Polk County v. Howe

248 S.W.2d 189, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 2060
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 28, 1952
DocketNo. 2910
StatusPublished

This text of 248 S.W.2d 189 (Polk County v. Howe) 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
Polk County v. Howe, 248 S.W.2d 189, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 2060 (Tex. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

GRISSOM, Chief Justice.

Polk County sued Felix V. Howe and others in trespass to try title to several tracts of land lying northeast of the Brazos River in Baylor County and a small tract southwest of said river. The court instructed the jury to return a verdict for the defendants claiming the land northeast of the river and submitted the question of the true location of the southeast corner of the Polk County School Land Survey. The jury was asked to determine whether the southeast corner, as fixed by the field notes in the patent, is located at a point fixed by Rike and Jones, Polk County’s surveyors, or at a point fixed by Smith, defendants’ surveyor. The jury found the southeast corner to be at the point fixed by defendants’ surveyor. Judgment was rendered for defendants and Polk County has appealed.

Appellant’s points are that the court erred (1) in refusing to instruct the jury that the southeast corner is at the point fixed by Polk County’s surveyors; (2) in instructing a verdict for defendants north of the river, because the field notes of the original survey of Polk County’s School Land, on their face, show a part of said land to be located north of the river and included in t)he location made for Polk County; (3) in refusing to instruct the jury not to consider “that there is more acreage in the Polk County School Land than * * * called for in the patent field notes” in determining the location of the southeast corner; (4) in refusing to sustain Polk County’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict to establish the survey so that it begins at the southeast corner “as judicially determined” in Polk County v. Stevens, Tex.Civ.App., 143 S.W. 204, because the original field notes called for the location of the southeast corner on the north line of T. E. & L. Survey No. 2131, and the undisputed evidence showed the southeast corner was 850 varas west of the northeast corner of Survey 2131 and that the corner was marked and the survey located.

Polk County contends it was conclusively shown that the original survey of the Polk County School Land crossed the Brazos River and contained more than 1,000 acres of land north of the river. It says that in an award of school land to a county, it has always been permissible to cross a river and that in addition thereto the legislature, in March, 1883, Gen. Laws 1883, p. 28, validated school land surveys that crossed a navigable river. See Gammel’s Laws of Texas, Vol. 9, pages 28 and 334.

It was stipulated that defendants have such title to the land sued for as the original pre-emption patentees had. It was agreed that the Brazos River is, in law, a navigable river, including all portions adjacent to the land sued for. The statement of facts contains the following stipulation :

“It is agreed between the parties that the northwest corner of Polk County School Land is now located as shown by the Smith Survey, being defendant’s exhibit No. 7.”

The real controversy as to the land north of the river is whether or not the Polk .'County School Land Survey crossed the Brazos River, a navigable stream, in the third north call on ■ its • northeast line, so that it conflicted with the homestead pre-emption surveys of the defendants north of the river. By its instructed verdict, the trial court held, as a matter of law, that said survey stopped on the south bank of the Brazos, did not cross the river, and, therefore, did not include the land sued for north of the river.

Defendant’s exhibit 7 is a map of the Polk County School Land Survey prepared by defendants’ surveyor, Smith. In connection with the stipulation that the northwest corner is at the point fixed by Smith, it is here pointed out that the southeast corner, as shown by said exhibit, was found by the jury to be at the point located by Smith and that it is about 755 varas west of the point claimed by Polk [192]*192County to be the southeast corner. Polk County’s surveyors testified that in reaching- the agreed northwest corner of the Polk County School Land Survey, they went more than 531 varas further west than called for in the patent.

There was also- a controversy between Polk County and the defendants claiming land south of the river which was settled by t)he verdict fixing the southeast corner. Defendant’s surveyor surveyed the entire Polk County School Land Survey on all sides and found no excess. He began at its northwest corner, as pointed out to him by Thurman and by Stribling, Throckmorton County’s Surveyor, where he found iron rust indicating the “wagon wheel corner,” where a wagon spindle had been buried to fix the corner, and ran the survey lines in reverse back to the place of beginning. Here, Smith also found a witness tree and a marked rock called for by the sketch from the land office. Smith also checked this point by tying it in with other surveys to the north and finding a witness tree and marks called for. He also surveyed it in the opposite direction. He also located the southwest corner of said survey, which was also pointed out 'by Stribling, which location was in accord with his survey. Smith’s southwest corner was the same as the southwest corner located in 1890 by the subdivider of said survey, W. A. Eaihart, special surveyor for Polk County, as shown by Eahart’s map of said survey, introduced by plaintiff.

Polk -County’s surveyors surveyed only the northeast side, beginning at a place pointed out by John Davis, and a portion of its south boundary. The evidence as to the true location of the southeast corner of the Polk County’s School Land was conflicting. The jury determined that conflict in favor of defendants -and the evidence is sufficient to sustain the finding.

In 18'39, the Republic of Texas set apart three leagues of land to each county for schools. 2 Gammel’s Laws of Texas, 134. Pursuant to this act, a survey was made for Polk County, in 1859, by Posey H. Gordon, Deputy Surveyor of the Young Land District, which included Baylor County, which survey was certified to by Swindell, District Surveyor, and recorded in his office and in Polk County, in 1859, and filed in the Land Office. Contrary to appellant’s contention, the original field notes of said survey, which are the same as those in the patent, show that the survey was located south and west of the Brazos River. The second and third north calls in the northeast line expressly stopped on the bank of the Brazos River and bearing trees were called for at each stop on the bank of the river. The second north call is “thence north 3,758 varas to a stake on the barde of the Brazo-s River upon which two cottonwoods bear south 36°. ’ 500 vrs.” The third north call is “thence north crossing a creek at 5,376 varas, a stake on the bank of the Brazos River from which a cottonwood brs. N. 8° E. 50 vrs.”

The field notes call for crossing valleys and prairies and a creek but they nowhere call 'for crossing a river. On the contrary, they call for two stops on the bank of the Brazos River, with calls for bearing trees, and the stops could not be elsewhere than on the south bank of the Brazos. These are the original field notes and they are copied in the patent from the State to Polk County. The surveyor’s plat in the corner of the field notes show that said survey did not cross the river; there are lines indicating that at all material points the Brazos River adjoined said survey on its northeast. Throckmorton County’s maps, made in 1859 and in 1880, introduced by Polk County, show the same location. See State v. Atlantic Oil Producing Co., Tex.Civ.App., 110 S.W.2d 953, 958 (W.R.).

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Bluebook (online)
248 S.W.2d 189, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 2060, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/polk-county-v-howe-texapp-1952.