Harris County Irrigation Co. v. Hornberger

94 S.W. 145, 42 Tex. Civ. App. 450, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 286
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 28, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 94 S.W. 145 (Harris County Irrigation Co. v. Hornberger) 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
Harris County Irrigation Co. v. Hornberger, 94 S.W. 145, 42 Tex. Civ. App. 450, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 286 (Tex. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

NEILL, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought by defendant in error Hornberger against his co-defendants in error, plaintiffs in error and other original defendants, in the ordinary form of trespass to try title to recover the Solomon Jacob’s 640-acre survey. The question presented, however, is purely one of boundary.

Defendants below who are plaintiffs in error disclaimed title to the land sued for unless it should be in conflict with lands claimed by them in the Peter J. Duncan survey. Those defendants below who are joined here with Hornberger as defendants in error disclaimed title to the land sued for except such part thereof as might be in the Spyars Singleton survey. Therefore, the question presented is whether there is a conflict either between the Jacobs, which it is admitted to belong to Hornberger, and the Peter J. Duncan or the Spyars Singleton surveys.

The case was tried without a jury and the court rendered judgment in favor of Hornberger against all the defendants except two, as to whom the suit was dismissed, for the survey sued for declaring that the southeast corner of the Spyars Singleton survey and the re-entrant southwest corner of the Peter J. Duncan survey to he located at a point H. 88% degrees E. 3340 varas from Carpenter’s Bayou, designated and marked by a dressed stone on which is inscribed “South corner, Jacobs, Mar., 1895, W. A. Polk, Surveyor.” It is then “ordered and decreed that said stone marks the ancient location of said southeast corner of the Spyars Singleton and the interior of re-entrant southwest corner of the Peter J. Duncan survey and also the beginning point of the Solomon Jacobs and Blunt IST. Sessums surveys.” From this judgment the writ of error is prosecuted, as well as from an order of the court allowing J. W. Maxey $141 compensation for surveying the land in controversy, which are taxed as costs against plaintiffs in error.

*452 It is unnecessary to copy the assignments of error in this opinion. It is enough to say that the assignments relating to the judgment affecting the land in controversy, question the sufficiency of the evidence to warrant the court in establishing the southeast corner of the Spyars Singleton survey and the re-entrant southwest corner of the Peter J. Duncan survey at a point H. 88% degrees E. 2240 varas distant from Carpenter’s Bayou designated and marked by a dressed stone, etc. .

The entire controversy depends upon the correct location of this corner, for it is common to the Spyar Singleton and the Peter J. Duncan surveys and the beginning corner of the Solomon Jacob’s.

The field notes of the Solomon Jacobs survey call to begin at the southeast corner of the Spyar Singleton one-half league on Carpenter’s Bayou at a pine tree 14 inches in diameter marked S. T. on north boundary line of the Peter J. Duncan survey; thence N. 2780 varas with Singleton’s line to a stake and mound in the prairie for second corner, the same being also the southwest corner of a survey made for Blunt N. Sessums; thence east 2595 varas with Sessums south boundary line to southeast corner, a stake and mound in prairie for third corner; thence south 43 degrees west 3875 varas to beginning.

The southeast corner of the Singleton and the northwest reentrant corner of the Duncan each call for a pine tree marked S. T. as their common corner. In 1855 the Singleton was resurveyed on account of a conflict with the Hirom survey on its west line. In each of.the field notes it calls to begin for its southeast corner at a pine in the prairie marked S. T. being also a corner of the Peter J. Duncan survey. Peter J. Duncan and J. W. Singleton were chain carriers on this survey. Spyar Singleton, a nephew of the patentee and son of J. Y. Singleton, who was a chain carrier when the Singleton was located in 1838 and in 1852 when it was resurveyed, testified that his father pointed out to him the pine tree marked S. T. which stood in the Amos McGee tract, formerly the Passmore 50 acres, and told him that it was the Duncan corner. The stump of said tree is still standing there. All of the deeds calling for the south portion of the Singleton survey, call for the pine tree marked S. T. at its southeast corner.

Robert Blalock testified that he had often heard that the pine tree marked S. T. standing in the Sherman place was the corner of the' Singleton and Duncan surveys, and that as far as he knew it had always been recognized as that corner.

Johnson Se¿ls testified that in 1879 Mr. Sherman, who then owned the Amos McGee 50 acres, pointed out to him the S. T. mark on said pine tree, and that the stump of the tree is still standing near Amos McGee’s branding pen.

Charlie Thompson testified that when Passmore owned said 50 acres he plowed up the ground for him before it was enclosed and that Pass-more told him not to plow up the tree as it was a corner tree; that the tree has been cut down but the stump is still there.

Sol Henderson testified that he worked for Amos McGee and that McGee wanted him to get a horse trough and not being able to find one he came back and told him that pine tree being burnt out would make a good one and that McGee told him to cut it down, that the tree was *453 marked S. T.; and that the old gentleman (J. P. McGee) was mad because he cut it down and said that it was a corner tree.

John Blalock testified that he saw the old pine tree marked S. T. with a mark on it and knew that it was called a corner tree of the Singleton and McGee surveys. That he came along soon after it was cut down and old man McGee seemed to be angry about it and said something about it being a corner tree of the Singleton survey. That he had seen the tree before it was cut down, it was dying from the top; a fire had been through there and had caused it to die; that it burned out one corner of the tree as well as he could recollect. That his recollection is that it did not burn out any of the letters and that it had been about ten or eleven years since he first saw those letters on the tree.

B. M. Blalock testified that he knew where Amos McGee lived on the Duncan survey and that witness had lived on the survey and knew where there was a pine tree a little west of McGee’s house that was marked S. T. and that he heard different people say that the tree stood there for a corner between the Duncan and Singleton surveys. That when Stimson was surveying some land out there about 1894, he (witness) found the tree marked S. T. and called attention to it.

J. W. Matthews testified that he saw the pine tree with the S. T. mark on it about 1893 near Amos McGee’s house.

Amos McGee testified that the old pine tree with the S. T. mark on it stood near the corner of his pen; that the mark was old and that he had never heard of the tree being marked until it was cut down to make him a trough, and that his father raised the mischief with him for cutting it down, stating that it was an old corner tree.

. B. J. Thacker testified that he went out on the land in 1883 to make a partition among some of Singleton’s heirs and in order to run off the Singleton tract they started at the S. T. tree at the southeast corner; that subsequently he was on the land with Gillespie and he went to the same pine tree with him and was there the third time with Gillespie.

J. W. Gillespie, a surveyor (son of J. J.

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Bluebook (online)
94 S.W. 145, 42 Tex. Civ. App. 450, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-county-irrigation-co-v-hornberger-texapp-1906.