Parkinson v. Sears

290 S.W. 556, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 1505
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 15, 1926
DocketNo. 2739.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 290 S.W. 556 (Parkinson v. Sears) 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
Parkinson v. Sears, 290 S.W. 556, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 1505 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

RANDOLPH, J.

Appellant brought this suit in the district court of Lubbock county against appellee. Judgment was entered by the trial court in favor of appellee, from which judgment appellant has appealed to this court. *

Plaintiff’s petition is a formal action of trespass to try title, with an additional allegation that an issue of boundary is involved in the suit “as he is informed.”

Defendant’s answer consists of a general demurrer, general denial, plea of not guilty, and an answer to the merits, setting tip recognition of line as a common boundary between sections 6 and 7 of block D2 as the true boundary line between said sections; also pleas of limitation of 3, 5, and 10 years.

The land in controversy is shown by the following sketch:

The fence indicated by crosses was built by George R. Bean about the year 1893. Bean testifies that this fence was erected by him without the assistance of a surveyor, and was purely a guess as to the true location of the line between the two sections.

Plaintiff’s petition describes the lands sued for by him, as follows:

“Part of said section No. 7, block D2, Lubbock county, Tex., to wit: Beginning at a 1" iron pipe set by Col. Smyth as the northwest corner of section No. 7, block D2, and the southwest corner of section 24, block D2; thence north 89° 30,’ east 106.6 vrs. to a wire fence; thence in a southerly direction along said fence 1,845.2 vrs. to the corner of said fence; thence west *557 95 vrs; thence north 0° 24'west 1,845.2 vrs. to the place of beginning—containing 33.1 acres.”

Plaintiff, in his said petition, alleges that the defendant is claiming the above strip of land as being part of section 6, but further alleges that same is a part of section 7 owned by him. This being the status of plaintiff’s cause of action, it devolved upon him to prove title to same and to prove that the true location of said section 7 would include the strip as contended by him. It is true that the plaintiff, in reply to the matters set out in defendant’s answer, for the first time pleads that the fence placed on the land was placed there without reference to the dividing line between said surveys, and that at such time it was not known or recognized where the dividing line was located; that in 1903, H. D. Beal, who was then the owner of section 6, being desirous of fixing and establishing the east line of said section 6, caused a survey to be made of said section 6, at such time being also in possession of survey No. 7, and acting for the plaintiff, the then owner of said survey 7, with the express agreement and understanding that the lines so located by a there named surveyor should be taken as the true lines and boundaries of said section, and that in said year such survey was so made and recorded in the survey- or’s records of Lubbock county, Tex., and that such survey placed the east line of section 6, which is the west line of section 7, as follows:

“An iron pipe set in earth mound for northwest corner section 7, and northeast corner section 6, and set stake and two stones in ground for common corner of south said two sections”

•—and that thereafter the said Beal, by his instruments of record—being the agreements to so survey, and the field notes aforesaid— held out to all persons and to this plaintiff in particular that said iron pipe and such set stake and two stones were the common corner of such surveys, and thereafter openly and notoriously recognized same as such, and also pleaded in such supplemental petition acquiescence therein until 1921.

The matters set up in said supplemental petition are expressly recited to be in answer to defendant’s answer and to. matters therein pleaded, and do not and cannot, under any rule of pleading, be taken as a part of plaintiff’s cause of action.

“Under our system, * * * the plaintiff is required to make a frank, plain exposition of the grounds on which he seeks a judgment against the defendant; and if the application of the law of the land to the facts so stated, if true, will not sustain his action, the defendant can avail himself of such insufficiency, either by demurrer, motion in arrest of judgment, or on assignment of error. If there are any exceptions in the law, by which the plaintiff would have a right to recover, he must allege in his petition such exception.” Long v. Anderson, 4 Tex. 422-426; Pettus v. Perry, 4 Tex. 486-490.

Hence it is that the two questions, title and true location, as claimed in the original petition, must form the basis of any recovery sought by him.

There is no evidence offered by plaintiff as to the true location on the ground of the line in controversy as placed by the original surveyor. The field notes of the survey made by Holt in 1903 show that his survey was based on a survey made by Col. R. P. Smyth for Reed, Earhart, and others, and also on a survey of a line running west from the southwest corner of survey 1 in block D, made by Smyth and Holt, which survey was made from, and the variation of the line from the southwest corner of survey 1 in block A east 7 miles to a stone mound at the northeast corner of survey 70 in block RG, and all of Holt’s work appears to be wholly based on Smyth’s work. There is no evidence whatever in the record to disclose what Smyth did as to following the footsteps of the original surveyor. The field notes given for survey 7 in the patent to said survey, which is dated October 14, 1878, are as follows:

“In Lubbock county, known as survey No. 7 in block D2 on the waters of North fork, a tributary of the Brazos river, about 8½ miles north and 4 miles west from the mouth of Yellow House creek, by virtue of land script No. 3-358, issued to said company by the commissioner of the general land office, March 9, 1877, and transferred to J. M. Davis, October 11, 1877.
“Beginning at an earth mound, the southeast corner of survey No. 6 in this block; thence north 1,900.8 vrs. to a stake; thence east 1,900.8 vrs. to a stake; thence south 1,900.8 vrs. to a stake; thence west 1,900.8 vrs. to a mound.”

It will be seen that the calls for course are for north, south, and east and west. Harris, the surveyor introduced by the plaintiff, testified that the Smyth line was run on a variation of 20° west, and was not run by a true north survey; that the work done by Smyth according to variation used by him would throw the line west of true north every mile he ran north of section 1, block A, about 11 varas, and in running north 8 miles they would swing something .like 90 varas west of where the line would be if run on true north.

Smyth was not used as a witness to explain why he ran the line on a variation from the true north, and there is no explanation in the record as to why this was done. Harris testified that the Smyth line at the northwest corner of 7 was west of the line run by him (Harris) some 111 varas; that the line he ran was run according to true north; that the original surveyor’s field notes to the land lying north of survey 1, block A, called for the lines to run north, south, east, and west; that on the east side of section 6, according to his running of the line, the fence 'was prac *558

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Bluebook (online)
290 S.W. 556, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 1505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parkinson-v-sears-texapp-1926.