Ross v. Houston Oil Fields Ass'n

88 S.W.2d 586
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 18, 1935
DocketNo. 10103.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 88 S.W.2d 586 (Ross v. Houston Oil Fields Ass'n) 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. Houston Oil Fields Ass'n, 88 S.W.2d 586 (Tex. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinions

This suit involves the title to approximately 126 acres of land in section 91 of A. C. H. B. survey in Brazoria county, the common source of claims between the parties being J. H. Burnett, the appellants *Page 587 claiming as Burnett's sole heir and her assignee, respectively, and the appellees as remote vendees down under a deed to Fontaine Beers that Burnett acknowledged April 8 of 1893.

The trial having been without a jury, the court held the title to be in the appellees — both under the Burnett deed construed as having conveyed out of him to Fontaine Beers all of section 91, and under the ten and twenty-five years statutes of limitation — filing these findings of fact and conclusions of law in support of the judgment:

"Findings of Fact.
"The two Little Surveys are the oldest surveys in the northwest part of Brazoria County. The H. N. Little 1/3 League was surveyed April 24, 1838, and granted July 18, 1845. The Erastus Little 1/3 League was surveyed April 24, 1838, and granted July 18, 1846. These two surveys each form a square. The H. N. Little adjoins the Erastus Little on the southeast with common or continuing north and south lines. The original surveyor's field notes and the field notes in the grants from the State describe the north line of the two Little surveys as running N. 48 deg. W. and the south line S. 48 deg. E. and the west line as running S. 42 deg. W. and the east line N. 42 deg. E. All the lines of the two Little Surveys, and particularly their north line have for more than thirty years been well marked on the ground and universally recognized and are not in dispute in this suit.

"The Thomas Spraggin Survey, a much larger survey than either the Little Surveys adjoins the H. N. Little on the south and is now, has been for more than thirty years, and is so shown on all maps, including the General Land Office map, shown as having a north line running N. 48 deg. W. and a south line running S. 48 deg. E. and a west line running S. 42 deg. W. and an east line running N. 42 deg. E. the same as the Little Surveys. The several surveys lying south and east of the Spraggins all have lines running in the same direction. The surveys coming down from Clear Creek on the north toward the Little Surveys are known as the H. T. B.R. R. Surveys and were all surveyed by the same surveyor on March 8, 1859. These surveys are in perfect squares running due east and west and due north and south. Survey No. 23, H. T. B., patented May 26, 1868, conflicts slightly at its southwest corner with the Erastus Little. Survey No. 24, H. T. B., patented January 9, 1902, adjoins Survey No. 23 on the east. The way the two Little Surveys and Surveys Nos. 23 and 24, H. T. B., are laid out on the ground leaves a triangular strip of land bounded on the south by the two Little Surveys and on the north by said Sections 23 and 24, H. T. B., and on the east by the Spraggin-H. T. B. Section 33 and the Hennel Stevens survey. It was this triangular piece of land which was surveyed and patented to J. H. Burnett as Section 91, A. C. H. B.

"The original surveyor's field notes, as well as the field notes in the patent to Burnett, described Section 91 as follows:

"`Beginning at the N.E. corner of H. N. Little 1/3 League Survey on the upper line of T. Spraggin Survey:

"`Thence N. 48 deg. W. with the N. line of H. N. Little and E. Little 3375 varas to W. Line of Survey No. 23, H. T. B.;

"`Thence E. 2885 varas with lower line of 23 and 24 to stake on S. Line of 24;

"`Thence S. 1403 varas to stake in prairie;

"`Thence east 24 varas to N.W. corner of No. 33, H. T. B.;

"`Thence S. 42 deg. W. 599 varas with upper line of said Spraggin tract to place of beginning, containing 640 acres.'

"It is apparent, and I so find as a fact, that the original surveyor in surveying Section 91 did not take into account the conflict between Section 23, H. T. B., with the Erastus Little and hence ran the south line of Section 91 too far to the northwest and, accordingly, his north line too far to the north, thereby creating a conflict with Sections 23 and 24. The field notes for Section 91 must be interpreted as running from the northeast corner of the H. N. Little along the north line of said Little Surveys to the south line of Section 23 and thence east along the south line of Sections 23 and 24 to a point opposite the stake called for in the original field notes of Section 91 as its northeast corner. According to the original field notes of Section 91, said section conflicted with Section 23 78.3 acres and with Section 24, 45.2 acres, making a total conflict of 123.5. This reduced the acreage of Section 91, as originally patented, to approximately 516.5 acres. Section 91, however, seems to have been regarded by Burnett up to the time he parted with title thereto in September, 1892, as containing 640 acres.

"Sometime prior to September 10, 1892, Fontaine and Beers began negotiating with *Page 588 Burnett for the purchase of Section 91. It seems that about the year 1892 one Barrow, a resident of Brazoria County, conceived the idea that the Little Surveys and the Spraggin and those to the south and east had all been surveyed by the original surveyors with north and south lines running N. 37 1/2 deg. W. and S. 37 1/2 deg. E., respectively. He seems to have converted one Stockwell, Assistant County Surveyor of Brazoria County at that time, to that view. Both Stockwell and Barrow wrote communications to the General Land Office about 1892, explaining why they held that view, and endeavored to get the General Land Office to recognize and adopt their position. They contended that the variation between the magnetic and the true north at the time the surveys were originally made was 9 1/2 deg. E. and that the original surveyor or surveyors showed this fact on their original field notes and stated that the surveys were made at the magnetic variation of 9 1/2 deg. E. They argued to the Land Office that said Office had misinterpreted the field notes of the original surveyor and had patented the land at N. 48 deg. W. instead of N. 37 1/2 deg. W. The Land Office, however, refused to recognize Barrow's and Stockwell's contention and adhered to a line N. 48 deg. W. I also find that the residents of Brazoria County in and about said Surveys also refused to adopt Barrow's and Stockwell's contention.

"It appears from the evidence that Fontaine and Beers employed Stockwell to survey Section 91 incident to their purchase thereof from Burnett. Stockwell furnished the field notes that went into the deed from Burnett to Fontaine, which read as follows:

"`All that certain tract or parcel of land situated in Brazoria County, Texas, and known and described as Section 91, A. C. H. B. Survey, Patent No. 188, Vol. 26, patented to Burnett and Kilpatrick, and described by metes and bounds as follows:

"`Beginning at a point on the upper line of T. Spraggin Survey 597.5 varas from his north corner, thence N. 37 1/2 deg. W. 2808 varas along the N.E. Line of the H. N. Little to corner;

"`Thence E. 2212.7 varas to corner on the south line of 24, H. T. B.;

"`Thence south with the east (west) line of H. Stevens Survey 1444 varas to upper line of 33 H. T. B.;

"`Thence W. 24 varas to its N.W. corner;

"`Thence S. 51 deg. 12' W. 597.5 varas to place of beginning, containing 514.16 acres.'

"Since 1892 neither J. H. Burnett nor anyone in his behalf nor his estate nor any of his heirs have ever assessed for taxes any of the land in Section 91. A. C. H. B., Brazoria County, Texas. Burnett died in 1902, and the inventory of his estate does not show any land in Section 91.

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Bluebook (online)
88 S.W.2d 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-v-houston-oil-fields-assn-texapp-1935.