65 Tex. 623 | Tex. | 1886
Buckley and Wilson compromised their controversy over one-fourth of a league granted to Moore, by dividing it between them. Buckley conveyed his interest in the upper half to Wilson, and Wilson conveyed his interest in the lower half to Buckley. In both deeds, made in 1847, the two lines dividing
If Buckley and Wilson, not only divided the land between them, but also actually ran out and marked the division lines, about the year 1847, and they and their privies have since acquiesced in and acted upon such delineation, until the defendant, in 1881, • set up a new line, the "plaintiffs, claiming by the old line, were entitled to recover. The court below fully comprehended this theory, and, fairly enough, submitted it to the jury.
If Buckley and Wilson did not extend their lines upon the ground, but some one claiming under one of them had the lines run out and marked, and this designation was accepted and acquiesced in for a number of years by the successive owners of the two parts, the boundary would be just as well established as if the lines were run by Buckley and Wilson. There was evidence tending to show that Herndon, whilst the owner of the Buckley half, had it surveyed and subdivided by a deputy surveyor, Henry W. Stamm, and his notes of the lines were recorded in October, 1852. If this surveyor actually ran the line in dispute just above the McCray house, and, as thus located, the line was accepted and acted upon from 1852 until 1881, it could not be disturbed. This theory was not submitted to the jury; it was sufficiently supported by testimony to justify its submission, and if sustained the plaintiffs would have recovered. i
But, if no line had ever been run out or marked until 1881, the plaintiffs would still be entitled to recover, if, upon an extension of the division lines, according to the calls in the deeds between Buckley and Wilson, the true location of the one in controversy should be found where the plaintiffs claim it to be. To justify and require the submission of this issue, there was certainly no lack of evidence on the plaintiffs’ part. The plaintiffs’ contention is undoubtedly right if the northwest corner of the Moore survey is really where it is described to be in Thompson’s first deed to defendant. That this was the northwest corner, seems to have been the accepted opinion from
On the other hand, Schley now considers the corner three hundred yards further down the river. He reached this conclusion in making a resurvey for defendant in 1881. He ran a line across the Scott and Moore surveys, and found that the actual aggregate width was equal to the sum of their breadths, as indicated by the field notes, and that in the aggregate area is the full number of acres accorded to both in the grants. He also ascertains that fixing the dividing line between these surveys three hundred yards below the old marked line and the recognized corner, leaves in the Moore tract its full quantum of land. These seem to be the main premises supporting his later conclusion. This reasoning depends upon a degree of faith in the infallibility of the chain and compass not generally entertained by minds familiar with land litigation in Texas.
The true line between the Scott and Moore surveys is that traversed by the surveyor who made the original surveys, even if it leaves in the one a greater and in the other a less area than its field notes de-; scribe Mr. Schley’s measurements may be very much more accurate than his ancient predecessors, but the object of the resurvey is not to correct, but to find the old lines. An old marked line, no more than three hundred yards from where it ought to be, affords strong grounds for opposing the views of Mr. Schley.
Without expressing or indicating any opinion as to where the northwest corner is, there was certainly sufficient testimony supporting the plaintiffs’ side of the issue to make it a question for the jury, whether, independent of the recognition of a division line between the Buckley and Wilson tracts, a division according to their deeds would not put the line in controversy where the plaintiffs contend that it is. This question was not submitted to the jury, but, in effect, was determined by the court in the defendant’s favor.
There was no error in allowing the defendant to testify to the statements made by Thompson about the line in controversy. These statements were fairly in rebuttal of the testimony offered by the plaintiffs, to the effect that Thompson always recognized, and often stated, that the division line between his land and the Gilbert tract ran just above the McCray improvement. The plaintiffs themselves instituted the issue as to where Thompson considered' this line to be, and proved his repeated declarations. In the statement of facts, what is probably the strongest quotation from Thompson, is set down as the testimony of the defendant, and not as a statement of Thompson, testified to by the defendant.
. The errors pointed out make it necessary that the judgment below be reversed and the cause be remanded, and it is so ordered.
Reversed and Remanded.
[Opinion delivered March 9, 1886.]