McSpadden v. Vannerson

169 S.W. 1079, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 845
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 27, 1914
DocketNo. 561.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 169 S.W. 1079 (McSpadden v. Vannerson) 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
McSpadden v. Vannerson, 169 S.W. 1079, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 845 (Tex. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

HENDRICKS, J.

The land in controversy is situated in block M-15, Swisher county, Tex., which is a block of irregular shape, con *1080 sisting of 36 surveys, and the field notes of wliicli are signed by one Summerfield; all of tlie surveys of said block purporting to have been made on October 4, 1879.

The field notes in the surveys on the north call to tie to block R. 0., which is immediately east of block W-l; five sections on the west side of the block also join a corresponding number of sections in block W-l, on the west. All the calls in all the field notes call to run either east or west, north or south, and to tie to each other, either by direct calls for each other or by calls through intervening surveys in the same block. Each (call) of said field notes (in each survey), in calling for distance, calls to run 1,900 varas; and each field note only calls for a “mound,” except the field notes to the following surveys: Nos. 2, 3, and 37, the calls for which, beginning at survey No. 2, respectively, call for a “mound” and other objects, and are as follows:

“Field Notes to Survey No. 2.
“Beginning at a mound, S. W. corner sur. No. 1, same block; thence W. 1,900 vrs. to a mound, from which a large lime rock 80 vrs. north of the S. .fork of Red river, brs. 67% W. 910 vrs.; thence N. 1,900 vrs. to the S. W. corner of sur. No. 14, in block R. O.; thence E. 1,900 vrs. to a mound; thence S. 1,900vrs. to beginning.
“Field Notes to Survey No. 3.
“Beginning at a mound, the S. W. comer of sur. No. 2, same block, from which a large lime rock 80 vrs. N. of south fork of Red river bears S. 67% vrs.; thence S. 1,900 vrs. to a mound; thence E. 1,900 vrs. to the S. W. corner of sur. No. 134, block M-Í0; thence N. 1,900vrs. to a mound; thence W. 1,900 vrs. to the beginning.
“Field Notes to Survey No. 37.
“Beginning at a mound the N. W. corner of sur. No. 38, saíne block; thence N. at 562 vrs. to an earth mt. from which bushes at foot of rock hill on side creek brs. S. 13 W. at 1,900vrs. to the N. W. corner of sur. No. 11, same block; thence W. 1,900 vrs. to a mound; thence S. 1,900 vrs. to the N. E. corner sur. No. 39, block W-l; B. 1,900 vrs. to the beginning.”

■ Block R. C., north of block M-15, is composed of 18 surveys, 3 north and south by six east and west, the field notes of which are also signed by Surveyor Summerfield, said block purporting to have been surveyed January 5 to January 7, 1878, and each call in the field notes of each survey is, “Thence 1,900varas a ‘mound,’ ” without any natural or artificial objects as locative calls in the lines of the surveys in said block. Block W-l, partially adjoining block R. O., and likewise partially contiguous to block M-15, as stated, consists of 40 surveys, 5 east and west and 8 north and south, the field notes of which are also signed by Surveyor Sum-merfield, and purport to have been surveyed October 1 to October 4, 1879, and each call in all the field notes of each survey in said block is also, “Thence ' * *• 1,900 varas to a mound,” without any marks, natural or artificial, called for in any of said field notes, except that surveys Nos. 22 and 27 in said block call to cross creek. Block M-9, north of said block W-l and R. O., consists of IS surveys north and south and 12 surveys east and west, constituting 216 in all, and every call in each survey in said block from the beginning call, the same as the other surveys mentioned, is, “Thence * * * 1,900varas a mound,” without any natural or artificial objects suggested for the boundaries of any survey, the field notes of which are signed by H. O. Hedrick, deputy surveyor; the block purporting to have been surveyed from May 20 to May 30, 1876. Survey No. 1, in this block, M-9, calls to tie to survey 101 in block M-8 and 203 in block 6, and blocks M-S and M-9, adjoining each other east and west, situated partly in Randall and partly in Swisher counties, and lie south of block 6, the said block M-8 being 35 surveys north and south, and five surveys wide, east and west, the field notes also having been signed by H. O. Hedrick, deputy surveyor, and said block purporting to have been surveyed from June 28 to July 5, 1876, inclusive; and survey No. 1 in said block M!-8, calls to begin at the southwest corner survey No. 208 of block 6, and each call in all the field notes to the 125 surveys in said block M-8, from the beginning call, is, “Thence * * * 1,900 varas a mound,” without any natural or artifical objects called for in the field notes, except in survey 119, on the east line of the block, there are calls to cross a creek on the east and west lines of said section.

Theoretically, a continuation north of 28 miles of the west line of block M-15, beginning at the northwest corner of said block, a point would be reached upon the map about five miles or five stations east of the southwest corner of survey No. 208, an established corner, in block 6, Randall county, Tex.

A. A. Hogan, as plaintiff, sued the defendant F. J. Vannerson for the purpose of settling the ' boundary lines between sections Nos. 20, owned by plaintiff, and 21, alleged to have been owned by Vannerson, in block M-15, in Swisher county, Tex.; the plaintiff alleging the specific boundaries of 20, according to an iron pipe survey, which is shown by the evidence to have been made by Surveyor Hutchinson, and asserting that Vannerson’s claim of the boundary line of said survey 21 would locate the same 756 varas too far south and 3S2 varas too far east of the correct and true boundary line, stating that, by the incorrect location of Vannerson’s survey No. 21, there is a difference of 255 acres of land in conflict. The defendant Vannerson, after pleading not guilty, impleaded Avery and Smith, as the owners of survey No. 22, contiguous to 21 in block M-15, and also impleaded D. A. Me-Spadden, as the owner of survey No. 23 of said block (22 lying immediately north of *1081 the Vannerson section No. 21, and 23 lying immediately west of and adjoining said survey No. 22); and, in Vannerson’s cross-action against the appellants Avery, Smith, and McSpadden, it is charged in substance that if the land of Hogan, the plaintiff herein, is located upon the ground as plaintiff claims, then the land of McSpadden, Avery, and Smith, is in conflict with the true boundary line of his (Vannerson’s land), and further alleges that said Avery and Smith are in possession of a part of said survey No. 21, owned by him (Vannerson).

The earth mound in,the southwest corner of survey No. 208, in block 6,1. & G. N. R. R. survey, Randall county, Tex., likewise the southwest corner of said block, is an agreed established corner, situated over 25 miles north and several miles west of the land in Swisher county, in controversy in this suit, and about five miles west of the west boundary line of block M-15. In.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Taylor v. Higgins Oil & Fuel Co.
2 S.W.2d 288 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
169 S.W. 1079, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 845, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcspadden-v-vannerson-texapp-1914.