Petroleum Producers Co. v. Stolley

137 S.W.2d 207
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 13, 1939
DocketNo. 10733.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 137 S.W.2d 207 (Petroleum Producers Co. v. Stolley) 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
Petroleum Producers Co. v. Stolley, 137 S.W.2d 207 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

*209 SMITH, Chief Justice.

The property involved in this suit consists of a strip of land three miles long and fifty-one varas wide at one end and fifty-six at the other, comprising fifty-six acres, in Duval County.

Appellees contend, while appellants deny, that the disputed strip is vacant public land lying between the Alexander League (survey 102) on the north, and surveys 78, 211, 212 and 215 on the south. Survey 102 is the senior survey, and 78, 211, 212 and 215, the junior.

The Commissioner of the General Land Office had leased the strip to R. R. Stolley for oil and gas purposes, and Stolley, joined later by the State, brought this suit in trespass to try title to establish the claimed vacancy and sustain his lease from the State. .

J. B. Wood and tibe heirs of James F. Welder, .claiming the fee in the land, and their lessee's, Petroleum Producers Company and United Producers Company, were named as defendants below.

A jury trial resulted in judgmént in favor of the plaintiffs below, and the defendants have appealed. The parties will be herein referred to as plaintiffs and defendants, respectively, as in the trial court.

The Alexander League, or .survey 102, was located in'the year 1878, by John J. Dix, then County Surveyor of Duval County, “based on actual ground work done in the field -during November, 1875, as reflected by his field notes.”

‘On the other hand, the mentioned surveys oil the south, 78, 211, 212 and 215, were located two years later, in 1880, by A. M. French, through office surveys within a traverse made on the ground by him. At the times of • both senior and junior surveys, Dix and French were partners in their professional work. Both partners died prior to the trial of this cause and therefore neither could testify thereat.

The controlling question in the case was made to turn below on the issue of whether Dix marked the southwest corner of survey 102 with a stake and mound at the time he located that survey, as evidenced by his field notes returned on October 8, 1878. The jury answered that issue in the negative.

Both parties in their oral argument in this court contended that under the evidence the issue is one of law rather than of fact, plaintiffs, upon whom the burden rested to negative the issue, claiming that the evidence was conclusive that Dix did not so mark that corner, while defendants contend with equal vigor that there was no evidence, or at least insufficient evidence, to sustain the adverse finding. The vital question calls for a minute and exhaustive study of the somewhat complicated evidence covering nearly 700 pages of the record. ■ .

It is conceded by all the parties that an excess exists in the Alexander League, regardless of whether the disputed strip is excluded from or included within the grant, and therefore the matter of acreage' can have no bearing upon this appeal.

Plaintiffs contend that the disputed strip comprises a vacancy between the Alexander League on the north and surveys 78, 211, 212 and 215 on the south, while defendants contend that the strip lies within the League and is included in the grant thereof —that the south boundary of the League coincides with the north boundary of 78, 211, 212 and 215. If surveyor John J. Dix placed a stake and mound, as' the southwest corner of the League in 1878, at the point claimed by defendants, but denied by plaintiffs and negatived by the jury finding, then under the theory of both plaintiffs and defendants, and adopted by the trial court, the claimed vacancy does not exist, and plaintiffs have no cause of action; otherwise, they have.

It is impossible in this opinion to undertake an analysis of all the evidence upon this issue, and yet to attempt even a summary of any part of it would require a summary of all of it, for all of it presents a composite mass from which no part may be fairly segregated and separately considered, because all are related and each has some bearing on the ultimate issue.

We may say, generally, however, that the evidence upon the issue submitted to the jury consists of literally hundreds of elements. There is' no direct evidence,- other than that gleaned from his field notes, which the jury impliedly -found were made- from an office survey,- that John J. Dix, in 1878, placed the stake and mound at the point claimed by plaintiffs, and rejected by the jury. The nearest approach to direct evidence was made by Hayes Dix, son of John J. Dix, and himself a surveyor. Hayes Dix testified that he accompanied his father when, in 1899, the latter was called upon to identify the southwest corner of the Alexander League in order to fix the beginning point of .a line for a fence; that although the alleged stake and mound marking that *210 corner was located far out in an open pasture of cactus and huisache, his father went straight to those markings, locating them without difficulty, and pointed them out to the witness as the markings he had placed there in 1878, twenty-one years before, as the southwest corner of the League. The witness further testified that in the course of his work as a surveyor he had had occasion to return to that point in 1908, 1914 and 1925, and each time observed the same markings at the same place indicated to him by his father in 1899, and that those markings, although disturbed, are still there in the same location. This evidence supports defendants’ theory, and, if true, expressly and by necessary implication destroys plaintiffs’ case. Plaintiffs do not attempt to impeach that testimony, except in degree, in that they contend, only, that the stone mound was placed on the ground by French in 1880, and (1) that French’s “X” tree witnesses the present location of the mound; or in the alternative (2) that the mound was placed by French at the point witnessed by his “X” tree, and subsequently moved 51 feet west and 6 feet north to its present location.

Plaintiffs undertook to destroy the effect of, and defendants to bolster, that testimony of Hayes Dix, which was sufficient to establish the corner in question at the point insisted upon by defendants, and which, if given full probative effect, would defeat the plaintiffs’ suit. The record, however, presents a great mass of additional evidence, parol and documentary, direct and hearsay; opinion, argumentative, expert, technical, practical; conclusions, assumptions, presumptions, inflections, implications. Numerous surveyors of long practical experience in that and like sections of the State, testified at length upon the issue under scrutiny here. They analyzed the territory and terrain, and applied their knowledge and experience to the issue. They testified to the engineering habits and peculiarities of Dix and French, respectively, their methods of surveying and markings, as well as to the customs of surveyors generally in that section. They sought to follow in theory the footsteps of Dix and French, and to explain, distinguish, question, reject or justify the diverse lines and markings of those original surveyors, respectively. When all that evidence is shuffled and sifted, examined and re-examined, and its separate and diverse parts weighed and considered, it discloses two conflicting theories of fact, the one supporting and the other refuting the contention of defendants that Surveyor John J.

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

Related

First State Bank of Corpus Christi v. James
471 S.W.2d 868 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1971)
Burkhart v. Horn
369 S.W.2d 680 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1963)
Graham v. Howard
249 S.W.2d 639 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1952)
Stanolind Oil & Gas Co. v. Wheeler
247 S.W.2d 187 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1952)
Etter v. Von Sternberg
244 S.W.2d 321 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1951)
Becker v. Mollenauer
234 S.W.2d 690 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1950)
Texas City Terminal Ry. Co. v. McLemore
225 S.W.2d 1007 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1949)
Kiel v. Mahan
214 S.W.2d 865 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1948)
Gillette Motor Transport Co. v. Whitfield
200 S.W.2d 624 (Texas Supreme Court, 1947)
Gillette Motor Transp. Co. v. Whitfield
197 S.W.2d 157 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1946)
Blaffer v. Powers
169 S.W.2d 536 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1943)
Stolley v. Petroleum Producers Co.
142 S.W.2d 242 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
137 S.W.2d 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petroleum-producers-co-v-stolley-texapp-1939.