Miller v. Yates

15 S.W.2d 730, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 384
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 16, 1929
DocketNo. 2246.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 15 S.W.2d 730 (Miller v. Yates) 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
Miller v. Yates, 15 S.W.2d 730, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 384 (Tex. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

HIGGINS, J.

• This is an action in trespass to try title and for damages brought by appellant, Mrs. Addie Miller, surviving wife and devisee of M. C. Miller, who died in 1915, against I. G. Yates and others holding oil and gas leases under Yates.

Upon peremptory charge there was verdict and judgment for defendants.

The land sued for is in two tracts, each being approximately 625 varas wide from north to south, and 1,900 varas long.

On March 15, 1882, certificates numbered 2302 and 2303, for 640 acres each, were issued to the Texas Central Railway Company under the provisions of chapter 12, tit. 84, R. S. *731 1879. By transfer dated April 8, 1882, filed in tlie General Land Office April 13, 1894, these certificates were transferred to “M. 0. Miller, Trustee, heirs or assigns.”

By application for survey filed with the county surveyor of Pecos county on February 11, 1887, Miller located the certificates upon vacant land lying between the Runnels pounty school land on the north and block 194, G. C. & S. F. Ry. survey on the south. The land was surveyed by O. W. Williams, deputy surveyor of Pecos county, on February 16, 1887.' The field notes, with the application for the survey and certificates, were filed in the General Land Office March 3, 1887. The surveys were numbered 101, 102, 103, and 104, Nos. 102 and 104 being the alternate school sections reserved to the state. Each survey contained 640 acres, was in square' form, each boundary line being 1,900 varas long. The N. W. corner of survey 101 was fixed at the southwest corner ’of the Runnels county school land, from which corner its lines ran east, south, west, and north, to the beginning. The succeeding surveys were constructed to the east upon 101.

According to the testimony of the surveyor, Williams, the Land Office claimed the surveys were in conflict with block 194 on the south, refused to patent on that account, and required corrected field notes, which he prepared September 16, 1892, filed in the General Land Office March 3,1893.

S. O. Clark, chief draftsman of the General Land Office, testified in part as follows:

“The original of this map appears to have been in use in this office as the official map of Pecos County prior to the map of 1895. From an examination and consideration of such map which was then on file in the General Land Office and in use by that Department at the time of the filing of the original field notes to said sections 101 and 103 under certificates 2302 and 2303, T. O. R>y. Co. in Pecos County, it does not appear that the entire area lying between the Runnels County School Land and Block 194, G. C. & S. F. Ry. Co., was sufficient in extent to permit the location of the two surveys of 640 acres each in accordance with the original field notes made up and filed in the Land Office to satisfy the two certificates mentioned.”

And, further:

“In canceling the original field notes covering both sections of land mentioned, and the issuing of patents to M. C. Miller as assignee of the T. C. Ry. Co. on each certificate for 407 acres, known as sections 101 and 103, Pecos County, and based upon corrected field notes- — the Land Office maps or plats on file at the time indicate or show that the corrected field notes covered the entire space between the south line of the Runnels County School Land and Block 194, G. C. & S. F. Ry. Co., causing the south lines of sections 101, 102, 103 and 104, T. C. Ry. Co., to appear to be the same as the north line of Block 194, G. C. & S. F. Ry. Co., and to their extent said lines were made to appear as coinciding with said north line of Block 194.” “The official map referred to in direct interrogatory No. 7 bears no date, but appears to have superseded the old map of Pecos County dated 1873, and was in use up to 1895, when i't was superseded by the map of Pecos County of .that date. I do not know of any correction of the official map referred to, except that it was superseded by a new map compiled in 1895.”

The only material difference between the original and corrected field notes is that the east and west boundary lines in the corrected notes are 1,209 varas long instead of 1,900 varas as in the original.

The original field notes of surveys 101 and 102, as they now appear in the Land Office, upon their face, bear this indorsement, “Canceled by corrected notes,” and the original field notes of surveys 103 and 104, upon their face, bear the indorsement, “Canceled by corrected field notes.” The Commissioner of the General Land Office, Hon. J. T. Robison, testified these indorsements were in the handwriting of Ernest Von Rosenberg, then draftsman in the Land Office.

Upon the corrected field notes patents to surveys 101 and 103 were issued April 14, 1894, to M. C. Miller, “assignee of the Texas Central R. R. his heirs or assigns.”

On November 28, 1898, M. C. Miller conveyed to the City National Bank of Austin, Tex., among other lands, 407 acres known as survey 101, block 194, being patent No. 77, vol. 109, and 407 acres known as survey 103, block 194, being patent No. 78, vol. 109.

The omitted portions off of the south ends of survey 101 and survey 103, as originally located and surveyed, constitute the two tracts of land in controversy. At the time the original location was made and up until about 1919 the Land Office maps and records showed only a sufficient strip of land north and south, between the Runnels county school land on the north and block 194 on the south, to accommodate the four surveys of 407 acres each. However, as a matter of fact there was sufficient vacant, unappropriated land between the Runnels county school land and block 194 to accommodate the four surveys of 640 acres each as originally located and surveyed.

This fact, however, was not known to the Land Office until about 1919, as a result of investigation and survey by Oapt. Dod, state surveyor. There is nothing in the record to show that either the Commissioner of the General Land Office or M. O. Miller were aware of the true facts during M.- O. Miller’s lifetime. When the ⅞0 patents were issued there was indorsed across the face of each original certificate the following: “407 acres. Patented April 14, 1894. W. L. McGaughey.” It was shown that W. L. McGaughey was the Commissioner of the General Land Office at the time. The two certificates remained in *732 the Land Office, and no certificate for un-located balance was taken out.

Upon the facts disclosed by Oapt. Dod’-s survey, Yates applied to purchase as vacant the land lying between the south line of the land patented to Miller and the north line of block 194. It was sold and awarded to him February 4,1921, by the Commissioner of the General Land Office, without condition of settlement, and patent issued April 13th, 1927.

It is unnecessary to consider the assignment complaining of the admission of certain testimony of the witness Williams. Without regard to the testimony objected to the peremptory charge was properly given. In reaching this conclusion such testimony may be and is disregarded.

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Bluebook (online)
15 S.W.2d 730, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-yates-texapp-1929.