Maxcy v. Boyles

38 S.W.2d 630, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 434
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 21, 1931
DocketNo. 9528.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 38 S.W.2d 630 (Maxcy v. Boyles) 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
Maxcy v. Boyles, 38 S.W.2d 630, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 434 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

LANE, J.

John W. Maxcy brought this suit against J. Stuart Boyles, as county surveyor of Harris county to compel him, as such surveyor, to make and send to the general land office field notes of a tract of land in Harris county which Maxcy claimed to be a vacancy lying between the east line of the Heels &' Tro-baugh league and the west line of the Edward Shipman survey, which he claimed to be land belonging to the public free school fund which he had the right to purchase.

In his petition Maxcy alleged that no part of the land is included within the boundaries of the Heels & Trobaugh, or any other survey, but that it is erroneously claimed by various persons who own parts of the Edward Shipman survey that said land is a part of the Edward Shipman survey.

The plaintiff alleged “that he had made application to the Commissioner of the General Land Office to have surveyed and to purchase the above described land, and that said Commissioner had replied that there was not sufficient information on file in his office to advise plaintiff that a vacancy might exist, and therefore he advised ‘no vacancy’; that said Commissioner declined to recognize the existence of the area as School Land and refused to authorize a survey to be made because he did not have sufficient information on file in his office to advise plaintiff that a vacancy existed, and because the map of Harris County, Texas, then in use in the General,Land Office showed the Edward Shipman survey to be contiguous on the west to the Reels & Tro-baugh survey.”

He alleged that no impediment, in fact, existed to the making of the survey requested by him, nor to the sale of said land to him;

The plaintiff describes the land which he sought to have surveyed as follows:

“Beginning- at the intersection of Green’s Bayou with the East line of the Reels & Tro-baugh League and running thence North along said East line Twenty-two Hundred Eorty-seven (2247) varas to the Northeast corner of said League in the South line of the J. W. Moody survey;
“Thence East along said South line of said Moody Survey Five Hundred Twenty-nine and Three-tenths (529.3) varas to the West line of the Edward Shipman Survey (which point is distant 1700 varas West from the East line of said Shipman Survey);
“Thence South along the West line of said Shipman Survey 2175 varas, to Green’s Bayou; and
“Thence up Green’s Bayou with its meanders to the place of beginning, containing 213.9 acres of land.”

At the request of Boyles, O. A. Teagle, S. •S. Hunt, Harrisburg Lumber Company, and two other parties were made parties defendant.

The Harrisburg Lumber Company disclaimed, and all other defendants answered by general demurrers, general denials, pleas of not guilty, and specially alleging the ownership of certain described lands, parts of the Edward Shipman survey.

The case was tried before the court with-, out a jury, and judgment was rendered against plaintiff, Maxcy, who has appealed.

Upon request therefor, the court prepared and filed his findings of fact, the pertinent parts of which are substantially as follows: That the Heels & Trobaugh league was surveyed and located on the ground by Surveyor S. C. Hiroms in May, 1827; that in the year 1824 the Mexican government granted to Thomas Earle a labor of land, described in the grant as being situated on the western bank of Green’s Bayou, the southeast corner of which is described only as being on the west bank of the bayou; that on or prior to December, 1830, Surveyor Hiroms, who surveyed and located the Heels & Trobaugh league in 1827, surveyed- and located the Edward Shipman survey; that there are no original English field notes of the Shipman survey now in existence, and that the field notes contained in the descriptive matter of the Mexican grant to Shipman describe the Shipman survey as beginning at a landmark on the margin of Green’s bayou opposite the southeast corner of the Earle survey, 5 varas distant from a water oak marked “E S”; thence to run east 481 varas; thence north 4,380 varas for its northeast corner; thence west 1,700 varas for its northwest corner, from which a pine bears south 45 degrees, 10 varas, distant; thence south 2,700 varas to .the margin of Green’s bayou, from which a water oak 24” in diameter bears east 7 varas distant; thence' down the bayou to place of beginning; that the south line of a survey made for J. W. Moody and the north line of the Shipman is one and the same.

He found that the west line of the Ship-man survey was originally located on the ground by surveyor Hiroms, and that such line is coincident with, and is the same line as, that part of the Reels & Trobaugh east line lying north of Green’s bayou; that, prior *632 to the controversy involved in the present suit, the west line of the Shipman had always been recognized and generally reputed to be located on the ground and as being the same as the east line of the Reels & Tro-baugh; that the southwest corner and west line of the Shipman survey are on the ground at the places where District Surveyor George Bringhurst placed them in his survey of a 150-acr.e tract, a part of the Shipman survey, situated in the southwest corner of said survey made in 1845; that Surveyor Bringhurst in' his survey of said 150 acres in 1845 called for a pin oals marked “ES” at the southwest corner of the Shipman on the east line of the Reels & Trobaugh survey; that the southeast corner of the Earle survey cannot be located upon the ground by any of the monuments and objects called for in the field notes, and can be located only by recognition and com?, mon reputation; that none of the artificial monuments and objects called for in the field notes of the Earle survey or the Shipman survey are now in existence; that, if calls for course and distance in the field notes of the Shipman grant are followed, its southwest corner can be fitted on the margin of Green’s bayou with approximate accuracy in at least two separate, distinct, and different points, both of which are east from the east line of the Reels & Trobaugh survey; that, if one of these points is adopted as said southwest corner, it would place the west line of the Ship-man 5,38-3 varas east of the east Une of the Reels & Trobaugh, and, running north from such point 2,700 varas, the distance called for in the Shipman field notes, would place its northwest corner 660 varas into the J. W. Moody survey, and that such line would conflict with the lines of the Anderson, Erwin, and Hiroms surveys as they are recognized on the ground to the extent of 296 varas east and west.

The court .further finds, substantially:

“That in the year 1870 the surveyor, J. J. Gillespie, looked for a marked line as the west line of the Shipman survey at a point 1700 varas west from the recognized northeast corner of said Shipman survey and found none; that there is no evidence in this case of any marked line indicating a property line for the west line of the Edward Ship-man survey at any point east of the east line of the Reels & Trobaugh survey. * * *

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Bluebook (online)
38 S.W.2d 630, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maxcy-v-boyles-texapp-1931.