Sullivan v. Masterson

201 S.W. 194, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 115
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 8, 1918
DocketNo. 31.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 201 S.W. 194 (Sullivan v. Masterson) 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
Sullivan v. Masterson, 201 S.W. 194, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 115 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

KING, J.

H. Masterson and Bettie Bryan brought suit in the form of trespass to try title to the south 4,000 acres of the Margarita Buye league of land in Liberty county, Tex., naming D. Sullivan and others as defendants. Pending trial, settlement was effected between the plaintiffs and a number of the defendants. D. Sullivan, appellant, purchased the interests of the other defendants not included in the settlement; ■ and prosecutes this appeal.

In the trial court, by agreement of the parties, the issue resolved itself solely into a question of boundary between the Margarita Buye league, claimed by appellees, and the Robert Burrell league, claimed by D. Sullivan. The Buye league being the senior, the only issue of fact in the case became the true location of the Margarita Buye league. Appellees claimed that the •southeast corner of the Buye is approximately 5,000 varas west of an iron bolt, called by their witnesses the “accepted” northwest corner of the John Blair league, based on the calls of the field notes of one of the Nicholas De Nava surveys, which 'calls to begin at the northwest corner of the John Blair league, and lying immediately west thereof, and to be 5,000 varas square. The northwest corner of this Le Nava survey calls for a pin oak six inches N. 72° W. 33.8. The Buye field notes call for an eight-inch white oak at its southeast corner bearing N. 72° W. 33.8 varas. There were a number of the De Nava surveys, supposed to consist of 11; but they were abandoned ffiany years ago because of an inhibition in the Mexican laws against locating so many leagues within 10 littoral leagues of the sea without the consent of the supreme executive. • The De Nava surveys were void on account of this inherent defect in the source of title to the same; it not being shown that the consent of the supreme executive had been obtained. They were, however, actually surveyed on the ground, and were not void on account of the manner in which they were surveyed.

Appellant, in addition to requiring appel-lees to show the location of the Buye, so as to include the land owned by him, offered evidence which he claims shows the location of the Buye to be 1,900 varas west of the location claimed by appellees. This location was based upon the location of the Win. B. Reed league. He claims that the northeast corner of the Wm. B. Reed is the southwest corner of another De Nava survey, and that the northwest corner of this De Nava survey is the southwest corner of the Buye. The ease was tried by a jury, the court submitting the law to them in a general charge. The verdict was for appellees, motion for new trial was overruled in 'the trial court, and this appeal perfected by D. Sullivan.

The description in plaintiff’s original petition of the land sued for is as follows:

“All that certain part of a league of land originally granted to Margarita Buye and located in said county about sixteen miles east of the town of Liberty, and beginning at the southeast corner of said league, thence north with the east line of said league 4,536 varas to corner, thence west parallel with the north and south lines of said' league a distance of 5,000 varas to the west boundary line thereof, thence south in said west boundary line to the southwest corner of the league, thence east in the south boundary line of said league to the place of beginning, containing 4,000 acres of land.”

The field notes of the Margarita Buye, according to the original surveyor, I. W. Burton, are as follows:

“The land surveyed to citizen Margarita Buye is situated on the creek called Pine Island Bayou and about two miles west of Wolf’s Point, where a mound of earth was formed around a stake for the first landmark of this survey, from which a white oak 8 inches in diameter bears north 72 deg. west 33.8 varas distant; thence north 5,000 varas, measured, and a mound of earth was around a stake for the second landmark, from which a pine 24 inches in diameter bears north 68½ deg. west 11.2 varas distant, and another pine 36 inches in diameter bears north 30% deg. 211 varas distant; thence west 5,000 varas were measured, and. a mound oí earth was formed around a stake for the third landmark; thence south 5,000 varas were measured and the fourth landmark was formed, from which a red oak 24 in. in diameter bears S. no deg. -2' east 42.6 varas distant, and a pine 30 inches in diameter bears south 42 varas distant; thence east 5,000 varas were measured to the first landmark, thus completing the survey of a league of land. * * *

For a proper consideration of this case, we deem it necessary to give the description of the John Blair league, the De Nava survey No. 1, lying immediately north of the John Blair, the De Nava No. 6, lying west of the John Blair, and the De Nava No. 7, lying west of the De Nava No. 6. The field notes of the Blair, as translated into English, are as follows:

“In the prairie about 20 miles west of Santa Anna, at a place known as Wolf Point on the road to Trinity_, set post in mound in the open prairie, lands high and rolling and rich; thence south 455.6 to a black jack in a small cluster of timber 9 inches in diameter, a line tree, 500 to a post in the open prairie in mound, lands low and wet; thence west 5,000 varas, set post and mound on the open prairie, lands rich, high, and rolling; thence north 500, set post in mound on the open prairie, lands low; thence east 5,018 to the place of beginning, containing one sito of land, four labors of which is fit for cultivation, balance pastoral lands. This survey is on prairie with some scattering timber.”

David Brown made this survey in 1834. The De Nava No. 1, surveyed by Isaac W. Burton in 1835, is described in the original field notes as follows:

“The league of land which by the foregoing order I have surveyed for citizen Nicholas De Nava is situated in Zavalla’s Colony, on the *196 south margin of Pine Island creek at the northwest comer of a survey made by Blair, and this survey included the point called Wolf’s Point, where the first landmark formed of a mound of earth around a stake was_ raised in prairie; thence east, following said Blair’s north boundary line, 5,000 varas were measured to said Blair’s northeast corner, it being the second landmark of this survey and having no witness trees; thence west 5,000 varas were measured, and the fourth landmark was formed like the preceding one, from which a Spanish oak 15 in. diameter bears north 27 deg. east 15 varas distant, and another tree.of same kind and size bears north 36 deg. east 14.6 varas distant; thence south 2 min. west 4,980 varas were measured to the first landmark, thus completing the survey of a league of land, which you ordered me to survey. Four labors of said land belong to the class of arable land, and the remaining ;ones, being 21, to that of pasture land.

The De Nava No. 6 is described as follows ;

“Situated in Zavalla’s Colony, on the south mai'gin of Pine Island creek, near a point called in English Wolf Point, and begins at the northwest corner of the Blair survey, where the first landmark was formed of a mound of earth around a stake with no witness trees, thence west 5,000 varas were measured and the second landmark was formed, from which a pin oak 6 in. in diameter bears north 72° west 33.8 varas; thence south 5,000 varas were measured and the third landmark was formed, from which a black jack 20 inches in diameter bears north 15 dog.

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Bluebook (online)
201 S.W. 194, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-masterson-texapp-1918.