Shelor v. Humble Oil & Refining Co.

103 S.W.2d 207
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 4, 1937
DocketNo. 4678
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 103 S.W.2d 207 (Shelor v. Humble Oil & Refining Co.) 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
Shelor v. Humble Oil & Refining Co., 103 S.W.2d 207 (Tex. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

HALL, Chief Justice.

J. W. Shelor and wife sued in trespass to try title to recover about ninety acres of land lying in Galveston county, and described in their pleadings, making E. E. Townes, S. C. Churchill, Humble Oil & Refining Company, State National Bank of Houston, and. Federal Land Bank of Houston, defendants. The parties will be designated here as plaintiffs and defendants, respectively, as they were in the trial court.

In addition to the formal averments, the plaintiffs alleged that the land, as properly located on the ground, includes a strip 350 feet wide off the west side of a tract of land claimed and/or owned by the defendants out of the same survey, and which defendants had fenced with such other lands claimed and/or owned by them. In its final analysis this is a boundary suit. Schley v. Blum, 85 Tex. 551, 22 S.W. 667; McDonald et al. v. Humble Oil & Refining Co. (Tex.Civ.App.) 78 S.W.(2d) 1068, 1069, 1071.

By formal petition plaintiffs sought to recover damages in the sum of $15,000, alleged to be the value of oil produced from the land sued for and converted by the Humble Oil & Refining Company.

All defendants claim under E. E. Townes, and all pleaded the general issue. Townes . and the Oil & Refining Company pleaded the three, five, ten, two, and four years’ statutes of limitation. Townes, in the alternative (and only in the event of adverse judgment), prayed for reimbursement for improvements of the alleged value of $1,500 made by him in good faith.

By trial amendment the Oil & Refining Company alleged the drilling of an oil well in good faith at the cost of $56,820.25, which sum it was agreed by the parties to be correct. It was also stipulated during the trial that the oil produced from the well on the strip of land in controversy by the Oil & Refining Company prior to October 10, 1935, was of the value of $13,248.18.

The plaintiffs assert that the strip of land in controversy lies between a line marked by S. J. Maas, a surveyor, with two-inch iron pipes in 1913, said line being ' approximately 917.a feet east of the undisputed east line of the J. S. Sherman survey, at the point where such line marked by Maas intersects a county road crossing the B. B. B. & C. R. R. Company survey, and the line drawn parallel to and 1,390 feet, or possibly only 1,367.8 feet, east of the east line of the Sherman survey.

Plaintiffs contend that the strip in controversy is included within the boundaries of a tract of 340 acres, more or less, off of the west side of the B. B. B. & C. R. R. Company survey conveyed July 6, 1888, by one Joseph Franklin, the common source of title of all parties to the suit, to Edward Webster, Sr., under whom plaintiffs claim. Defendants insist that said strip is a part of a tract of 300 acres off the east side of said survey reserved and particularly excepted by the terms of said deed from its operation.

The trial court found that the east line of the B. B. B. & C. R. R. Company survey, as originally marked, would automatically, under the terms of plaintiffs’ deed (which describes the land as that being conveyed by the deed from Franklin to Webster), fix the east line of their land at the point contended for by them.

In addition to the controversy as to the east line of the tract conveyed by Franklin to Gump, defendants contended: (1) That the present controversy had been determined by a previous judgment of the district court of Galveston county, and (2) that the line in "dispute had been established at the same location as would be given it if all the facts recited in the judgment could be taken as true, and which location is the one contended for by defendants.

[209]*209The judgment referred to was rendered in the case of J. F. Magale et al. v. Gulf City Trust Company et al., numbered 17282 on the docket of the district court of Galveston county.

The trial court sustained the defendants' contentions as to agreed boundary, acquiescence, and estoppel, and rendered judgment in favor of defendants. At the request of plaintiffs, the court filed findings of fact and conclusions of law, which were excepted to.

The strip of land in litigation lies wholly within the boundaries of the Buffalo Bayou, Brazos & Colorado Railroad survey, Patent No. 424, vol. 15, dated March 20, 1883, and will be referred to hereinafter as the B. B. B. & C. survey. This survey, as shown by the accompanying plat, lies between what is shown to be the Sherman and Jones surveys; and east of the Jones survey, as shown by the county map, lies the Edwards league:

The land claimed by Shelor and purchased by him is the western portion of said B. B. B. & C. survey, while the lands claimed by Townes et al. are the eastern portion of said survey and the Jones survey.

The B. B. B. & C. survey was originally surveyed in 1840 by Surveyor Banks for Wm. Garlick, but it was abandoned and no patent was ever issued by the state based upon his field notes. Later, in May, 1889, the tract was again surveyed for one Tarvin. No patent was issued upon the field notes of that survey. When the survey was made for Garlick by Banks, he also returned field notes for the Jones and the Martin (which is now the Sherman) surveys.

Plaintiffs' original petition describes the land sued for as follows: “Three Hundred and Forty acres (340) of land (more or less) taken off the west side of a tract granted by the State of Texas to the Buffalo Bayou, Brazos & Colorado Railroad Company by patent No. 424, Vol. IS, dated March 20, 1883, containing six hundred and forty acres (640) of land, situated on the north side of Dickinson Bayou in the County of Galveston, State of Texas, same being the same property described in deed from Joseph Franklin to Edward Webster, Sr., by special warranty deed dated July 6, 1888, and recorded in Vol. 68, page 488, of the Deed Records of Galveston County, Texas; and being the same property conveyed by Edward Webster, Sr., to E. J. Gump by general warranty deed dated March 23, 1892, recorded in Vol. 104, page 47, of the Deed Records of Galveston County, Texas.”

The petition in a boundary suit should describe the land by metes and bounds, and this should be done by each party, describing the lines by objects, if any, to be found on the ground. Where the description in the field notes is doubtful, and the objects called for cannot be found on the ground, the pleadings should accurately describe the land as the lines actually exist, and allege that such description is correct. Edwards v. Smith, 71 Tex. 156, 9 S.W. 77; Stephens v. Motl, 81 Tex. 115, 16 S.W. 731; Provident Nat. Bank v. Webb, 60 Tex.Civ.App. 321, 128 S.W. 426; Durden v. Roland (Tex.Civ.App.) 269 S.W. 274; Bailey v. [210]*210Baker (Tex.Civ.App.) 42 S.W. 124. But the question of the sufficiency of the pleadings is not urged here, and the defects are waived.

Accompanying the transcript we find more than fifty “exhibits.” Some are referred to in the briefs. These exhibits consist of plats, maps, field notes by numerous surveyors, and photostatic copies of maps, field notes, with blueprints showing the lands involved, which also include much of the surrounding country and a part of the Gulf of Mexico; copies from the surveyor’s offices, the General Land Office; copies of testimonios, patents, grants dating from the day of and signed by “Esteven F.

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103 S.W.2d 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shelor-v-humble-oil-refining-co-texapp-1937.