Ware v. Davidson

42 S.W.2d 463, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1470
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 10, 1931
DocketNo. 3588.
StatusPublished

This text of 42 S.W.2d 463 (Ware v. Davidson) 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
Ware v. Davidson, 42 S.W.2d 463, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1470 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

JACKSON, J.

This suit was instituted in the district court of Potter county, Tex., by the plaintiffs, C. T. Ware, R. C. Ware, and C. R. Garner, against the individual defendants, Alex Davidson, Tullie M. Dickson, and her husband, J. B. Dickson, E. S. Blasdel, and Walter B. Allen, and against the corporate defendants, the Pecos & Northern Texas Railway Company, the Panhandle & Santa Pé Railway Company, and the Port Worth & Denver City Railway Company, to recover title and possession of certain particularly described portions of section 156, block 2, A. B. & M., in Potter county, Tex.

The defendants answered separately, each disclaiming any interest in the land sued for save and except certain specific tracts particularly described in his individual answer. The judgment of the trial court disposes of all parties and their respective claims.

This appeal is by the plaintiffs, and involves only the title to the land adjudged by the trial court to be vested in the defendant, the Port Worth & Denver City Railway Company, and no further' notice of the disposition of the rights asserted by the other defendants is necessary.

The plaintiffs’ petition is in the usual form of trespass to try -title, and they allege that the Fort Worth & Denver City Railway Company is a corporation, organized and authorized to do business under and 'by virtue of the laws of the state of Texas.

The Port Worth & Denver City Railway Company disclaimed as to all the lands described in plaintiffs’ petition except a strip 50 feet wide on the north and constituting a part of the tract of land claimed by plaintiffs. The 50-foot strip claimed by this defendant it describes by metes and bounds.

As a defense to plaintiffs’ suit in trespass to try title, this defendant pleaded not guilty and the statute of ten years’ limitation as to the land claimed by it and described in its answer.

In a supplemental petition the plaintiffs alleged that the Port Worth & Denver City Railway Company should not be permitted to claim a right of way more than 100 feet wide across said section 156 under any grant made to it by the state of Texas; that said section, of which the land in controversy is a part, was awarded by the state as a part of the free school lands to Prank Lester on September 10, 1887, and said defendant thereafter built its line of railway across said section; that by mesne conveyances from Lester, the plaintiffs are the owners of the title to all of said section, and, if defendant was ever authorized to appropriate a right of way 200 feet wide across said section, it failed and refused to do so and only appropriated a right of way 100 feet wide, which is 50 feet on each side of the center of its railway; that it fenced but 100 feet in width for its right of way and never claimed ownership to any greater part of said section; that on July 7, 1893, ft accepted from H. B. Sanborn and J. T. Holland, the owners in fee of said section, a deed conveying to it a strip of land 100 feet wide for its right of way over said section, in which deed defendant’s land is described as 50 feet on each side of the center of its tracks.

The Port Worth &- Denver City Railway Company, in a supplemental answer, demurred generally and specially to plaintiffs’ supplemental petition, and alleged that it was incorporated in the year 1873 by a special act of the Legislature of the state of Texas (Sp. Laws 1873, c. 208); that said act granted to it a right of way to the extent of 200 feet in width through the public lands of the state: that, at the time the act by which it was incorporated became a law, section 156 was a part of the public domain and had not been surveyed or sold; that by said act defendant was authorized to locate, build, equip, own, operate, and maintain a railway and telegraph line from, at, or near Port Worth in a northerly direction through the state toward Denver City, Colo.; that, subsequent to the enactment of said law, the defendant surveyed its line from Port Worth toward Denver City and across said section 156 and thereafter completed its line of railway, and ever since has continued to operate and use such railway; that under said act the defendant acquired a right of way 200 feet in width through such section for railway purposes, and any pur *464 chase made by the original grantee of said section from the state was subject and inferi- or to the rights of the defendant to the use of a 200-foot strip in width across said section for railway purposes; that such 200-foot strip had theretofore been appropriated for this defendant by the Legislature, and the land commissioner was without authority to sell to the original grantee the land appropriated to the defendant by the Legislature; that the development of the country and the increase of the population thereof necessitates the use of all of said strip for right of way purposes, and the defendant continually uses portions thereof for railway purposes and now uses a large part of said 200-foot right of way for the operation of its railway; that it has never abandoned any of said land, and any of such strip that is not in use is due to the fact that the development of the country has not necessitated its use for railway purposes, but the defendant has at all times held and reserved said entire strip to be used for railway purposes when the conditions justify such use.

The case was submitted to the court without the intervention of a jury and judgment rendered that the title to the strip of land involved in this appeal be confirmed in the Fort AVorth & Denver City Railway Company, from which judgment in behalf of the Fort Worth & Denver City Railway Company, the plaintiffs prosecute this appeal.

The appellants, by proper assignments, urge as error the action of the trial court in confirming the title of appellee to the use of the land for railway purposes, because: First, the land was not granted to appellee by the state of Texas; second, appellee failed to claim, take possession of, or appropriate said land for railway purposes; and, third, the testimony fails to show that the provisions of appellee’s charter which constitute conditions precedent to its acquisition of the land were performed by it.

The record shows that the tract of land involved is located outside of a right of way 100 feet in width across said section, but is included and situated within a right of way 200 ■feet -in width across said section; that on September 10, 1887, section 156, block 2, A. B. & M., in Potter county, Tex., was awarded by the commissioner of the general land office of the state to Frank Lester; that on September 24, 1887, Frank Lester conveyed said section to J. T. Holland; that on December 9, 1890, the state issued to J. T. Holland, assignee of Frank Lester, a patent conveying to J. T. Holland said section described as containing 640 acres of land; that by a regular chain of conveyances the appellants are the owners of the title acquired by, Frank Lester and J. T. Holland from the state to the land in controversy; that in 1873, the Legislature passed “An Act To Incorporate the Fort AArorth & Denver City Railway Company,” the provisions of which, necessary to a disposition oí this appeal, are:

“Section 1. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Texas.

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Bluebook (online)
42 S.W.2d 463, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ware-v-davidson-texapp-1931.