Hart v. Associated Oil Co.

261 S.W. 506, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 917
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 3, 1924
DocketNo. 1591.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 261 S.W. 506 (Hart v. Associated 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
Hart v. Associated Oil Co., 261 S.W. 506, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 917 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinions

WALTHALL, J.

This suit was brought by the Associated Oil Company, a corporation, and the Rio Bravo Company, a corporation, plaintiffs herein, against I. N. Hart and wife, Allie Hart, and I. N. Hart, as community administrator of himself and his former wife, Katie Hart, defendants, to recover the title and possession of all the oil, gas, coal, and other minerals in, under, and upon the east % of the S. W % and the N. W. % of the S E. % of section 57, block 4, Houston & Texas Central Railway Company survey of lands in Eastland county, Tex., and prayed for an injunction perpetually en *507 joining the defendants from in any manner resisting and contesting plaintiffs’ right of entry upon and their use of said land for the purpose of prospecting for and developing the oil, gas, coal, and other minerals, and to produce and remove same from said land.

Plaintiffs allege title to be in themselves to the oil, gas, coal, and other minerals in, under, and upon said land, and the right and perpetual easement to go upon said land to prospect for and develop said minerals, and to produce and remove same from said lands, said claim of title to said minerals and said right of ingress and egress being based upon certain reservations in the deed conveying said land and hereafter more fully stated, and deny the title to any of said minerals to be in defendants; but that defendants, owning the surface, claim to own said minerals, and deny plaintiffs’ right of access to said land for the purpose stated. Plaintiffs’ suit in other respects is in the usual form of trespass to try title.

Defendants answer by general denial, not guilty, plea of the ten years’ statute of limitations, plea of ten years’ limitation under memorandum of title, specially defining, the boundaries. Defendants further answer that they own said minerals and mineral rights under said land as hereafter more fully stated, and pray that the cloud cast upon their title by plaintiffs’ claim of' title be removed.

The case was tried without a jury, and the issues both of fact and law are more fully made to appear by the findings of fact filed by the trial court, as follows:

'“(1) That the plaintiff Associated Oil Company is a corporation duly chartered under the laws of the state of California, and has a permit to do business in Texas; that the Rio Bravo Oil Company is a corporation duly chartered under the laws of the state of Texas; that the defendants, and each of them, reside in Eastland county, Tex.; that the land involved in this suit is located and situated in Eastland county, Tex.
“(2) That the state of Texas has heretofore issued its unconditional patent to section 57, block 4, Houston & Texas Central Railway Company survey, which said patent included all the land described in plaintiff’s petition herein filed, to the said Houston & Texas Central Railway Company.
“(3) That the Legislature of the state of Texas, by a special act approved on, the 21st day of September, 1866, granted to the said Houstpn & Texas Central Railway Company 16 sections of land, of 640 acres each, for each mile of railroad it had constructed or might thereafter construct ‘in accordance with the provisions of the charter of said railway company ’
“(4) That by deed executed January 30, 1877, the said Houston & Texas Central Railway Company conveyed the land described in plaintiff’s petition filed ifi this cause to Jane R. Smith; that the reddendum clause in said deed reads as follows:
“ ‘It is expressly agreed and stipulated that the vendor’s lien is retained until the hereinbe-fore described note, with interest, etc., thereon, in accordance with the tenor, effect, and reading, shall be fully paid, upon which this deed will become absolute, a strip 200 feet wide' for right of way and other railroad .purposes should a branch of its road be located on the premises, and all minerals in and on said land, together with the right of way for convenient access thereto, are reserved and ex-depted from this grant and conveyance.’
“(5) That by deed dated January 18, 1885), Charles S. Dillingham, as special master commissioner, in compliance with a certain decree rendered in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Texas, in the Fifth Circuit Court, on May 4, 1888, in a certain cause then pending in said court under the title of ‘Nelson S. Easton and James Rintoul, Trustee, and the Farmers’ Loan & Trust Company, Trustee, v. The Houston Texas Central Railway Company et al., bearing the numbér 198 consolidated cause, on the chancery docket of said court, sold and conveyed to Frederic P. Olcott ‘all lands, town lots or blocks, real estate, or interests in real estate, of every kind and description,’ to which the said Houston & Texas Central Railway Company ‘has title, claim, or equitable ownership,’ except the land and other property subject to the first mortgage on the Waco & Northwestern division, dated June 16, 1873, but the land so excepted from said conveyance did not include nor affect any part of the land described in plaintiff’s petition filed herein; that Nelson S. Easton and James Rintoul, as trustees of the main line first mortgage of the Houston & Texas Central Railway Company, dated July 1, 1866, and of the Western division first mortgage of said railway company, dated December 1, 1870, and Farmers’ Loan & Trust Company, as trustee of the main line and western division consolidated mortgage, dated October 1, 1872, and of tlie general mortgage, dated .October 1, 1872, and of the general mortgage of said railway company, dated April 1, 1881, and of the Waco & Northwestern division consolidated mortgage, dated May 1, 1875, Benjamin A. Shepherd, as sole surviving trustee of the income and indemnity mortgage of said railway company, dated May 7, 1877, and the Houston & Texas Central Railway Company, joined the said Charles S. Dillingham, special master commissioner aforesaid, in the execution of said deed.
“(6) That the deed from Charles S. Dilling-ham, Special Master Commissioner, et al., to Frederic P. Olcott, conveyed all the right, title, and interest'of said Houston & Texas Central Railway Company in and to the land described in the plaintiff’s petition, which was by said railway company retained or excepted from the conveyance by it to the said Jane R. Smith.
“(7) That by mesne conveyances the plaintiffs acquired all right, title, and interest in and to the land described in their petition filed herein that was acquired by Frederic P. Ol-cott under the deed from Charles S. Dilling-ham, Special Master Commissioner, et al.
“(8) That the defendants by mesne conveyances acquired all right, title, and interest in said land described in plaintiffs’ petition herein that wa,s acquired by Jane R. Smith under the. deed from Houston & Texas Central Railway Company.”

*508 The court entered judgment for plaintiff for all of the minerals in said land, and granted the injunction prayed for. Defendants excepted, and prosecute this appeal.

Opinion.

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Related

Associated Oil Co. v. Hart
10 S.W.2d 791 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1928)
Owen v. Associated Oil Co.
281 S.W. 607 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1926)
Associated Oil Co. v. Hart
277 S.W. 1043 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
261 S.W. 506, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 917, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hart-v-associated-oil-co-texapp-1924.