State v. Heard

199 S.W.2d 191, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 631
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 18, 1946
DocketNo. 9594.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 199 S.W.2d 191 (State v. Heard) 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
State v. Heard, 199 S.W.2d 191, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 631 (Tex. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

BAUGH, Justice.

Suit was by the State and the Town of Refugio (hereafter referred to as the Town) against numerous named individuals, and the Houston Oil Company, in trespass to try title to 15.65 acres of land, being a part of the bed of the Mission River in Refugio County. The W. R. R. Oil Company and Jack E. Gaines, holders of an oil and gas lease on the land sued for, intervened. The portion of the river bed here involved lies in the western part of a grant of four leagues made by Coa-huila and Texas to the Town of Refugio in 1834. The suit was filed on March 6, 1939. The defendants, appellees here, claimed title to said lands under the ten-year statute of limitation by virtue of the provisions of the Relinquishment Act, commonly referred to as the Small Bill, which became effective March 3, 1929. See Art. 5414a, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. Trial was to the court without a jury before Judge J. O. Moore, who died after the close of the evidence but before judgment. The record of that trial, without further evidence, was thereupon submitted to his successor in office, and judgment rendered that the appellants take nothing; and that the appel-lees be quieted in their limitation title to said lands; hence this appeal.

In its judgment the trial court found, among other things, as follows:

1. That the original grant to the Town of Refugio contained, .including the river bed, exactly four leagues of land;

2. That consequently, on March 3, 1929, the effective date of the Relinquishment Act, and under said Act, title to the river bed vested in the Town;

3. That continuously after said March 3, 1929, appellees had said lands enclosed by good fences under claim of ownership, which was adverse, open, visible, notorious and hostile to said Town;

4. That the mandate of the Supreme Court issued out of the case of Heard v. Town of Refugio, 129 Tex. 349, 103 S.W.2d 728, had not been complied with;

5. That the judgment in that case was not binding upon the defendants (appellees) in the instant case;

6. That the survey made of the lands involved in this suit was not made in accordance with the decisions of the Supreme Court of Texas;

*193 7. That the portion of the river here involved constituted a statutory navigable stream.

Obviously findings Nos. 2 and 5 are conclusions of law and not findings of fact. Finding No. 7 is not attacked. If the trial court erred in finding No. 3, then findings Nos. 1 and 4 become unimportant in so far as appellees are concerned. The first contention made by appellants is that the trial court did err in its finding No. 3, in that under well settled decisions, the possession, use, and occupancy by appellees of the river bed in question between March 3, 1929, when the Small Bill became effective, and March 6, 1939, when this suit was filed, under the undisputed facts, fails to sustain a limitation title in appellees. We have concluded that this contention should be sustained.

The lines of the original grant to the Town called to cross the Mission River. The calls for the lines of the tracts subsequently conveyed and now owned by appel-lees do not cross said River. It was determined in the case of Heard v. Town of Refugio, 129 Tex. 349, 103 S.W.2d 728, and by the trial court in the instant case, that the portion of the River here involved was navigable under Art. 5302, Vernon’s Ann. Civ.St. The bed thereof consequently belonged to the State prior to the effective date of the Relinquishment Act; and subsequent to that time was governed by the provisions of that Act. These questions were all adjudicated by the Supreme Court in Heard v. Town of Refugio, supra, and that case reversed to give the State an opportunity to assert its claim to the river bed; and to determine under the formula laid down by the Supreme Court in that case, the respective interests of the State and the Town in the sector of the river bed there involved. The holding of the Supreme Court in that case, and the formula therein laid down, was clearly intended to apply, and we think of necessity must apply, to all of the navigable portion of said river bed within the boundaries of the original grant, either under the doctrine of res adjudicata or stare decisis. For our purposes here we deem it unnecessary to determine which. If, as found by the trial court in the instant case, there was no excess acreage in the original grant, then title to all of said river bed within the boundaries of the original grant, passed, under the Relinquishment Act and subject to its terms, to the Town on March 3, 1929. If there were an excess in said grant, then, dependent upon the amount of such excess, title to the river bed either remained -in the State, or passed in part to the Town. See Heard v. Town of Refugio, supra. As to such part, if any, as remained in the State limitation would not run in favor of appel-lees. Art. 5517, R.C.S. As to such as vested in the Town under said Act, limitation would run in favor of appellees, provided their possession, occupancy and use met the requirements of the statutes and decisions essential to ripen their claim into a ten-year limitation title.

Considering now the issue of adverse possession, the record shows that the Mission River in this area runs from northwest to southeast. Mrs. F. V. Heard in 1929, and long prior and subsequent thereto until her death in 1939 or 1940, owned a 600-acre tract lying north and south across the portion of said river here in controversy. In June 1925 she executed an oil and gas lease on said 600-acre tract to the Houston Oil Company, with full rights of ingress and egress to and upon said lands for development purposes, to build tanks, run pipe lines, etc., on all or any part of same. As early as 1904 said tract of land had been fenced, the fences crossing said river, capable of retaining stock in said pasture, and with water gaps across the thread of the stream which the flow of flood waters in the channel would open; but which were kept closed when the stream was not at flood level, so as to prevent passage of live stock into and out of such pasture via the bed of the stream. Th^se fences across the stream were maintained at all times from 1904 up to the time this suit was filed; and the lands enclosed by them used for grazing live stock, in addition to use in oil and gas development. The Houston Oil Company assigned a part of its acreage, but retained 400 acres of the original 600, which it developed for oil and gas, erected tanks, pumps, and other essential equipment thereon at its wells, none of which were in *194 the river bed, and laid gathering pipe lines over and upon the area, some of which crossed the bed of the stream. The character and use of both the bed of the stream and of the adjoining riparian lands by ap-pellees and their predecessors in title was exactly the same after March 3, 1929, as it had been 'theretofore.

The character of adverse possession which will ripen into a limitation title under Arts. 5510—5516, Vernon’s Ann.Civ. St., has been repeatedly adjudicated. The stringent rule laid down in Satterwhite v. Rosser, 61 Tex. 166, as

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Bluebook (online)
199 S.W.2d 191, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-heard-texapp-1946.