Stark v. Adams

183 S.W. 58, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1318
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 2, 1915
DocketNo. 34. [fn*]
StatusPublished

This text of 183 S.W. 58 (Stark v. Adams) 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
Stark v. Adams, 183 S.W. 58, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1318 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

BROOKE, J.

This is an action of trespass to try title brought by appellees against appellants to recover 160 acres undivided out of S. P. R. R. Co. survey No. 1, Newton county, Tex. Plaintiffs’ claim is founded solely on the ten-year statute of limitation, they claiming occupancy for the time required, but holding under no instrument of purchase, while appellants, by the admission.' of the parties, own the complete record title from the sovereignty. There was a jury trial, and upon the answers of the jury to the several questions submitted to them by the court a judgment was entered in appellees’ favor, and, after motion for new trial was overruled, the cause has been properly appealed.

Appellees own and have occupied continuously during the time they have claimed to occupy the land sued for a 50-acre tract of land in the northeast corner of the E. Williams survey. Their deed, under which they own this 50 acres, has during that time been of record, and describes their land as beginning at the northeast corner of the E. Williams, running thence south and west and north to the north line of the Williams, and thence east to the beginning. The deed describes the land as a part of the Williams survey. The land sued for lies immediately east of this land of appellees. The Williams survey was made in 1840. The Crooks survey, joining the Williams on the north, was made in 1846 by the same surveyor. The call for the north line of the Williams running from its northwest to its northeast corner, according to its field notes, reads:

“Thence west rich dark soil at 300 varas middle Cow creek 5 varas wide running south at 330 varas, high hammock land, timber, oak, holly, gum, pine and dogwood, at 630 varas, white oak timber at 865 varas red oak line tree with some XX timber pine, oak, dogwood, hickory at 1,344 varas, stake.”

The length of this north line of Williams is 1,344 varas. The Crooks survey, made by Lewis, who surveyed the Williams, establishes its southeast corner in the north line of the Williams, and makes bearing trees and runs west with the Williams north line, passing the northwest corner of the Williams at 1,212 varas, leaving thereby the northeast corner of the Williams 132 varas east of the Crooks southeast corner. This southeast corner of the Crooks survey seems to be well identified, and now on the ground. No other point in the two surveys is located by evidence of corners and bearing trees called for in the grant.

[1] By his first assignment the appellant assails the action of the lower court in refusing the defendant’s requested peremptory instruction to return a verdict for the defendants, for the following reasons:

(a) The undisputed evidence shows all occupancy and possession of the plaintiff Emma G. Adams to have been in a portion of the Erasmus Williams survey, and to no portion of S. P. R. R. Co. section No. 1 sued for.

(b) The undisputed evidence shows plaintiffs’ possession proven in the case commenced in 1885, and continued until 1903, when she married one George Shankle, after which *59 slie moved from said property, and the possession of same was from said period of 1903 to 1910 jointly in said plaintiff and Shankle, who asserted a joint claim to said property, and after said period, 1910, was exclusively in the plaintiffs’ possession, and the evidence fails to show any ten-year continuous occupancy and possession in the plaintiffs of the premises sued for.

(c) That the undisputed evidence showed that there is a conflict between S. P. R. R. Co. section No. 1 and Erasmus Williams; that the said Williams is a senior survey, and they claim there can be no hostile or adverse holding by an occupant holding under a recorded title of a senior survey of any portion of said junior survey, unless such possession extends beyond the conflict, and onto the junior survey, beyond the conflict, sufficient in character to amount to an ouster by an occupant of the true owner of the junior survey not in conflict with the senior.

While this is a case of trespass to try title, it is dependent primarily upon the true location of the east boundary line of the Erasmus Williams survey. The Williams survey was located in 1840, and the Samuel Crooks survey in 1846, by Lewis, who had previously^ located the Williams survey. A careful investigation of the testimony develops the fact that there are no bearing trees called for in the original grant to be found at the northeast corner of the Williams which are now standing. While some of the surveyors testified concerning the northeast corner of the said Williams, and as to its true location, they admitted, when tested, that the bearing trees called for in the Williams grant, together with the marks called for on said trees, were absent, and where they fixed the corner, or attempted to fix the same, the marks on the trees were admittedly made by a surveyor named Cox, in 1885, and none of the surveyors could, with certainty, show any mark or indication of the footsteps of the original surveyor made at the place where the appellants claim the northeast corner of said Williams survey to be or tending to show that it was at the point claimed by ap-pellees. The field notes of the Wililams survey are as follows:

“Surveyed for Erasmus Williams for 320 acres of land situated on Middle creek adjoining the N. B. of William S. Cahay 320-acre tract, being the quantity of land to which he is entitled by virtue of certificate No. Ill issued by the board of land commissioners for Jasper county, beginning 125 varas from the northeast corner of said Cahay survey, stake from which a sweet gum mark 6. W. bears N. 15 E. 5.6 varas and a sweet gum mark G. B. W. bears N. 25 W. 1.8 varas; thence north rich land black soil at 620 varas sweet gum line tree, at 900 varas, small branch brushy oak, pine land, dark soil at 1,344 varas, second corner, black rich land, a stake from a sweet gum mark G. W. bears S. 38 deg. 30' E. 5.6 varas sweet gum, mark G. W. bears N. 58 deg. 30' W. 19.6 varas; thence W. rich land dark soil at 300 varas middle of Cow creek 5 varas wide, runs S. at 330 varas, high hammock land, timber oak, holly, gum, pine and dogwood, at 630 varas, white oak timber at 865 varas, red oak line tree, land here some ir-roack timber pine, dogwood, hickory, etc., at 1,344 varas, stake from which a black gum G. W. bears S-. 16 W. 8.6 varas from black gum G. W. N. 63 E. 5.6 varas; thence S. land some broken dark soil at 300 varas, small branch runs E. 450 varas, level dark soil at 800 varas, pine line tree at 1,344 varas, a stake, fourth corner, from which a sweet gum marked G. W. and W. R. bears S. 84 deg. 30’ W. 11.6 varas, and a post oak marked G. W. and W. R. bears N. 70 E. 5 varas; thence E. good hammock land at 250 varas, a branch runs S. E. at 300 varas, rich land, dark soil, stiff land, at 985 varas, middle Cow creek or West creek 6 varas wide, runs S. at 1,344 varas, place of beginning; two-thirds of this survey is good land, the remg. land one-third second grade land, surveyed June 27, 1840. M. B. Lewis, Practical Surveyor.
“James King. Sidney Wortham, C. B.”

The field notes were filed in the land office July 7, 1840. Six years later Lewis, the surveyor, surveyed the Samuel Crooks land on the north, and the field notes of the Crooks were as follows:

“State of Texas, County of Jasper.
“Survey for William F.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
183 S.W. 58, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stark-v-adams-texapp-1915.