Southwestern Settlement & Development Co. v. Stanburg

248 S.W. 108
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 10, 1923
DocketNo. 892.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 248 S.W. 108 (Southwestern Settlement & Development Co. v. Stanburg) 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
Southwestern Settlement & Development Co. v. Stanburg, 248 S.W. 108 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

This was a boundary line suit instituted by appellants against appellees in the' form of trespass to try title, and in which appellees answered by a plea of not guilty. N

The question involved was the true location on the ground of the south boundary line of Texas & New Orleans section 12, in Sabine county, Tex. Appellees contend that this line is located 222 varas north of the north line of the Jacks survey, and on this theory they purchased from the state, as vacant land, the strip lying between the north boundary line of the Jacks and the south boundary line of section No. 12, referred to in this record as the Charley Stanburg claim. Appellants contend that the south boundary line of section 12 is practically coincident with the* north boundary line of the Jacks, and that the south boundary line of what appellees contend was vacant land is, in fact,-the south boundary line of section 12. On this theory the land in controversy — 23.7 acres — is a part of section 12, and, belongs to appellants.

Appellants have made a very extended statement from the evidence. Appellees have filed a short brief, but make no statement whatever. Therefore the statement made by us is taken from appellants’ brief.

The field notes of section 12 are as follows:

“Survey No. 12.
“The State of Texas, County of Sabine.
“Field notes and plat of a survey of 640 a. of land made for the Texas & New Orleans Railroad Company by virtue of land scrip No. 820 issued to said company by Wm. S. Hotch-kiss, commissioner of claims, at Austin, Texas, February 13, A. D. 1861. '
“Said survey is situated upon the waters of Tebo & Housen Bayou beginning at the southeast corner of survey No. 11, at a stake from which a pine 8 in. dia. bears north 5 vrs. and pine N. 40 deg. E. 4 vrs.
“Thence S. 9 deg. W. 980 vs. to branch 1 vrs. bears S. E. 990 vs. to black gum 10 in. line tree 1,480 vrs. intersected the north boundary line of John Clark’s league for second corner a stake from which a red oak bears N. 79 deg. E. 2 varas dist. and a post oak N. 75 deg. E. 9 vrs. dist.
“Thence with John Clark’s north boundary S. 85- deg. W. 400 vs. to an old corner of Robert Roundtree’s survey — 1,600 vs. to the northwest corner of John Clark’s league stake and mound, from which a pine 20 in. dia. bears S. S3 deg. E. 3 vrs. and a sweet gum 10 in. bears S. 25 deg. W. 4.6 vrs. dist.
“Thence with John Clark’s western line S. 5 E. 810 vs. to fourth corner a stake, from which a pine 12 in. in diameter bears N. 13 deg. E. 3 vs. and a pine 10 in. dia. south 6 vs.
“Thence north 81 deg. west 546.5 vs. to fifth corner on the east boundary of survey No. — a stake from which a pine bears S. 85 deg. E. 5 vs. and a pine S. 22 deg. W. 8 vs.
“Thence N. 9 deg. E. 257 vs. to branch 1 vara bears 487 vs. to old road, 1017 vs. branch 1 vrs. wide, bears east, 1027 vs. pine 10 in line tree, 1,631 vrs. to the southeast corner of survey No. 9; thence along the east boundary line of survey No. 9 1,021 vrs. intersected the southwest corner of survey No. 12. (total length of' this line being 2,652 to fifth corner) a pine 6 in. bears marked X from which a pine bears N. 10 deg. E. 3 vrs. distant 4 vs.
“Thence S. 81 deg. E. along the east boundary of survey No. 11, 1,900 vs. to the place of beginning.
“Bearing trees all marked X.
“Surveyed October 21, A. D. 1873.”

*109 All parties agree as to tíre location on the ground of the first, second, and third corners called for in the field notes.

Appellants offered two witnesses, competent surveyors, who testified that the fourth corner in the field notes was found by them on the west line of the John Clark, as called for, at a point 802 varas south 5° east from the third corner of the field notes, which corner is also the northwest corner of the John Clark. The bearing trees called for were not found, but they found stumps, which they identified as being the stumps of the old bearing trees on the course and distance called for. They ran the south boundary line from that point north 82° west, instead of north 81° west, as called .for in the field notes, and found an old marked line. On this line was an old bearing tree, which another witness of appellants had known and recognized as a boundary tree on this line for more than 40 years. At the intersection of the line run by appellants’ surveyors with the east line of section 10, they found a corner of long standing, but did not find the bearing trees called for in the field notes.

One of the original chain bearers testified for appellants, and located the south boundary line of section 12 and its fourth and fifth corners in accordance with appellants’ contention.

The official maps .of Sabine county have shown a vacancy between the south boundary, line of section 12 and the north boundary line of the Jacks, but the north boundary line of the Jacks calls to run with an old line — now identified as the south boundary line of section 10 — to “an old corner,” now identified-as the southeast corner of section 10; “thence S. 0 deg. W. 55 vrs. to stake for comer; thence S. 81 deg. E. 594 vrs. intersected the west line of the John Clark league.” If this call were correct, there would be a vacancy between the Jacks and section 12, even when that section is located according to the contention of appellants. In platting the Jacks, the land office located it in •accordance with the call as just given, but, on the record as now before us, it appears that the parties to this appeal recognize that this call should read “north 9 deg. east, 55 varas,” and thence on the proper call to the west line of the Clark. If the north line of the Jacks is thus located, it is practically coincident with the south line of section 12 when located according to appellants’ contentions.

The official map of Sabine county, made subsequent to the patenting of the supposed vacancy to appellees, locates the Charley Stanburg claim as shown by the old maps, thus placing it on the map almost entirely south of the location made by Stanburg on the ground.

The surveyor who made the field notes to section 12 attached to his report a plat of the section showing the location of the south boundary line as now contended for by appellants. Section 12 is short in area, even when the south line is located according to appellants’, contentions. Appellees’ contentions would further reduce its area. Appellants locate the southeast corner at a distance of 802 varas from the third corner. Appellées locate that corner at a distance of 573 varas from the third comer. From its field notes the line' should be 810 varas. As appellants locate the fifth or southwest corner, the west line is short about 58 varas. On appellees’ location it would be short about 280 varas. The original field notes call for the west line to cross only two branches. On appellants’ contention this line now crosses five branches, and on appellees’ contention it crosses four branches.

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Bluebook (online)
248 S.W. 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwestern-settlement-development-co-v-stanburg-texapp-1923.