Travis County v. Williamson County

4 S.W.2d 610
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 25, 1928
DocketNo. 7182.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 4 S.W.2d 610 (Travis County v. Williamson County) 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
Travis County v. Williamson County, 4 S.W.2d 610 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinions

This appeal involves a controversy over the common boundary line between Travis and Williamson counties, which *Page 611 arose as follows: Various legislative acts from 1846 to 1879 fixed said boundary line as beginning at the northeast corner of land granted to Isaac Casner, being the north corner of Bastrop county; thence with the meanders of the divide between the waters of the Brazos and Colorado rivers to the intersection of the southeast line of Burnet county, at a point 26 degrees west from the west corner of John Carothers' league No. 6 on the west fork of the San Gabriel river. Articles 911 and 925, R.S. 1879; Batts' Anno. Statutes 1895, vol. 1, pp. 423 and 429. In 1859, under orders of the county court of said counties, respectively, Dennis Corwin, for Travis, and Wm. K. Duerson, for Williamson, undertook, and, according to their reports which were formally adopted by the respective county courts appointing them, did survey a part only of said boundary line. In 1883, under orders of the commissioners' courts of said counties, respectively, John E. Campbell, for Travis, and A. S. Howren, for Williamson, surveyed the whole of said boundary line, and their reports were formally adopted by the respective commissioners' courts appointing them. Neither court ordered these surveyors to do so, but their respective reports show that they tried to follow or resurvey and re-establish the Corwin-Duerson line of 1859 on the portion covered by it, and with variations which do not appear to be material succeeded in doing so. In 1927, Williamson county sued Travis county under provisions of articles 1591 and 1606, R.S. 1925, alleging that the two surveys were identical over the portion of the line covered by both; that by them the entire boundary line had been definitely established and well marked upon the ground and had been for many years recognized as the boundary line, except as to a small portion or segment of the line covered by both surveys and specifically described, on which the markings had become vague and indefinite; that Travis county and its officers had for many years failed and refused to recognize and be bound by said common boundary line so established on this particular portion or segment, were asserting and claiming the line to be farther north and east of where same was so established, and were unlawfully asserting jurisdiction over property of the value of $150,000, which was subject to taxation in Williamson county by virtue of said surveys. Williamson county prayed that the court declare the common boundary line to be fixed and established by the Campbell-Howren survey of 1883, and that the portion of the line alleged to be in controversy and on which the markings had become vague and indefinite be resurveyed and re-established in accordance with that survey. By answer and cross-action Travis county contended in the trial court and here contends, among other contentions, as follows:

(1) That the 1883 Campbell-Howren line was illegal because run under orders of the commissioners' court, instead of by action of the county court of said counties, as required by the statutes then in force.

(2) That the 1859 Corwin-Duerson line was illegal because it was a survey of only a part of the boundary line, whereas the law then existing required that the whole of said line be run.

(3) That neither of said surveys had ever been recognized by Travis county.

Travis county prayed that the court appoint competent surveyors to survey the whole of said boundary line in accordance with the acts of the Legislature fixing it, and that they be directed to fix, mark, and establish said line in accordance with law.

On a trial to the court without a jury judgment was rendered declaring the 1883 survey illegal upon the ground contended for by Travis county, but the 1859 survey was declared to be legal, and upon these conclusions of law the court ordered the whole of the line surveyed in accordance with line fixed by the legislative acts, supra, but directed the surveyors appointed to follow the 1859 survey on the portion of the line covered by it; and from this judgment Travis county has appealed, contending that the trial court should have sustained all of its above contentions and rendered judgment in accordance with its prayer. Williamson county has cross-assigned as error the action of the trial court in declaring the 1883 survey illegal.

The trial court correctly held the 1883 survey illegal because made under orders of the commissioners' court, instead of the county court of the respective counties at interest as required by the statutes in force at that tme. Gammel's Laws, vol. 8, p. 1437; Kaufman County v. McGaughey (a decision by this court) 32 S.W. 927, Id., 11 Tex. Civ. App. 551,33 S.W. 1020. Williamson county attacks the McGaughey decision as dictum on the point in question and as an incorrect pronouncement of the law, contending that commissioners' courts also had jurisdiction over county boundary line surveys by virtue of article 686 to 691, R.S. 1879. These contentions were directly passed upon in the McGaughey Case and for that reason are overruled, and also because the legality or illegality of this survey is only incidental to Travis county's third contention that whether legal or illegal it had never recognized the survey.

There is no merit to Travis county's contention that the 1859 survey was illegal because a survey of only a part of the boundary line. We find no provision in the statute under which this survey was made requiring that the whole of a county boundary line be surveyed or that a survey of only a portion in dispute would not be authorized. Gammel's Laws, vol. 2, p. 1537.

But since we are of the opinion *Page 612 Travis county's third contention, that it had never recognized either of said surveys or lines so established, should be sustained under the undisputed evidence, the question of the legality or illegality of these surveys becomes immaterial, and the trial court should have instructed the surveyors appointed to survey, mark, and establish the said boundary line as fixed by the various legislative acts, supra, instead of requiring them to resurvey and re-establish the 1859 line on the portion covered by it.

In reference to the recognition of said surveys, Williamson county alleged that by them the said boundary line had been definitely established and marked upon the ground and had been for many years recognized by the respective counties as the boundary line, but that Travis county was unlawfully asserting jurisdiction to the north and east of said established line at a particularly defined and described point, which was alleged to be the only portion of said boundary line in controversy. Travis county denied these allegations and pleaded that it had never recognized the surveys, and that no part of the said boundary line had ever been legally surveyed, established, and marked upon the ground as required by law. On the issue thus raised by the pleadings Williamson county had the burden to prove recognition of the surveys by the two counties. It offered in evidence the various orders of the respective courts of the counties at interest appointing the surveyors, their reports and field notes, and the respective orders of the courts of the counties approving said reports and field notes, and rested its case.

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Bluebook (online)
4 S.W.2d 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/travis-county-v-williamson-county-texapp-1928.