OPINION
In this suit for conversion of oil and gas and title to minerals, the appellants raise four issues. Issue one complains of the trial court’s grant of summary judgment applying
stare decisis
to a case this Court decided some eighty-three years ago in
W.T. Carter & Bro. v. Collins,
STARE DECISIS
The issue that impends upon the others is whether, under the doctrine of
stare decisis,
this court’s opinion in
Carter v. Collins
stands as a bar to appellants’ claims as a matter of law. Central to this issue is an unresolved question about how Texas courts apply
stare decisis
to boundary line cases.
See Swilley v. McCain,
This court has addressed this notion of
stare decisis
in three opinions.
See Atchley v. Superior Oil Co.,
Asserting that they own the mineral interests in the Escobeda League in Polk County, appellants sued appellees for converting oil and gas that they contend belonged to them and was produced from the Escobeda League. Essential to their recovery is appellants’ contention that the Escobeda League conflicts with three surveys, the Colville, Thompson, and Wylie. 1 Appellees pleaded a defense under the doctrine of stare decisis and moved for summary judgment. Appellees contended the appellants were suing them for eon-verting oil and gas produced from lands located under the Colville, Thompson, and Wylie Surveys, that those surveys did not conflict with Escobeda, and that the absence of any conflict was forever determined by this court in Carter v. Collins. In this case, appellants do not claim under any of the parties to Carter v. Collins. Their claims are based upon earlier severances of the Escobeda mineral interests. But their claims urge the same conflict between Escobeda and Colville as that urged by the appellants in Carter v. Collins.
Carter v. Collins
was an action in trespass to try title brought by the appellees of that case to recover most of the Thomas Colville League.
See W.T. Carter & Bro. v. Collins,
While the quality of the surveying efforts described in Carter v. Collins was at times inept at best, nevertheless, we conclude, after a rather painstaking and detailed review of the various boundary descriptions, as well as the illustrated plat reproduced in the opinion, that sufficient evidence was contained in the record in the prior case to support the jury’s finding that the two boundary descriptions of the Escobeda League and the Colville League do not conflict in that they were not superimposed, one survey on top of the other. Carter v. Collins was a trespass to try title *669 case in which the appellants “disclaimed any interest in or title to the Thomas Colville league, save and except whatever part thereof might be included within the ... Bartolo Escobeda league of land.... ” Id. at 317. Appellants, in essence, were claiming ownership to property only to the extent it was reflected in the Escobeda League boundary survey. The issue was simply decided by having the jury compare the two surveys, review an illustrated plat admitted into evidence, and evaluate testimony from witnesses. Id. at 318.
With regard to the evidence reviewed by this Court in the earlier case, we observed that “[t]he great preponderance of the evidence in this case establishes the fact that the Thomas Colville league was actually located on the ground as shown in the above plat.” Id. at 319. Having said that, we then went on to methodically set out the inaccuracy in the purported location of the Escobeda survey in relation to other correctly established surveys and in relation to the existence of natural objects found and identified on the ground. Id. at 319-321. This was done by applying the following legal maxim which provides for a qualitative classification and grade of calls in survey and field note interpretation:
It is the law of this state that where natural objects, as called for in the field notes, can be actually found and identified on the ground as showing the footsteps of the surveyor, both course and distance, when inconsistent therewith, must give way and be disregarded.
Id. at 321.
After conducting this very detailed analysis of the Escobeda survey vis-a-vis well-established neighboring surveys and natural, identifiable objects, we concluded:
It is to be seen that if the Escobeda league is located as contended for by the appellees, it places it out of conflict with the other leagues and surveys, all of which were made by the same surveyor, and within a very short period of each other, and acquits the surveyor of doing an irrational thing, that of surveying one league upon another, when it was his official duty to locate the survey upon vacant domain, and without any intervening vacancies.
Id. Since the “other leagues and surveys” do indeed include the Thompson and Wylie leagues, as represented on the illustrated plat contained in the opinion, we find that Carter v. Collins establishes the accuracy of those surveys, as well as the fact that Escobeda is not in conflict with the other surveys. Id. at 321.
Our reading of Carter v. Collins in its entirety leads us to the conclusion that boundary lines were determined for a number of leagues, including the three at issue in the instant case. Therefore, stare decisis controls. The spirit of the so-called unorthodox view of stare decisis is certainly defeated if a decision must turn on whether exact metes and bounds appear in detail in the prior opinion. As noted above, over eighty-three years have passed since this Court handed down Carter v. Collins. The parties to that case, as well as any successors in interest, have had to live with the boundaries established therein. To step in at this point in time and essentially “wipe the slate clean” would, we believe, cause irreparable harm. The Texas Supreme Court has historically recognized the need for real property issues to remain settled once the appellate courts have spoken, viz:
The distinction [legal distinction between “mortgages” and “assignments” in conveyances of real property] so recognized has become a long-established rule, under which many transactions have been entered into, which involve property of great value. Such being the case, we are not at liberty to overrule the former decisions of the court upon the question. It is far more important that a line of decisions under which valuable rights have accrued should be deemed settled than that the court should conform to what may be thought a more correct technical rule.
*670
Adams v. Bateman,
VENUE
Appellants complain that the trial court erred in transferring this case from Harris County to Polk County. According to appellants, venue was proper in Harris County under Tex. Civ. Prac.
&
Rem.Code Ann. § § 15.002(a)(2) and (3) and 15.005, because some of the appellees either resided in Harris County or had their principal offices there. Appellants concede that § 15.011 is mandatory, but contend this case is a suit for the recovery of personalty and its venue is not governed by § 15.011. We overrule appellants’ complaint because their suit, as discussed under the
stare decisis
issue, is essentially one for the recovery of land.
See Renwar Oil Corp. v. Lancaster,
For the reasons stated above, we affirm the grant of summary judgment by the trial court.
Affirmed.
Notes
. We have adopted the spelling of Wylie that is used on the plat in Carter v. Collins, 192 S.W. at 318.
. Railroad Comm’n v. Magnolia Petroleum Co.,
.
Gulf Land Co. v. Atlantic Refining Co.,
