Randall v. Gill

14 S.W. 134, 77 Tex. 351, 1890 Tex. LEXIS 1135
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 20, 1890
DocketNo. 6615
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 14 S.W. 134 (Randall v. Gill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Randall v. Gill, 14 S.W. 134, 77 Tex. 351, 1890 Tex. LEXIS 1135 (Tex. 1890).

Opinion

HENRY, Associate Justice.

—This suit was brought by appellees to try the title to 160 acres of land.

The controversy is as to whether the land is included in the James B. Bonham survey. If it is, it is admitted that appellants, who were defendants in the District Court, have title to it. If it is not included in the Bonham survey, it is admitted that it is owned by appellees.

Appellees claim that the land sued for by them lies between the Bonham and the Stephens and Hoxey surveys, while appellants contend that the south line of the Bonham is the north line of the Stephens and Hoxey surveys.

It appears that all three of said surveys were made by the same surveyor, as was also the Bowers survey, and that the Hoxey survey was made on the 19th day of June, 1846, and the others on the 12th day of June, 1847.

The patent describes the Bonham survey as beginning 718 varas south 71 degrees east from the northwest corner of the Asa Hoxey survey for its southeast corner; thence north 19 degrees east 2192 varas to its northeast corner; thence north 71 degrees west 3800 varas to its northwest corner; thence south 19 degrees west 2198 varas to its southwest corner; and thence south 71 degrees east 3800 varas to the beginning.

The northwest corner of the Hoxey is the northeast corner of the Stephens, and the courses of the north lines of the two surveys are the same as the course of the south line of the Bonham.

The northwest corner of the Hoxey and the northwest corner of the Bonham are both well defined and easily identified.

For a considerable distance from the northwest corner of the Bonham [354]*354on the course given for its southwest corner the west line of said survey is plainly marked. Neither the northeast nor southwest corners nor the north, south, or east lines of the Bonham are found marked on the ground as they should be found from the Hoxey corner as called for in the patent.

The evidence shows that by terminating the west line at the distance from the northwest corner called for in the patent, and from that point running the south, west [east], and north lines on the courses and for the distances called for in the patent, a marked southeast corner and marked south and east lines are found so as to close the Bonham survey with its proper quantity of land and not include any part of the land in controversy. But the marks of the corner and lines thus found are shown to be younger than the marks on the west line, and there is evidence showing that they were made subsequent to the date of the original survey.

The evidence shows that if the Bonham survey is made to begin at the point in the north line of the Hoxey called for in the patent, and the east line is prolonged on the course given in the patent 270 varas beyond the length of that line as called for in the patent, and if the northeast corner is established where such line will intersect the north line of the survey extended from the established northwest corner, and the west line is extended 270 varas beyond its distance given in the patent on the course given in the patent to where it will intersect as the southwest corner of the survey the south line extended from the southeast corner on the course given in the patent, such lines will include in the Bonham survey all of the land in controversy.

The north lines of the Hoxey or the Stephens surveys do not appear to be marked upon the ground, but, as we have said, the intersection of the northeast corner of the one with the northwest corner of the other is plainly marked and well defined, and there does not appear to be any uncertainty about where said surveys or their north lines are to be found.

The beginning or southeast corner of the Bonham, as called for in this line and at a given and short distance from a well known corner, should not be disregarded in the endeavor to ascertain the true situation of the survey.

The southeast and northwest corners of the survey being clearly ascertained, and the correctness of the course called for in the patent being demonstrated by its correspondence with the marked west line as well as with the north line of the Hoxey, and as course prevails over distance where the two can not be reconciled, the lines of the survey should be closed by the extension of lines from the northwest and southeast corners to their intersection.

The cause was tried before a jury, and surveyors, who were witnesses, were permitted to express their opinions to the effect that when the original survey was made none but the western line was actually run. In this we think there was error. It was not a fact to be proved by expert evi[355]*355deuce. The witnesses had surveyed the land and had described the facts as they found them to exist on the ground. That was as much as it was proper for them to be permitted to do. It was the province of the jury to conclude from the facts proved whether or not the lines were actually run.

It can not be doubted from the evidence that the surveyor actually ran the west line and actually found the northwest corner of the Bonham survey and the northwest corner of the Hoxey survey. There being no difficulty in finding the southeast corner of the Bonham survey from the last named point, and there being no uncertainty about the course of any of the lines, the actual lines of the survey may be ascertained with certainty from these facts, even if none of the other lines were ever actually surveyed.

It would be different if there was anything in the evidence to contradict or cast doubt upon the correctness of the two corners mentioned, but we find nothing.

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Bluebook (online)
14 S.W. 134, 77 Tex. 351, 1890 Tex. LEXIS 1135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/randall-v-gill-tex-1890.