Hamman v. San Jacinto Rice Co.

229 S.W. 1008, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 151
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 3, 1921
DocketNo. 7964.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 229 S.W. 1008 (Hamman v. San Jacinto Rice 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
Hamman v. San Jacinto Rice Co., 229 S.W. 1008, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 151 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, C. J.

This suit was brought by appellant against appellees in the form of an action of trespass to try title to the L. Hemenway 640-acre survey in Harris county. As the case developed upon the trial the only issue was one of boundary or the true location of the survey as described in the patent.

The land sued for is described in plaintiff’s petition as follows:

“The Luke Hemenway survey, Abst. No. 803, Certf. No. 351, Pat. No. 53, vol.-, recorded in vol. R. p. 89, Harris County Deed Records, same beginning at the northwest corner of land scrip No. 186; thence east 1,900.8 varas; thence north 1,900.8 varas; thence west 1,900.8 varas; thence south 1,900.8 varas to beginning, and which is further identified by the following description: Beginning at a point 5,400 varas east of San Jacinto river, at the northeast comer of Reuben White survey; thence south along the east line' of Reuben White survey, 1,198 varas to a point; thence east 2,888 varas to a point, which is the northwest corner of Luke Hemenway survey No. 351; thence east 1,900.8 varas to its northeast corner; thence south 1,900.8 varas to its southeast corner; thence west 1,900.8 varas to its southwest corner; thence north 1,900.8 varas to its northwest corner, place of beginning.”

The appellees answered by general demurrer, general denial, plea of not guilty, and pleas of 3, 5, and 10 years’ limitation. They further pleaded:

“Agreed and recognized boundaries, and that both the Gregory surveys, owned by appellees, and the Hemenway, a part of which is owned by appellant, were located by Henry Trott, the county surveyor of Harris county, Tex., at the same time he located contemporaneously, and as a part of the same work, a block of 14 surveys, known as the Trott surveys, situated between the Reuben White and Beardsley or Baldwin surveys on the west or San Jacinto river side, and the James Scott, Hugh Morgan and Hannah Nash surveys, situated on the east or Cedar Bayou side, and that since the property owned by the plaintiff was a part of said 14 surveys made by Henry Trott, if a shortage developed in said block of surveys, the plaintiff’s rights, if any he ever had, were to have the land in said block of surveys apportioned between all the owners thereof, and that the plaintiff has at no time had the right to cause these defendants to lose the whole of said shortage, if any there was.”

The trial in the court below with a jury, to whom special issues were submitted, resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendants.

Only two issues were submitted to the jury. The first issue submitted was whether the surveyor, Henry Trott, actually surveyed and located the L. Hemenway survey on the ground, and the second issue, which the jury were instructed to answer only in event- they answered the first in the affirmative, was:

“Did or did not the surveyor, Henry Trott, locate the Hemenway survey, scrip 351, in the position on the ground as claimed in plaintiff’s petition?”

In response to the first question the jury answered “Yes,” and to the second “No.”

It was agreed by the parties that the plaintiff owned the land within the boundaries of the Hemenway survey unless previously con-, veyed or lost by limitation, and that the defendants own the lands -claimed by them which are found to be within the boundaries of the'surveys named in their answer (The Walter Gregory surveys).

The description and field notes in the patent to the Hemenway survey are as follows:

'“Survey of six hundred and forty acres of land for Luke Hemenway, ass’ee of Sam’l M. Williams. Situated’ between the waters of the San Jacinto and Cedar Bayou north and adjoining a survey made for land scrip No. 186 & east & adjoining a survey made for Baldwin. Being about 6 miles from Lynchburg and about 18 miles from the city of Houston. Being the quantity of land to which he is entitled. By virtue of land scrip No. 351. Dated at New Orleans on the tenth day of August, 1836. Beginning at the N. W. corner of land scrip No. 186 a post on the cast boundary line of a survey made for Baldwin; thence east l,900/io vrs. with the north boundary lino of a survey made for land scrip No. 186 to a post in prairie, being the N. E. corner of said survey & the N. W. corner of a survey made for land scrip No. 187; thence north 1,900s/! 0 vrs. to a post in the prairie; thence west 1.9O0/io vrs. to a post in the prairie; thence south at 940 vrs. past the N. E. corner of said Baldwin survey l,900/io vrs. in all with his line to the place of beginning.”

*1010 It was agreed by the parties that the beginning corner of this survey, called for in the field notes, which is the northwest corner of August Whitlock survey No. 186 on the east line of the Baldwin survey, 'can be and is definitely fixed on the ground by course and distance from the east line of the Reuben White survey, which survey was made in 1825 and the northwest corner of which as fixed and established by the original survey on the bank of the San Jacinto river is now known and recognized and its e'ast line, fixed by course and distance from said corner, is and has long been known and recognized.

It was further agreed:
“That the true location of the northeast corner of the Reuben White survey is at the point that has been stated .by Mr. Stimpson as its northeast corner, and being indicated on the map wy a circle and the letter a where the county road jogs. That the true east line of the Reuben White survey extends from that jog in the road south to an intersection with the north line of the George White, and that the Baldwin survey lay immediately east of that line last described, and was 2,888 varas in width. That Mr. Trott considered it to be that width, and that is a fact that we get on the ground, and that the four H! T. & B. surveys and the Ruby survey lay over and take in and include the Baldwin survey as laid out on the ground just as indicated. That if you begin and survey the August Whitlock 186 at the point on the ground that counsel for defendant has admitted is the true southeast corner of the Baldwin survey, and survey that Whitlock according to its field notes, and then survey the Hemenway 851 according to its field notes on the ground by beginning this survey at the admitted southeast corner on the ground of the Baldwin, you would place the August Whit-lock 186 and the Hemenway 351 as shown on. the Maxey map.”

The Maxey map locates the Hemenway survey as claimed by plaintiff.

The Walter Gregory survey No. 41, which is owned by defendants, lies east of and adjoining' the Hemenway. The description and field notes of the Gregory contained in its patent are as follows:

“Situated between the waters of San Jacinto river & Cedar Bayou north and (adjoining) a survey made for land scrip No. 187 and east & adjoining a survey made for land scrip No. 351. Being about 6 miles from Lynchburg and about 19 miles from the city of Houston. Being the quantity of land to which he is entitled by virtue of land scrip No. 41. Dated at New Orleans on the 13th day of July, A. D. 1836.
“Beginning at the N. E. & S. E. corners of survey made for land scrip Nos.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
229 S.W. 1008, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamman-v-san-jacinto-rice-co-texapp-1921.