Webb v. Brown

2 Posey 36, 1880 Tex. LEXIS 237
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedNovember 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 Posey 36 (Webb v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Webb v. Brown, 2 Posey 36, 1880 Tex. LEXIS 237 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1880).

Opinion

Opinion.— It is settled, as a general rule in the construction of deeds, that, in case of a discrepancy in the de[38]*38scription of the premises between the distances and the boundaries, the former are to be controlled by the latter, on the ground that the lesser must yield to the greater certainty. The rules by which courts are governed in determining from the description of the land given by the calls in a deed are but those of reason, founded on experience and observation, applied to the subject for the purpose of identifying and rendering certain the true locality of the land as the same has been actually located or surveyed.

Justice Roberts, in Booth v. Upshur, 26 Tex., 70, thus stated the principle with its mode of proper application: “ There is no law fixing the effect of any call found in a grant or giving one any more weight or importance than another. Therefore, by merely looking at the face of the grant, which has several calls, the controlling call cannot be determined. Courts that have had to determine between conflicting calls, upon motions for new trials and otherwise, have laid down rules for their decision, founded on reason, experience and observation, which are rules pertaining, not to the admissibility, but to the weight of evidence. They have generally agreed upon a classification of and gradation of calls in a grant, survey or entry of land, by which their relative importance and weight are to be determined. The first class of calls are natural objects, such as rivers, creeks, mountains, etc. The second are artificial objects, such as marks on trees, and marked lines, etc.; and the third are course and distance. Thus, in the abstract, or other things being equal, a river prevails over a marked line, and a marked line over course and distance. Still, the lowest grade, to wit, course or distance, is made to prevail over the highest grade, to wit, rivers, creeks, etc., when, upon applying the calls of the grant to the land, the surrounding and connected circumstances adduced in proof to explain the discrepancy show that course or distance is the 2nost certain and reliable evidence of the true locality of the grant.”

The practical application of the foregoing rules has [39]*39been illustrated in the decisions of our supreme court under very many varying, important and interesting phases in cases too numerous to require citation. See Urquhart v. Burleson, 6 Tex., 511; Bass Mitchell, 22 Tex., 294; Mitchell v. Burdett, id., 535; Booth v. Strippleman, 26 Tex., 442; Bolton v. Lann, 16 Tex., 111; McCown v. Hill, 26 Tex., 361; Castleman v. Ponton, 51 Tex., 84.

It is contended by the appellant under the fourth assignment that the title convreyed to the plaintiff had not failed, notwithstanding the admitted fact that the deed recited the contents of the tract to be one hundred and sixty acres, and that it contained but ninety acres, because, as he urges, that the field-notes recited in the deed call for the boundary line of the Bennett survey, and that the tract, being thus limited by that call, and embracing thereby only ninety acres, that the other calls by course and distance, which, if they should prevail, would include a part of the land embraced in the Bennett survey (admitted to be an older and a valid title), must be disregarded, and that in consequence there was no failure in the title con\Teyed by the deed. The plaintiff’s cause of action, being based upon the defendant’s warranty of title, relies upon the existence of the actual survey, as described in the deed, to the points indicated according to the courses and distances set forth in the field-notes, and alleges eviction from the excess of land thus embraced in the one hundred and sixty acre survey, and surrender to the adverse paramount title.

A discrepancy as to the actual lines and boundaries of the survey as actually made by the surveyor exists not on. the face of the deed, but under the facts admitted, xvhich demonstrate that if the survey does include one hundred and sixty acres, that the call for the Bennett line is incorrect, and that the lines of the survey passed over it and included within them seventy acres of the Bennett tract.

Whether the survey was in fact thus made or not xvas a fact to be ascertained by the judge who tried the case. There was evidence before him strongly tending to estab[40]*40fish the existence of the survey upon the ground in accordance with the courses and distances indicated in the field-notes. In determining a question of this kind, where a seeming repugnance exists in the calls like that which is presented here, no unfavorable presumption, in the absence of proof, will be indulged against the truthfulness and correctness of the calls; it will be presumed that the surveyor did actually make the survey as indicated in his field-notes. Stafford v. King, 30 Tex., 257. The court will not presume that a surveyor did not actually run the fines of a survey in the absence of testimony. Castleman v. Ponton, 51 Tex., 84. It was proper, therefore, in attempting to reconcile the discrepancy in the calls of the survey, to adopt the rule which would explain, if possible, a mistake, if any existed in them, and which would thereby establish with reasonable certainty where the survey in fact was made; to follow, indeed, the footsteps which the surveyor made upon the ground.

It is admitted that both of the surveys or tracts of land were in the prairie and unoccupied, and that neither of the parties knew anything of the boundaries of either tract.

Ko evidence on either side was adduced in anywise explanatory of the field-notes of the survey of the land conveyed to the plaintiff. The field-notes are as follows, to wit: Beginning at the north corner of A. J. Batts’ survey, from which two post oaks six and ten inches in diameter bear north thirty-seven east twenty-five varas' distant; thence south forty-five east four hundred and seventy-five varas to corner, from which a pecan twelve inches in diameter bears north forty-five west seventy varas distant, a walnut ten inches in diameter bears north, north thirty-three, east fifty-five varas distant; thence north forty-five east nine hundred and fifty varas, corner, from which a post oak bears north eighty-eight west one hundred and thirty varas distant; thence south forty-five east eight hundred and fifteen varas, corner; thence north forty-five east three hundred and fifty varas, corner on southwest line of [41]*41A. Bennett’s survey; thence north forty-five west one thousand two hundred and ninety varas to a corner in the prairie; thence south forty-five west one thousand three hundred varas to the place of beginning.

The admission of the parties, taken in connection with the foregoing field-notes, “ that it was proven on the trial that the land conveyed by the defendant to the plaintiff contained only ninety acres — that it was short seventy acres,” established these facts,- viz.: that the lines, if actually run by course and distance, ran across and into the Bennett survey and did not corner on it, including within them seventy acres of the Bennett; that the line from the fourth to the fifth corner, calling for the Bennett line by a line in the field-notes of three hundred and fifty varas, should have stopped at forty-four varas distant from the fourth corner, and if the fifth corner was really established on the Bennett line, the surveyor made a mistake in the call for distance of three hundred and six varas in respect to a line which ought only to have been forty-four varas in length.

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Related

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158 S.W. 1033 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
2 Posey 36, 1880 Tex. LEXIS 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webb-v-brown-texcommnapp-1880.