Ware v. Perkins

178 S.W. 846, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 866
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 5, 1915
DocketNo. 805.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 178 S.W. 846 (Ware v. Perkins) 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. Perkins, 178 S.W. 846, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 866 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

HUFF, C. J.

H. P. Ware and 16 others, as plaintiffs, instituted suit against L. N. *847 Lochridge, J. J. Perkins, W. E. Norton, and P. H. Pennington, as defendants. The suit is over a small strip of land out of the Louisa Netherly survey, in Wichita county. The plaintiffs set up specifically the facts as claimed by them entitling them to the land.

The Louisa Netherly survey was owned by L. N. Lochridge, consisting of 786 acres. On the 27th day of November, 1912, L. N. Lochridge executed a written contract to T. W. Owen and G. E. Wilson, with the customary rights of ingress and egress to oil and gas, in and under 200 acres of the Louisa Netherly survey in Wichita county, which contract was registered March 25, 1913, in said county. The land conveyed by the contract is described as follows:

“Beginning at a point 1,500 varas from its N. E. corner on the E. line of said survey; thence W. to the W. line of said survey; thence south a number of varas sufficient to make'200 acres of land” — reciting sufficient consideration.

Owen and Williams, on the 11th day of March, 1913, for a.recited consideration of ?250,000, assigned their interest in said contract to the Forest Oil Company, together with other leases, which assignment was registered in Wichita county March 25, 1913. For a purported consideration of 810,000, the Forest Oil Company assigned to A. J. Bart-rug, so far as it related to 20 acres in the form of a square out of the southwest comer of said 200 acres. This assignment is dated August 20, 1913, and recorded December 29, 1913. Afterwards on December 26, 1913, in an assignment which was registered December 29, 1913, Bartrug, for a recited consideration of 8500, transferred and assigned to B. F. Taylor his right to the gas and oil in and under said 20 acres, under said contract; and afterwards, on the 29th day of December, 1913, Taylor, by assignment, for a recited consideration of 8600, transferred and assigned to the plaintiff, J. A. Watkins, a half interest in his right to the oil and gas upon and under said 20 acres. It is admitted that said last contract was transferred to Watkins in trust fdr the other plaintiffs in this case as beneficiaries. On the 30th day of December, 1913, by written contract registered January 3, 1914, L. N. Lochridge, for a consideration of 8100, granted to W. E. Norton an option to lease 10 acres or less as he might choose out of the Louisa Netherly survey, except 25 acres out of block No. 5, L. N. Lochridge plat, and the land leased previous to that date to E. B. Stevens and the Carson Oil Company. It was provided in the option that Norton should pay at the rate of 8100 per acre therefor and a royalty of one-eighth of the oil. Afterwards, by written contract dated January 21, 1914, and recorded January 28, 1914, Lochridge granted and conveyed to J. I. Perkins and W. E. Norton the gas and oil under a strip of the said Netherly survey described as follows:

A strip 12 varas wide and 990 varas long, more or less, off the south side of block No. 4, as per the L. N. Lochridge plat of 786 acres out of the Louisa Netherly survey, abstract No. 240, and being all the land out of said block No. 4, not heretofore covered in a lease of 200 acres to Owen and Wilson, being at the N. E. corner of block No. 5, per the L. N. Lochridge plat of said land; thence north 12 varas, more or less, to the g. E. corner of said 200 acres heretofore leased to Owen and Wilson; thence west along the S. line of said 200 acres 990 varas; thence S. 12 varas, more' or less, to the N. W. corner of said block No. 5; thence E. 990 varas to the place of beginning, containing two acres more or less.

This strip is the land in. controversy. In consideration of this lease the grantees agreed to pay the grantor 8200 yearly in advance for each gas-producing well and to furnish him free of charge gas therefrom for domestic purposes and a royalty of one-fifth of the oil obtained from said land.

Before the lease contract to' Owen and Wilson, heretofore set out, Lochridge platted the tract of land leased by him, but did not subdivide it. His son, who lived at San Antonio, appears to have been something of a civil engineer, and he requested his son to plat the land into blocks of 80 and 100 acres each, except the 200 acres theretofore leased to Owen and Wilson. His son made a plat or sketch of the several blocks in his office in San Antonio, numbering them 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8. Block No. 4 is marked on the plat 200 acres, but is shown to be 1,152 varas long, north and south and 990 varas east and west. At the time of making the lease Owen and Wilson knew nothing of the plat, if in fact it was then in existence, and the lease to them was made without reference to the plat. Block 5 of the plat lies immediately south of block 4. It is shown by the introduction of several lease contracts that Loch-ridge recognized the north line of block 5 in conveying certain parcels of land to various owners, calling for the north line or corners of that block. The Netherly survey of land is shown to be 990 varas wide east and west. After the land was platted by Lochridge’s son in San Antonio, and the plats sent to his father, Lochridge employed a surveyor to run out the blocks in accordance with the plat, and at the corners of the several blocks he or the surveyor placed stakes or marked the corners of the several blocks, gome time after, this, just when it is not shown, Lochridge met Owen and told him that he had placed stakes at the corners of block 4, which represented the 200 acres leased to him and Wilson, and that it was under the fence and where he could find it.

Owen says that he found the stakes and claimed the south boundary of his 200-acre lease to be at those stakes. Owen further testified that he had been thinking of surveying the land out until he was informed by Lochridge that he had made the survey, and that he considered the stakes the comer of his “stuff,” and that Lochridge told him that he had put the stakes for the comers of the 200 acres. These stakes were placed by Loch-ridge after the lease to Owen and Wilson had *848 been made and after the making of tbe map. Owen did not purchase by tbe map, and knew nothing ■ about tbe map. Lochridge never pointed out tbe stakes to Owen, but simply told him that it was under tbe fence and where be could find it. Wilson, tbe partner of Owen, knew nothing about the map or stakes, and testified that they had just leased 200 acres. Lochridge did not know, he says, at the time that there was an excess in block, 4, and that he did not intend to lease more than 200 acres to Owen and Wilson. A surveyor was employed to run out the 200 acres, and says that 1,152 varas by 990 varas is not exactly 200 acres; it is 202.03 acres.

We find that the 20 acres sold to Taylor and his assignor is simply described as 20 acres out of the southwest comer of 200 acres conveyed to Owen and Wilson. After-wards Taylor had 20 acres surveyed, and began at a small stake for the southwest corner of block 4, and ran the 20 acres out in a square in the southwest corner. Taylor’s testimony shows that he did not purchase the 20 acres at the time of his purchase with reference to the plat; that he had only seen it once, and that he purchased it simply as 20 acres out of the southwest corner of the 200-aere tract; and that his contract only called for the land so situated.

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Bluebook (online)
178 S.W. 846, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 866, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ware-v-perkins-texapp-1915.