Jones v. Burkitt

150 S.W. 275, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 798
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 27, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 150 S.W. 275 (Jones v. Burkitt) 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
Jones v. Burkitt, 150 S.W. 275, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 798 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, C. J.

This suit was brought by the appellee Burkitt against the appellant W. E. Jones and the executors of the estate of M. T. Jones, deceased, and a number of other defendants. Plaintiff’s petition in addition to formal allegations of trespass to try title to the north half of section No. 2 of Washington county railroad surveys in Harris county alleges that the controversy is really one of boundary, the line in dispute being the north line of said survey No. 2, which is identical with the south line of the Thomas Earle league; that defendants W. E. Jones and the executors of the estate of M. T. Jones, deceased, own the south portion of the Earle league and the other defendants own the S. % of said survey No. 2, and also survey No. 3 of said Washington county surveys, lying immediately south of said survey No. 2. The prayer of the petition is that the south line of the Thomas Earle league be established 335 varas north of the line claimed by the defendants, W. E. Jones and the executors of the estate of M. T. Jones, and plaintiff recover of said defendants all of the land held by them on said survey No. 2 as so fixed and established, and, in alternative, judgment is asked against the other defendants fixing the south line óf the N. % of said survey No. 2 and the south line of said survey 335 varas south of the line as claimed by said defendants. The appellants answered by general demurrer and plea of not guilty and pleas of limitation of five and ten years. They also pleaded a judgment of the district court of Harris county as res ad judicata upon the issue of the location of the north boundary line of said survey No. 2.

It is unnecessary to name the other numerous defendants who are appellees herein, or to notice the various pleadings filed by them, except the appellee F. O. Hubbell, who is alleged in plaintiffs’ petition to -be the owner of survey No. 3 lying south of said survley No. 2, and who was made a party defendant in order that the alternative prayer of the petition might be considered by the court in event plaintiff failed to establish the north line of survey No. 2 as claimed by him. This defendant, in addition to pleas of not guilty and other defensive pleas interposed to plaintiff’s suit, alleged that he owned survey No. 1 of said Washington county surveys, which lies immediately east of said survey No. 2 and south of the Thomas Earle league, the north line of said survey No. 1 being identical with the south line of the Thomas Earle league, and prayed that said line be fixed and established at a point 335 varas north of the line claimed by appellants. All of the numerous defendants impleaded their warrantors immediate and remote, and the number of defendants and the number of pleadings filed make the record both voluminous and confusing, but, for the purpose of understanding and deciding the questions presented by this appeal, the foregoing is a sufficient statement of the issues presented in the court below. The trial in the court below with a jury resulted in a verdict fixing the location of the south line of the Thomas Earle league as claimed by plaintiff and defendant Hubbell. The court declined to submit the issue of limitation pleaded by appellants, and held that, as to one-half of the strip of land in controversy between plaintiff and defendants, plaintiff was estopped by the former judgment of the district court of Harris county pleaded by appellants. Judgment" was rendered in accordance with the verdict of the jury and holdings of the court above stated. This appeal is prosecuted from said judgment by the defendants W. E. Jones and the executors of the estate of M. T. Jones, deceased.

The evidence shows that the Thomas Earle league was located in 1824. Its field notes called to begin on the south side of Buffalo bayou at a pine tree from which an elm eight inches in diameter bears north 23 degrees'west 23 varas; thence south, 5547 var-as, to post in prairie; thence east 5,000 varas, to stake in prairie; thence north, 4,-500 varas, to Buffalo bayou; thence up the bayou to the beginning. The Washington county surveys Nos. 1 and 2 were located by J. J. Gillespie, deputy surveyor of Harris county, on July 11 and 12, 1860. The field notes of survey No. 1 are as follows: “Beginning on the south boundary line of the T. Earle league 2,500 vrs. west of the S. E. corner of the same at an ash stake for cor. from which Round Point bears S. 16 degrees E. Thence south 1,445 varas to a square pine stake for cor. Thence east 2500 *277 yaras to cor. on tlie west boundary line of the H. W. Raglin survey. Thence north 1445 varas to the S. E. cor. of the Earle league. Thence west 2500 varas along the south boundary of the Earle league to the place of beginning.” Survey No. 2 is thus described by its original field notes: ‘‘Beginning at the northeast cor. of this survey the N. W. cor. of No. 1 in the south line of Thos. Earle league survey at an ash stake blazed on 4 sides for cor. from which Round Point bears S. 16 B. Thence south 1445 var-as on the west boundary line of survey No. 1 to a square pine stake for cor. Thence west 2500 varas to cor. mound on ,the east boundary line of the James Seymore survey. Thence north 1445 varas to the S. W. cor. of the T. Earle league. Thence east 2500 varas along the south boundary of the T. Earle league to beginning cor.”

It will be observed that the field notes of the Thomas Earle league do not call for any natural object except the bayou and a pine tree at the beginning corner of the survey from which an elm tree eight inches in diameter bears N. 23 W. 23 varas. No trees or other object is called for to mark the fourth corner on the bayou. It was shown, however, that as early as 1838, when the James Seymore survey adjoining the Earle on the west and the J. B. Woods adjoining it on the east were located, that there were marked trees at both corners of the Earle on the bayou. In the field notes of- the Sey-more the northwest or beginning corner of the Earle is called for, and is described as follows: ‘‘A pine tree 30 inches in diameter on the south bank of Buffalo bayou marked. T E on the east and P on the west, from which an elm eight inches in diameter marked X bears N. 23 W. 23.6 varas.” .The field notes of the Woods survey call for the southwest corner of said survey on the east line of the Thomas Earle survey. “Thence north 2400 varas to stake on Buffalo bayou marked T E on south and N E on north, from which a pecan tree five inches in diameter marked A bears north 27% degrees west and a' cypress twenty inches in diameter bears south 86 degrees west 14 varas.” The northeast corner of the Earle as described in the field notes of the Woods can now be found and indentified on the ground from the pecan bearing tree called for and this corner and the location of the east line of the Earle have been known and recognized for many years. The location of the west line of the Earle has also been known and recognized for a long time, and there is practically no dispute as to its location. There is also evidence sufficient to sustain the finding that the location of the pine tree called for as marking the northwest corner of the Earle was at the point on the bayou at which the west line of the Earle, as it has been known and recognized by appellants and all others-interested in its location, strikes said bayou. J. J. Gillespie testified that 25 years or more ago his father, who located the Washington county surveys, showed him a pine tree on Buffalo bayou which he said was the northeast corner of the Thomas Earle, and at which he said he began his surveying to locate the south line of the Earle when he located the Washington county surveys along said south line.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
150 S.W. 275, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 798, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-burkitt-texapp-1912.