Warren v. Boggs

111 S.E. 331, 90 W. Va. 329, 1922 W. Va. LEXIS 230
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 111 S.E. 331 (Warren v. Boggs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warren v. Boggs, 111 S.E. 331, 90 W. Va. 329, 1922 W. Va. LEXIS 230 (W. Va. 1922).

Opinion

Lively, Judge:

This cause was formerly considered by this court ,on appeal from a decree sustaining a demurrer to, and dismissing, plaintiffs’ bill. Warren v. Boggs, 83 W. Va. 89. A statement of the facts, as set out by the pleadings, is there found.

The respective property interests of the parties in the subject matter of the litigation have been determined in a compromise agreement entered into by them and dated May 12, 1913. By that agreement the parties have designated the metes and bounds of the 94 acre tract, and the metes and bounds of the 17 acre and 115 poles tract, designated in the pleadings “as the 18 acre tract” which interlocks on the 94 acre tract. The controversy is now as to the proper location, with respect to these two tracts, of an oil well known as Boggs No. 5. If that well is.on the 94 acre tract the plaintiffs are entitled to 7/8 of the 1/8 royalty therein and defendants to 1/8 of the royalty; if the situs of the well is on the 18 acre tract, then defendant is entitled to all of the royalty. The lower court decided that the well was'on the 18 acre tract; that plaintiffs were not entitled to- any relief and dismissed their original, amended and supplemental bills. This appeal was awarded from that decree.

[331]*331The compromise agreement of May 12, 1913, which is the basis of this litigation and on which the contentions of the parties are predicated, recites that defendant Boggs is the owner of the 18 acre tract, “which was conveyed by C. C. Smith and wife and A. B. Wells and wife to N. B. Hoff, by deed dated March 1, 1886, of record in the Roane County Court Clerk’s Office in Deed Book No. 12 at page 64, which is therein bounded and' described as follows: BEGINNING at a stake and pointers Hiram Nestor’s northwest corner, thence N. 2 E. 16 1/2 poles to a stone pile and pointers, thence S. 87 1/2 E. 180 poles to pointers on line of No. 9 and 10; thence S. 2 W. 15 poles to a white oak, corner to said Nestor; thence N. 87 1/2 W. ¡with Nestor’ line 180 poles to the beginning, which said tract of 18 acres of land is claimed by the said J. P. Boggs, to lap or interlock on the said tract of 94 acres.” The deed from Smith and Wells to Hoff is exhibited, and the same courses and distances are found therein as above given, ,with the addition thereto, after the last course and distance (N. 87 1/2 W. with the Nestor line 180 poles to the beginning) the words “Surface measurement containing seventeen acres and one hundred and fifteen poles.” The consideration named is $106.30. In 1892 Hoff executed a trust deed on this land to J. A. A. Vandale, trustee, to secure a debt owing to H. W. Goff, in which the same corners, courses and distances are given, and the acreage stated to be 18 acres more or less. And, on July 29, 1907, Vandale, trustee, executed the trust and deeded the land to J. O. Boggs for $160.00, in which the same courses, ’ distances and comérs are given, “being the same tract of land conveyed to the said N. B. Hoff by C. C. Smith and A. B. Wells by deed bearing date on the 1st day of March, 1886, and recorded” etc. In the two last named deeds no reference is made to surface measurement. The boundaries of the 94 acre tract are incorporated in the compromise agreement, ' but they have little bearing upon the question at issue, the location of the well, as'the'entire 18 acre tract seems to be an interlock upon and lying within the boundaries of the 94 acre tract. The location and establishment of the northern line [332]*332of the 18 acre tract running from the stone pile and pointers i£S. 87 1/2 E. 180 poles to pointers on a line of No. 9 and 10” decides the issue. If this line runs south of the well then plaintiffs are entitled to relief, as the situs of the well would be on the 94 acre tract; conversely, if the true location of the line is north of the well then the well is on the 18 acre tract and the decree should be affirmed. Twelve surveyors, six on each side, went upon the land and surveyed the 18 acre tract, and those introduced as witnesses for plaintiffs, Thorn, Taylor, Shoup, Bell, Childs and Parks, place the northern line of the 18 acre tract from 4 to 13 feet south of the well; and those employed by defendant, Wolf, Woodyard, Dunbar, ■ Scott, Ewing and Daniels, place the line from 4.6 to 11 feet north of the well. On this conflicting evidence we are called upon to ascertain the location of the' lines, especially the northern line of the 18 acre interlock. These surveyors have had many years of practical experience in their profession and seem to be well versed both in theory and practice. How can it be that in the ascertainment of one line of so small an area, bounded by four lines only, a difference of from 8 to 24 feet arises? The science of geometry and mathematics is exact. The infinite depths of stellar space are measured with such exact nicety that the apposition of stars and planets can be calculated to the fraction of a second of time. One corner of the survey, the southeastern corner, the white oak stump replaced by an iron pipe, is agreed upon as the only corner about the location of which there is no controversy. From this point the surveyors began, and from that point the three remaining corners are differently located by them. It is evident that the methods pursued, and not a defective science, have brought about the different results, different maps. By what method should the surveys have been made? Plaintiffs insist that the surveys should be made according to the courses, lines, distances and corners denoted as of the date of the compromise agreement of May 12, 1913, allowing for the magnetic variation from that date; or if the survey be made as of the date of the original survey in 1886, and the magnetic variation calculated from that [333]*333date, then surface measurement should be invoked, the method of measurement' then used, as expressly stated in the original deed from Smith and Wells to Hoff. Defendant asserts that the survey should now be made with magnetic variation calculated from 1886, and by horizontal measurement, under see. 2, chap. 67, Code. It appears that all of the surveyors calculated the magnetic variation from 1886, each using practically the same degree of variation when running the lines. If the survey is to be made as of that date, and we think it proper to do so, the Same measurement should be used as was then used — surface measurement. In that way only could the footsteps of the original surveyors be followed. In that way only can the boundaries be determined and fixed as they were then ascertained and fixed. Any other method will bring about a different result. That is fully demonstrated, for, by using horizontal measurement, the side lines have been shortened about 6 poles and the eastern line lengthened by 1 1/2 poles. These surveyors should, as nearly as possible, do exactly what the surveyor then did. Was it the intention of the parties, when they made the compromise agreement in 1913, that the 18 acre tract should be run out and located by the survey and deed as of 1886? Such seems to be the contention of defendant for his surveyors have calculated and used the magnetic variation from that date. It follows that the surface measurement as set out in that deed must also be adopted. The beneficial portions of that deed cannot be taken by either party and the portions which are not beneficial ignored. The agreement 'refers specifically to the deed of 1886, and the courses, distances and corners are copied “as therein bounded and described.” Horizontal measurement should govern unless surface' measurement is con-contracted for.

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Bluebook (online)
111 S.E. 331, 90 W. Va. 329, 1922 W. Va. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warren-v-boggs-wva-1922.