Woods v. Robinson

58 Tex. 655, 1883 Tex. LEXIS 81
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1883
DocketCase No. 1499
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 58 Tex. 655 (Woods v. Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woods v. Robinson, 58 Tex. 655, 1883 Tex. LEXIS 81 (Tex. 1883).

Opinion

West, Associate Justice.

This is a suit brought by plaintiff in error to recover thirty-six and two-thirds (36-f) acres of land, patented in April, 1881, and to which he has a chain of title.

The defendants claim that the land at and long before the date of plaintiff’s patent had been granted to J. C. Beil’s assignee, under ■ whom they hold. There is no question as to- the mesne conveyances of either party. The case was tried without a-jury.

[658]*658The patent to J. G. Neil’s assignee, under whom the defendants claim, was issued on January 21, 1858, and that of -Spence, under whom the plaintiff claims, in April, 1881. As, all other things being equal, the elder grant must prevail, the vital question, then, is, were the thirty-six and two-thirds (36-f) acres in suit inclosed within the ambit of the Neil survey when plaintiff’s patent issued? If it was, then the judgment of the court below, which answers the question in the affirmative, was correct; if not, it must be set aside.

The field notes of the Neil survey call to begin at the northwest' corner of the J. B. Alexander survey, which has as its northwest corner a known and established point in the Daniels east line, on which the Neil survey corners. Its south line is in part common to it and the J. B. and Samuel Alexander surveys. This south line is also well known, and its second corner, being its southeast corner, is carefully marked by bearing trees, etc., and is found on the ground and is called for at the point where this south line of the Neil survey intersects the east line of the Lyons survey, also a survey whose lines and corners are known. It then runs north with the Lyons east line to the southeast corner of the P. Price survey, where was established a corner common to the Neil and Price surveys, and on the Lyons east line, and also known. The line then runs west with Price’s south line until it reaches Price’s southwest corner, which is also known. It then runs north with Price’s west line until it strikes Price’s northwest corner, which is also carefully marked with bearing trees, etc., and well known, and is the point where this line last mentioned, being a line common to the Price and Neil surveys, intersects the south boundary line of the Woods grant of three-fourths (f) of a league, being an old and well-defined survey, cultivated and occupied for twenty-five or thirty years past, with its west line and corners all well known or very easy to be ascertained. From this last-named well known point in the south line of the Woods survey the Neil line runs west according to the calls of the patent, until it strikes the east line of the Horton survey, and there it has a corner in common with the Woods grant. This last line is in the prairie, but the patent calls for the corner in the east line of the Horton survey, giving course and distance, and this east line of the Horton, which is also the west line of the Woods survey, is a marked line, and is well known and easily found, and for many years fences have been built and farms laid out and inclosed with reference to its known locality, and the line can be easily traced on the ground, and the point where the Neil north line intersects it is capable of ascertainment. From this point, being the northwest corner of the Neil [659]*659survey, the patent • calls for a line running south with the Horton and Daniels east line to the beginning point of Beil’s grant, which, as was said before, is at the northwest corner of the J. B. Alexander survey on the east line of the Daniels grant. The small strip of thirty-six and two-thirds (36§) acres in controversy lies in the northwest corner of the Beil survey. In running the north line of the Beil survey from Price’s northwest corner, along the south line of the Woods grant, the call for distance is exhausted, not only before the corner in Horton’s east line is reached, but even before a point is reached in Woods’ line, which would be opposite the beginning point of the south line of the Beil survey. This north line of the Beil survey being in the prairie, and of course unmarked, and the corner also undesignated by any natural object, the plaintiff contends that the northwest corner of the Beil grant, instead of being established on the Horton east line as called for in the patent," the call for distance in the grant being more than exhausted, and the southwest corner itself not found, and the Horton east line not reached, must be established in the prairie at a point opposite its original beginning corner, where the Daniels east line, which is also called for in the grant as part of the west line of the Beil survey, if extended in a northerly direction, would intersect the south line of the Woods grant at a point in the prairie where the plaintiff seeks to fix the northwest corner of the Beil grant.

The Beil survey is then closed, according to this theory of the plaintiffs, by running a line south, disregarding entirely the call in the Beil grant for the Horton east line, until the Daniels east line is reached, and then following the Daniels line, also a well-known line, to the point of beginning at J. B. Alexander’s northwest corner. If this is done, the calls in the Beil patent for its northwest corner in the east line of the Horton grant will be disregarded, as well as the call in the patent for the Horton east line as constituting a part of the west boundary line of the Beil grant. Prom this it would result that the small strip in controversy will be outside the boundaries of the Beil survey and would - belong to plaintiff. The reason given by the plaintiff in error for insisting on the location of the ground of the Beil survey in this manner, is that by it the Beil grant gets its full complement of land, and the survey closes properly and lawfully, whereas, if it is. extended according to the calls of the patent to the Horton east line, not only the call in the grant for distance must be disregarded, but that on running south along the Horton east line, instead of striking the Daniels east line as called for and then running with it according to the patent, we will [660]*660in fact strike the Daniels north line, which is not called for in the grant, at a point on that line two hundred and three (203) varas distant from the Daniels east line which is called for, and by continuing the course and distance called for in the grant south, the line so run will disregard the call of the grant for thé Daniels east line, and will throw the Neil grant in conflict with the Daniels grant, and will exhaust itself on that survey, and will never reach either the Daniels east line or its own beginning corner, but will terminate at a point within the Daniels grant two hundred and three (203) varas west of the actual beginning corner of the Neil grant, which had already been ascertained and established on the ground at the northwest corner of the J". B. Alexander survey.

This is the only difficulty that exists in locating the Neil survey on the ground. It arose evidently from the fact that the surveyor, when establishing the Neil north line in the prairie, without probably tracing that line west beyond Price’s well-known northwest corner, assumed that the Horton east line was really nothing more than a continuous extension of the old Daniels east league line from its beginning point on the Lavaca river back in the prairie to the termination of the Horton east line.

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Bluebook (online)
58 Tex. 655, 1883 Tex. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woods-v-robinson-tex-1883.