Thompson v. Kelly

97 S.W. 326, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 180, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 464
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 28, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 97 S.W. 326 (Thompson v. Kelly) 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
Thompson v. Kelly, 97 S.W. 326, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 180, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 464 (Tex. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Associate Justice.

—The nature and result of this suit, as stated in appellants’ brief, said statement being concurred in by appellees, is as follows:

This was a suit instituted in the District Court of Wharton County for two 640 acre tracts of land patented to A. J. Dunlap. The lower Dunlap, patent No. 143, was alleged to belong to Mrs. M. L. Kelly in her own separate right, and the upper survey, patent No. 144, was alleged to belong to plaintiff G. G. Kelly and his wife, M. L. Kelly, in community; and defendant Madray was alleged to own an undivided one-eighth of this survey. The suit for these lands was originally two separate suits in trespass to try title, but on motion were consolidated and prosecuted to judgment in the name of G. G. Kelly et al. v. M. J. Parrar et al. J. H. Burns was alleged to. be the owner of section No. 3, Houston, East & West Texas Eailway Company, lying east of these surveys, and was made a defendant. Thompson and Forgy were alleged to own the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Eailway surveys on the west, and F. P. Alcott was alleged to own the Houston & Texas Central Eailway surveys, also on the west. He was also made defendant, and the lessees of Thompson *181 and Forgy, K. D. and J. W. Bagsdale, were also made defendants. A number of parties originally made defendants were dismissed from the suit, and judgment by default was rendered and made final against other defendants. The pleadings of the plaintiffs were in the usual -form of trespass to try title, with the further allegation that there was a dispute between the plaintiffs and the defendants, Burns, Forgy, Thompson and Alcott as to the location of plaintiffs’ surveys. The pleadings of each of these defendants were general denial and not guilty, and a disclaimer as to any part of the land sued for, save and except the land embraced in their respective surveys; and as to the land claimed by them they prayed judgment for same and for costs. The plaintiffs’ petition in the consolidated suit did not attempt to define their surveys as they lie on the ground further than to set out the field notes embraced in the patents. The answers of Forgy and Thompson specially define their respective surveys as they are located on the ground by recognized comers and monuments. The consolidated cause was tried by a jury, and resulted in favor of the plaintiffs and defendant Madray against Thompson and Forgy, placing plaintiffs’ surveys in conflict with defendants’ surveys to the extent of 1,426 varas from east to west. Verdict and. judgment was in favor of defendant Alcott, and practically so as to said Burns. Thompson and Forgy joined in motions for a new trial, jointly assigned errors, jointly executed bond, and now jointly present briefs in this court, and are the only appellants. The surveys of said Thompson were the locations for the individual owner of said Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Bailroad Company, and defendant Forgy owned the alternate surveys located for the school fund to said Thompson’s surveys; and their defense is the same in every particular.

The two Dunlap surveys owned by appellees were located long prior to the location of the surveys owned by appellants, arid the only issue in the case is as to the true location of the Dunlap surveys. These surveys are described in the patents as being on the main Sandy Creek in Jackson County, and are known as the lower and upper Dunlap surveys. The field notes of the lower Dunlap are as follows:

“Beginning at a stake in open prairie, from which a scrubby live oak marked CX’ bears X. 44 W., 153 varas. Thence W. 200 varas to timber, 906 varas to the X. E. corner of lands granted to W. J. Wickham, 1900 varas to the S. W. corner of this survey at the edge of the prairie on the west side of Sandy Creek. Thence X. 1,900 varas to corner in prairie. Thence E. 1,360 varas to the S. W. corner of a tract of 640 acres surveyed for this warrant, in timber, 1900 varas to the corner of this survey, a live oak marked ‘X’ at the edge of bottom timber on the east side of the creek. Thence 1900 varas, through black jacks and post oaks, south to the beginning.”

The upper Dunlap is thus described by its field notes:

“Beginning at a stake in the open prairie, from which a black jack 10 in. in dia. at thé edge of timber marked X bears W. 1000 vrs. Thence W. 1000 varas to timber, 1380 vrs. to live oak at *182 the edge of bottom timber, marked CX’ to the N. E. corner of lower survey of same land warrant, 1900 vrs. to the corner of this survey. Thence north 1900 vrs. to the N. W. corner of this survey on the west side of Sandy Creek. Thence east 1202 varas to the S. W. corner of the land surveyed for E. & H. Bolton, 1900 varas to the N. E. corner of this survey in rough, burnt thicket on the E. side of creek; from which a charred live oak stump marked “X” brs. N. 2 varas, and a clump of large live oaks, the largest marked “X” bears S. 20 E. and a live oak at the edge of the open prairie brs. S. 81% E. Thence S. 1900 vrs. to the beginning.”

None of the corners or lines of these surveys can be identified upon the ground -by any original marks or objects called for as corners. The evidence offered by the appellants shows that if these surveys are located in accordance with the calls in the field notes by starting from a stake in the open prairie and running west the distance called for to the timber the N. E. and S. E. corners of both surveys would be east of Sandy Creek, and the location of their west lines would not be where they are claimed to be by the plaintiffs. This was one of the main points which appellants sought to establish. While counsel for appellants was cross-examining one of plaintiffs’ witnesses on this point, the trial judge interrupted him and stated in the hearing and presence of the jury that the calls in the field notes of the Dunlap surveys for distances to the creek and to timber were passing calls and were of little or no force in locating the corners of the surveys. This remark of the judge was excepted to by the attorney for appellees and a bill of exceptions reserved. After stating the facts showing the materiality of the testimony the bill contains the following statements:

“And during this examination the court more than once remarked to counsel, and to and within the hearing of the jury, that he considered the calls in the field notes of any of said surveys for their corners as being east of the creek as merely descriptive and not locative; and that the calls for the prairie and timber were also descriptive calls and not locative, and that time ought not to be consumed in such examination, because said testimony as to whether or not said calls were east or west of the creek, or as to whether or not they were in the prairie or timber could have no bearing upon the location of said surveys, because they were merely descriptive, and of the very least importance, if of any importance at all.
“And whereupon the counsel for defendants excepted to

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 S.W. 326, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 180, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-kelly-texapp-1907.