Hays’ initial point in said original field notes was also described as being the southwest corner of section 211 in the western line of the Armstrong block, from which two cottonwood trees were called to bear “S-vrs.” From the point so fixed,. ' viz., the southwest corner of survey 211, the surveys were consecutively extended west some eight miles to “Abbies Peak,” which was called for *202 in the field notes of a number of surveys in that vicinity, the most prominent call being for the peak at 300 varas North 48 East from the N. W. corner of the I. & G. N. survey No. 1, certificate 126. At the third mile east of Abbies Peak a hackberry was called for. Hack-berries were also called for in the bed of a branch at the N. E. corner of survey 3, certificate 334, of the Hays surveys south of said section 211 of the Armstrong work. The evidence, however, relating to the identity of the objects called for was conflicting, as we shall hereinafter have occasion to more particularly point out.

In answer to the special issues submitted, the jury found: 1st. That Jasper Hays went upon the ground and located the block in question and that the official surveyor of the district adopted his work. 2nd. That the Abbies Peak called for in the. field notes was the peak situated in “Sunflower Valley” (as insisted by appellees) instead of McKenzie’s Peak situated a few miles west. 3rd. That it was Hays’ intention to appropriate the vacant land in Sunflower Valley and vicinity, including the land in controversy, and to locate the same on the ground by calls for Abbies Peak and other objects. 4th. , That Jasper Hays in making the location was ignorant of the true boundaries of the Armstrong surveys called for in the Hays field notes. 5th. That the call for Abbies Peak at the N. W. corner of I. & G. N. survey 1, certificate 126, should be reversed to read “Abbies Peak, south 48 degrees west, 300 varas,” instead of north 49 degrees east, 300 varas, as called for in the field notes; that the calls for the Peak at the S. E. and S. W. corners of the survey adjoining I. & G. N. survey 1 on the east, were correct, and that the surveys in controversy are located on the ground according to iron pipes placed by surveyor George M. Williams. 6th. That the boundaries of 3 and 4, if fixed by calls for course and distance from the post oak corner, would be north 412 and west 207 varas of the lines as fixed by the iron pipes placed by Williams.

Disregarding assignments of error that we deem immaterial or plainly answered by the record, we first notice the contention of appellants that the court by his ruling on their exceptions to McCarty’s cross-action erroneously, held that there was no misjoinder of parties. As to appellant C. C. Haile, we find no reason for disturbing the court’s action. He was an original party controverting, together with McCarty, the very issue upon which the .suit of the plaintiff was predicated, and hence the cross plea of McCarty enabling the court to declare all of the legal consequences of a determination of the issue, seems proper. See Skipwith v. Hurt, 94 Texas, 322.

Not so, however, as to appellant B. F. Whitaker.; It was not asserted that he in any event possessed’or claimed any land -for which the plaintiffs sued. He had no direct interest in the issue in the suit or claimed any of the land in controversy therein. McCarty could no more interplead Whitaker upon his alternative plea and thus place upon him the real burden of the defense, than could Whitaker in turn shift his burden by interpleading owners of land adjoining him whose lines might indirectly he affected by the location of the block in accord with the contention *203 of the plaintiffs. It is evident that such a practice would he productive of delays, difficulties in the determination of issues in which some of the parties to the suit are not interested, and in the adjustment of costs, etc. We are of opinion, therefore, that the court should have sustained Whitaker’s exception to his joinder.

The seventh assignment of error is based upon the following bill of exception, omitting formal parts, viz.:

“Be it remembered that on the trial of the above entitled and numbered cause, the following proceedings were had, towit: That after G. M.

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Bluebook (online)
133 S.W. 1088, 63 Tex. Civ. App. 199, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haile-v-johnson-texapp-1910.