State v. Humble Oil & Refining Co.

128 S.W.2d 424, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 1107
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 5, 1939
DocketNo. 8727.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 128 S.W.2d 424 (State 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
State v. Humble Oil & Refining Co., 128 S.W.2d 424, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 1107 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

BAUGH, Justice.

The State brought this suit against some 175 defendants to recover as vacant public lands about 618 acres in two tracts located in the Conroe Oil Field in Montgomery County, Texas, and for $5,000,000 damages for oil taken therefrom. Some of the defendants were claiming a preference right to an oil lease on said lands. Trial was to a jury on special issues, the result of their findings in answer to such issues being that the vacancy claimed by the State did not exist, and judgment was accordingly rendered against the State. The State and the defendants who claimed priority of right to an oil lease on said lands have appealed.

The controlling issues presented depend upon the proper location of Washington County R. R. Co. Surveys 13 and 14 in Montgomery County. There is also necessarily involved the proper location of T. & N. O. R. R. Co. Survey 16 in said county. These three surveys were originally made by John M. Wade in 1861. The *425 relative location of these various surveys, except the vacancies claimed, and as they appear on the maps on file in the General Land Office, are shown on the attached map:

DEPENDANTS’ EXHIBIT NO. 4, SHOWING GROUND LOCATIONS

A general statement with reference to the older surveys in this area will contribute to a better understanding of the issues presented. The record discloses that both to the east and to the west of the area here involved numerous surveys had been laid out in 1838 and 1839 along the San Jacinto River on the west and along the Caney Fork of the. San Jacinto River on the east. Between these old surveys to the north, west, south, and east of the lands here involved there existed in 1861 unsur-veyed public domain of some 12,000 acres, or more, extending northwest and southeast for a distance of 5 or 6 miles. In 1861 John M. Wade, district surveyor* undertook to survey these vacant lands: He began about 5 miles southeast of the tracts here involved and laid out 16 T. & N. O. R. R. Co. Surveys tying the eastern tier of said surveys to the senior surveys on the east; and the western tier of said surveys to senior surveys on the west. T. & N. O. Survey 15 was surveyed the day before T. & N. O. No. 16. T. & N. *426 O. No. 15 called to adjoin the Clark Beach west line and to run north with that line to within 100 varas of the south line of the Littlefield Survey. This survey was run out from east to west. T. & N. O. No. 16, surveyed the following day, began on the east line of the Ransom House Survey and called to extend eastward to the west line of T. & N. O. 15.

About 6 months after surveying the T. & N. O. sections, Wade surveyed W. C. R. R. Co. sections Nos. 13 and 14. His field notes for No. 13 called to begin at the N. W. corner of the Littlefield “on S. line of Wm. B. Bridges Sun,” thence to run west 1800 vrs. to the east line of the Wee-den Survey; thence south with the east lines of the Weeden and Davis Surveys 2006 vrs.; thence east to the west line of the Littlefield; thence north with the west line of the Littlefield -2006 vrs. to the beginning. This section was patented on these field notes to the W. C. R. R. Co.» in 1877.

The field notes of W. C. R. R. Co. No. 14 called to begin at the N. E. corner of T. & N. O. 16, surveyed by Wade about six months before, on the west line of T. & N. O. 15; thence to run north with the west line of T. & N. O. 15, 979 vrs. passing its N. E. corner, 1079 vrs. to the south line of the Littlefield; thence west with the S. line of the Littlefield 30 vrs. to its S. W. corner; thence north with the west line of the Littlefield 880 vrs. to the S. E. cor. of W. C. R. R. No. 13; thence west with the S. line of 13, 1800 vrs. to the S. W. cor. of 13; thence S. and W. with the lines of the Davis Survey around the S. E. corner of the Davis; thence S. 1915 vrs. to a corner; thence east with the north line of T. & N. O. 16, 1860 vrs. to the beginning.

It is not controverted that if W. C. R. R. Co. Surveys 13 and 14 be located by laying same out from, and in accordance with, Wade’s calls for adjoinder to the senior surveys on the north and west — i. e. the Bridges, the Weeden (Owens), and the Davis — as those surveys are located on the ground, an irreconcilable conflict with, or departure from, the calls for the senior surveys to the east — i. e. the Littlefield, Beach, and T. & N. O. 15 — as those surveys are indisputably located on the ground, will result.

On the other hand, if these two surveys be located in accordance with Wade’s calls for the Littlefield and T. & N. O. 15 lines and corners as established on the ground, then they must be pulled away from the Bridges, Weeden, and Davis Surveys as located on the ground, and his calls for adjoinder to those surveys ignored.

The State contends that, as a matter of law, these two surveys must be located by the adjoinder calls for the senior surveys to the north and west. The appellees contend that they are properly located from their beginning calls on the senior surveys to the east, both as a matter of law. under the undisputed facts; and under the findings of the jury.

It is not controverted that W. C. R. R. Co. Surveys 13 and 14 must be regarded as a system of surveys, run out together by the same surveyor, and that they can not be separated. And the cardinal rule in locating such surveys is to follow the footsteps of the surveyor on the ground if they can be found. If they can not be found with certainty, all the surrounding ■facts and circumstances should be looked to in arriving at the purpose ■ and intent of the surveyor, and so construed and applied as to carry into effect the most probable intent of the parties to the grant.

The Clark Beach Survey was surveyed in 1838 and patented in 1851 on its original field notes. Its west line as located on the ground is not questioned. The H. B. Littlefield was originally surveyed in the form of a rectangle in 1838, adjoining the Beach on the north and its west line and S. W. and N. W. corners definitely establishing on the ground as shown on the accompanying map, and as so established were located by Wade in 1861, and by several surveyors since then, the original bearing trees for the corners being identified as late as 1905. It was early discovered, however, that the original field notes of the Littlefield conflicted with the S. W. portion of the H. S. Williamson Survey, and in 1850 the Littlefield was resurveyed so as to eliminate this conflict and its configuration as a rectangle changed. The west line and the S. W. and N. W. corners of the original survey were, however, definitely retained in ■ their original location. In 1839 the Wm. B. Bridges Survey was made. The field notes and map showed it to be in the form of a square, to join the north line of the Littlefield and to extend westward past the N. W. corner of the Littlefield. The Bridges likewise was resurveyed in 1849 under entirely different field notes from the original sur *427 vey and was patented in 1849 under the new field notes. As resurveyed in 1849 its south line was moved approximately 900 vrs. north of the south line thereof as located in the original survey. This of necessity moved the Bridges S. line away from the N. line of the Littlefield as that line had long before been definitely established on the ground.

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Bluebook (online)
128 S.W.2d 424, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 1107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-humble-oil-refining-co-texapp-1939.