Lynn County v. Garza County

58 S.W.2d 24
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedMarch 15, 1933
DocketNo. 1626—6136
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 58 S.W.2d 24 (Lynn County v. Garza County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lynn County v. Garza County, 58 S.W.2d 24 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1933).

Opinion

SHARP, Judge.

This suit was originally filed to determine the common boundary line between Lynn and Garza counties. Because of the effect of the establishment of such line upon other interested counties, the counties of Lubbock, Yoakum, Cochran, Crosby, Hockley, Terry, and Kent became parties. The cause was tried before the court without a jury. The judge filed findings of fact and conclusions of law, and based upon these findings the boundary line between the various counties was determined. Erom the judgment of the trial court, an appeal was taken to the Court of Civil Appeals at Eastland, and that court reversed and remanded the judgment of the trial court, with instructions. 42 S.W.(2d) 627. The Supreme Court having jurisdiction of this cause by virtue of article 1821, Revised Civil Statutes, as amended in 1929 by the 41st Legislature, chapter 33, section 1 (Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. art. 1821), granted a writ of error to review the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals.

The pertinent and controlling parts of the findings of fact and conclusions of law made by the trial court read as follows:

“Findings of Pact
“1. I find that the Counties of Throckmor-ton, Haskell, Stonewall, Kent, Garza, Lynn and Terry, by the Acts creating them, were each made thirty miles square; that the North lines of each of said Counties were, by the Acts creating them, made thirty miles long.
“2. That in said tier of Counties, Kent, Garza, Lynn and Terry, and in addition to those named, Yoakum, are the Counties in the said tier, that are parties to this suit.
“3. That the beginning corner for the North line of said tier of Counties is the North-west corner of Young County.
“4. That the North-west comer of Young County is well qstablished and located on the ground, and was definitely located by the proof in this case.
“5. That the South boundary line, as well as the other boundary lines of Lubbock County, were established, located and marked on the ground, by one J. B. Jones, in 1892; that the Jones South-east corner of Lubbock County is an easily recognized corner on the ground; that the said South boundary line of Lubbock County, as established by J. B. Jones in 1892, is thirty miles long.
“6. That from the North-west corner of Young County to the J. B. Jones South-east corner of Lubbock County, is more than one hundred'and fifty miles.
“7. That the Surveyor appointed by the Court to locate the various boundary lines of the counties involved in this suit, found the South boundary line of Lubbock County to be further South than the said South Boundary Line located by J. B. Jones in 1S92.
“8. That Lubbock County is not asking that their South boundary line be moved any further south than the Jones South boundary line of said County.
“9. That Lubbock County and Crosby County have, for many years, recognized the East boundary line of Lubbock County, as established by J. B. Jones in 1S92, as the dividing line between said Lubbock County and Crosby County.
“10. That Stonewall, Haskell and Throck-morton Counties are not parties to this suit.
“11. That by beginning at the J. B. Jones South-east corner of Lubbock County, and running East thirty miles for the North-east [25]*25Corner of Garza County, and from the Northeast Corner of Garza County thirty miles east to the North-east Comer of Kent County, there is still left between the North-east Corner of Kent County, and the North-west Corner of Young County, more than ninety miles for the North boundary lines of Stonewall, Throckmorton and Haskell Counties.
“12. I find that the South boundary lines of Baylor, Lamb, Terry, Floyd and Motley Counties, is a well established line upon the ground, and has been for many years recognized as an established line. * * *
“Conclusions of Law
“From the above Findings of Fact, I conclude as a matter of law, that the common corner of Lubbock, Crosby, Garza and Lynn Counties, should be established as the J. B. Jones South-east Corner of Lubbock County, and that the common corner of Garza, Kent, Dickens and Crosby Counties, should be established thirty miles eastward from said J. B. Jones South-east Comer of Lubbock County ; that the common corner of Kent, Stonewall, King and Dickens Counties should be located thirty miles eastward from the common corner of Dickens, Crosby, Garza and Kent Counties, and I conclude that the common corner of Lubbock,' Lynn, Terry and Hockley Counties should be located at the J. B. Jones South-west Corner of Lubbock County, and that the common corner of Terry, Hockley, Cochran and Yoakum Counties, should be located at a point thirty miles westward from the J. B. Jones South-west Corner of Lubbock County, and that the South-west Corner of Cochran County, and the North-west Corner of Yoakum County, should be located on the Texas-New Mexico boundary line, at the point where a line extended westward from the common corner of Cochran, Hockley, Terry and Yoakum Counties, crosses said boundary line of Texas and New Mexico.”

The trial court entered judgment in accordance with the above findings of fact and conclusions of law.

The Court of Civil Appeals disagreed with the judgment of the trial court and held that the trial court should have decreed that:

“ * * * The N.W. corner of Garza county, being also the S.E. corner of Lynn county, should be located at the point of intersection of the parallel of latitude passing through the NW. corner of Young county, and the meridian passing through the N.W. corner of Floyd county. The N.W. corner of Floyd county should, we think, be located for the purpose of determining the meridian by running the agreed courses and distances from the Statutory N.W. corner of Young county rather than from Swindell’s N.W. comer. * * * Under this view the N.W. corner of Garza county and the S.E. comer of Lynn county should be located 758.4 varas south and 846.S varas west of the J. B. Jones S.E. corner of Lubbock county, as marked upon the ground; the said point being also 956.3 varas south and 101.6 varas east of the concrete monument.
“ * * * The judgment of the trial court should have decreed the common corner of Garza, Lynn, Lubbock, and Orosby counties to be as hereinbefore stated; that consistently therewith it should have directed the location of the S.E. corner of Orosby, the N.E. corner of Garza,'and the N.W. comer of Kent counties at the point where the parallel of latitude passing through the N.W. comer of Garza is intersected by the meridian of longitude passing through the Statutory N.E. corner of Floyd county. The S.W. comer of Lubbock, the N.W. corner of Lynn, the N.E. corner of Terry, and the S.W.-corner of Hock-ley counties should be located at the point where the meridian passing through the Statutory N.W. comer of Hale county intersects said parallel of latitude, and that the N.W. corner of Terry, the N.E. comer of Yoakum, the S.E. comer of Ooehran, and S.W. .corner of Hockley counties should be located at the point of intersection of the meridian passing through the Statutory N.W. corner of Lamb county and said parallel of latitude; that the east and west lines of said counties should be located along meridians passing through said corners as located.

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Bluebook (online)
58 S.W.2d 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynn-county-v-garza-county-texcommnapp-1933.