Ross v. Green

128 S.W.2d 477, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 1121
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 12, 1939
DocketNo. 3383.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 128 S.W.2d 477 (Ross v. Green) 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
Ross v. Green, 128 S.W.2d 477, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 1121 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

WALKER, Chief Justice.

This was an action in trespass to try title by defendants in error, W. J. Green et al., against plaintiffs in error, W. W. Ross et al., for the title and possession of a tract of 83.9 acres of land in Liberty County, on allegations that the land in controversy was part of the A. B. Hardin one-half league, granted to Augustin B. Hardin in 1831. Plaintiffs in error answered by pleas of not guilty and limitation; their theory was that the land in controversy was part of the Swail survey granted to William Swail in 1831. These two surveys are rec *478 tangular in shape, with the Trinity River the common boundary line between them; the Hardin survey on the east side of the river, and the Swail survey on the west side. On trial to the court without a jury, judgment was in favor of defendants in error for the land in controversy. Plaintiffs in error have duly prosecuted their appeal to this court.

In support of the judgment, the trial court made and filed the following fact conclusions:

“1. This is a suit in trespass to try title by the plaintiffs, W. J. Green and Mrs. Adelia Cessna, against the defendants, for the title and possession of a part of the A. B. Hardin one-half league of Liberty County, Texas, and being that portion of said league known as the Mary Conley Bend, which lies west of the present course of the Trinity River, but prior to the sinking of the Mary Conley (a steamboat which formerly plyed the Trinity River,) said land was on the East side of the course of said Trinity River, and being all of said property in said league bounded on the north by the present course of the Trinity River and on all other sides by the old course of the Trinity River, together with that certain one-half of the old river bed adjacent and riparian to the land above described; and all of said property is particularly described in plaintiffs’ petition.

“2. I find that the A. B. Hardin ½ league was patented by the State of Coa-huilla and Texas to A. B. Hardin on May 3, 1931, by field notes, which call for the west line of said one half league to the Trinity River.

“3. When patented on May 3, 1831, I find that the Trinity River which formed the west boundary of the A. B. Hardin ½ League, was located as contended for by the plaintiffs in this trespass to try title suit, and that the river made a complete horseshoe bend around the land now in controversy, and followed the old river bend, which is now visible upon the ground. The center line of said Trinity River as it existed then and as now found upon the ground, is described as follows, to-wit: * * *

“5. The location of said Trinity River in 1831, was in the old channel particularly described above, and was such that the land in controversy in this suit was and still is a part of the A. B. Hardin ½ league, and was originally located on the East side of the Trinity River; but after the Mary Conley steamboat sank in the neck of the river bend now known as Mary Conley Bend, and as a result of the overflow and current of the river, the Trinity River cut a new channel through the neck of said bend as shown by the attached plat, leaving the land in controversy as well as the original channel on the West side of the present Trinity River Channel. After such cut, which was visible, the stream suddenly left its old bed and formed a new one, and the cut formed a new channel through which the main flow of the river has continued until the present time. The river deserted its original bed and forced for itself a new channel across the head of the Mary Conley bend, separating the land in controversy from the other portion of said tract in such a manner that the land in controversy can still be identified and was identified as having been separated from the rest of the A. B. Hardin ½ league and left on the west side of the present new channel. The change in channels was perceptible, and the land now left on the west side of the new channel still can be identified as the same land that was' originally on the east side of the old river channel. The old abandoned river bed and all of the land in controversy lies above tidewater.”

Plaintiffs in error attack, as without support in the evidence, the fact conclusion that the land in controversy was part of the Hardin survey in 1831, when it was granted to Augustin B. Hardin. We give the following brief summary of the facts, which support the findings of the court:

In the first part of 1872, the course of the Trinity River put the land in controversy on the east bank of the river as contended for by defendants in error, making the horseshoe bend described by the court in his fact conclusions; later in that year the river changed its course, putting the land in controversy on the west bank. In 1872, prior to the time the river changed its course, the channel of the river around the horseshoe bend was navigable by steamboats, and had been at all times within the memory of living witnesses. Nev Green, seventy-one years old, so testified; Henderson Day, eighty-one years old, so testified; Jim Jackson, seventy-two years old, so testified — these three witnesses had known the land in controversy all their lives and testified to the facts as they remembered them from their earliest boyhood. When he was a boy in 1904, Roscoe Davis, forty-one years old, lived on the Hardin survey *479 on the banks of the Trinity River, just across from the land in controversy. At that time this .land was claimed by W. B. Green, the ancestor of defendants in error, as part of the A. B. Hardin survey; Green exercised general dominion over it and appropriated the timber on it. The owners of the Hardin survey claimed the land in controversy as part of the Hardin survey, and this claim was continuous within the memory of the living witnesses. This claim was based on the theory that the horseshoe bend existed from 1872 back to 1831. In 1932, Hugh Grimes made the following contract with Champ Ross, through whom plaintiffs in error claim, to occupy and use part of the Swail survey:

“Dear Sir: I hereby give you permission to use the portion of the south one-third of the Swail Survey in Liberty County, Texas, belonging to me which fronts on Old River for the purpose of renting boats for fishing purposes and also for placing such beehives thereon as you desire, this license being terminable at any time that I may elect to terminate the same. In consideration of giving you this license you have agreed and by accepting hereunder do agree to prevent any trespassing on the property or cutting timber therefrom unless I give my consent first to the cutting of the timber. It is expressly understood that I reserve the right to terminate this license at any time at my pleasure.
“Yours truly, Champ Ross.”

Hugh Grimes was acquainted with the land in controversy, the “Mary Conley Bend”; he was living on the west side of the river; holding under Champ Ross he made no effort to take possession of the “Mary Conley Bend,” the land in controversy; while he was living on the Swail, under his contract with Ross, he heard of threats to cut the timber on the “Mary Conley Bend”; he notified Champ Ross of these threats and received from him the following reply, read into the record by counsel for plaintiffs in error:

“Mr. H. E. Grimes, Route 1, Dayton, Texas.

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Related

Ross v. Green
139 S.W.2d 565 (Texas Supreme Court, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
128 S.W.2d 477, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 1121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-v-green-texapp-1939.