Harrison v. Manvel Oil Co.

179 S.W.2d 413, 1943 Tex. App. LEXIS 772
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 30, 1943
DocketNo. 4103.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 179 S.W.2d 413 (Harrison v. Manvel Oil 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
Harrison v. Manvel Oil Co., 179 S.W.2d 413, 1943 Tex. App. LEXIS 772 (Tex. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

O’QUINN, Justice.

This is an action in trespass to try title involving a triangular strip of land containing 1.97 acres of land in the Chas. Un-derton Survey in Liberty County, Texas. A producing oil well is located on the land involved. The appellants were plaintiffs in the trial court. They pleaded the statutory form of trespass to try title action, including statutes of limitation, and the defendants answered by general demurrer, general denial, plea of not guilty, and specially plead the several statutes of limitation against appellants’ right to recover. The defendant Manvel Oil Company disclaimed as to the land involved, and was discharged from the suit.

The cause was tried to the court without a jury, and judgment rendered in favor of the defendants. Findings of fact and conclusions of law were requested by appellants, and found and filed by the court. Said findings are:

“This is a trespass to try title suit, involving a tract of land in the Charles Underton Survey in Liberty County containing 1.97 acres of land, and is a part of the same 20 acre tract of land which was involved in a prior suit in this same court styled ‘L. P. Palmer et ux. v. Gulf Production Company’, No. 5465 on the docket of this court, and which cause was appealed by Gulf Production Company, et al to the Court of Civil Appeals at Beaumont, such cause being entitled in said appellate court ‘Gulf Production Company et al. v. Palmer et al.’, the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals being found in 230 S.W. 1017.
“II. I find that the 20 acre tract of land sued for by Palmer and wife in said cause No. 5465 contained exactly 20 acres, it being composed of, as stated in the opinion of said appellate court written by Judge Walker, ‘the two tracts theretofore deeded to him by Moore and enough additional land lying North of these two tracts to make exactly the 20 acres’, the 20 acres involved being definitely identified and located on the ground as lying immediately North of and adjoining the South line of the Charles Underton Survey, which is hereinafter referred to as the Partlow line.
“HI. I find that the two tracts of land, referred to in the appellate court’s opinion *414 as being ‘the two tract of land theretofore deeded’ by Moore to Palmer, are the tract of 13.28 acres in the Underton Survey included in the deed executed by J. J. Moore to L. P. Palmer by deed dated July 22, 1885, and a tract of 5.2 acres in the Underton Survey conveyed by the same grantor to Palmer by deed dated January 4, 1908, and that in locating the South line of the Un-derton Survey, which is the South line of said two tracts of land, the surveyor, Part-low, fixed and located said South line of the Underton Survey at that point and place upon the ground which is 100 varas South from the undisputed N. E. Corner of the tract of land conveyed by Moor to Palmer by said deed of date July 22, 1885, and as located by said surveyor, Partlow, said South line of the Underton Survey extends from said point on a course of S. 80 deg. 10' W., it being the line which on the map prepared by said surveyor, Partlow, is identified by the wording (on the North side of said line) ‘South line Chas. Under-ton Survey’, and on the South side of said line by the wording ‘North line Jesse De-vore League’. And, further, I find that when the above mentioned deed from Moor to Palmer of date July 22, 1885, was executed, the parties thereto and the survey- or who at that time located upon the ground the tract of land conveyed to Palmer by said deed (called therein to be 60 acres) actually understood, regarded and accepted as the location of the true location of the South boundary line of the Un-derton Survey and the true location of the North line of the Devore League at that time the same line which Partlow located as the true location of the South boundary line of the Underton Survey and the North boundary line of the Devore League, and which is delineated and identified upon the map Partlow prepared, as above stated.
“IV. I find that in 1918 H. O. Compton, County Surveyor of Liberty County, upon request made of him by Palmer, surveyed the entire area of land then claimed by Palmer in both the Devore League and Underton Survey, and found the actual acreage thereof to be 69.35 acres, and that the North 20 acres thereof is the 20 acre tract which Palmer and wife sued for in said Cause No. 5465. Also, I find that when Compton made said survey he treated and regarded and accepted as the true location of the South line of the Underton Survey the same line heretofore identified as the Partlow line, and which, so I find, Compton located 100 varas South of the N.E. corner, as originally fixed, of the 60 acre tract of land conveyed by Moor to Palmer by said deed of date July 22, 1885. I further find that the N.E. corner of said acre tract as located by the surveyor who surveyed the tract and made the field notes therefor at the time said tract of land was deeded by Moor to Palmer in 1885 was fixed and placed by him at a point 100 varas North of the line on the ground that he accepted and regarded and actually located as the South line of said Underton Survey and likewise the North line of the Devore League.
“V. I find that at the time the surveyor Compton surveyed and located the tract of 69.35 acres referred to the South line which he accepted and located as being the true original line of the Underton Survey was an old marked line, and at that time an original bearing tree at said N.E. corner of the 60 acre tract conveyed by Moor to Palmer on July 22, 1885, as located and marked by the surveyor who furnished the field notes for the description written into said deed, was still standing, and I also find that the stump of the pine tree called for as a witness tree at said corner is still there on the ground, and that in this suit there is no controversy between the parties hereto as to the actual location of said corner upon the ground.
“VI. I find that when said suit of Palmer et ux. v. Gulf Production Company et al., No. 5465, was filed in this Court, and tried therein, and when same was heard and disposed of by the Court of Civil Appeals, that all parties and the courts regarded and understood that the area of land involved in said suit was exactly 20 acres of the Charles Underton Survey, as above identified, and dealt with, treated and regarded that area of 20 acres as the tract of land which was in controversy, and the Court of Civil Appeals in reversing the judgment of the trial court and rendering judgment, adjudged and decreed, by its judgment, to the plaintiffs exactly 13.28 acres of land out of said 20 acre tract, and adjudged and decreed to the defendants the remaining 6.72 acres thereof, the fact in this connection further being, so I find, that the opinion of Judge Walker states the express finding of said appellate court to be that ‘appellants disclaimed as to the 13.28 acres of land conveyed to Palmer by Moor by deed dated the 22nd day of July, 1885, and, by appropriate pleas, put in issue the title to the remaining 6.72 acres claimed by plaintiff in his petition.’ I further find *415 that the 1.97 acre tract of land in controversy in this suit, as actually located on the ground, is a part of the above referred to and identified tract of 13.28 acres which was actually involved, litigated and adjudged to Palmer and wife by the Appellate Court judgment above referred to.

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Related

Tankersley v. Sell
226 S.W.2d 17 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1950)
Harrison v. Manvel Oil Co.
180 S.W.2d 909 (Texas Supreme Court, 1944)

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Bluebook (online)
179 S.W.2d 413, 1943 Tex. App. LEXIS 772, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-manvel-oil-co-texapp-1943.