77 Tex. 71 | Tex. | 1890
This suit involves a question of boundary. One Abel Warren, being the owner of the Lee C. Smith original survey, agreed to sell to one A. T. Perkins a tract of 320 acres lying in its northwest corner. The land was surveyed in the shape of a parallelogram extending 950 varas from east to west and 1900 varas from north to south, with corners well marked on the ground by bearing trees. The deed was made to Perkins describing the land according to this survey. It was subsequently ascertained that the surveyor made a mistake as to the true position of the northwest corner of the Smith survey, which he intended to make his starting point, and commenced about 85 varas west of that corner. Consequently the east line of the survey as run by the surveyor and as marked on the ground and described in the deed to Perkins was 85 varas further west than it should have been. A. T. Perkins conveyed the 320 acres of land to E. E. Perkins, describing it as it was
Subsequently Warren sold to one Coudry a tract of land lying south of Moore’s survey and east of that sold to Perkins. The field notes of this tract call to be^in at the southwest corner of the Moore survey, and describe its lines by course and distance without designating either natural or artificial objects to fix the exact localitju The land in controversy is the strip lying between the southern prolongation of the west boundary line of the Moore and the east boundary of the survey made for Perkins as actually surveyed and as described in the deed from Warren to him.
The appellant was plaintiff in the court below. ' He claims that his land extends to the prolongation of the Moore line. The appellee, who holds under Coudry, claims to the east line of the survey as actually run by the surveyor who established the corners described in the deed from Warren to Perkins.
Starting from the southwestern corner of W. O. Moore’s land and following the courses and distances of the lines called for in the deed to Coudry, that deed does not embrace the land in controversy; but the surveyor who ran the lines and made the field notes which were subsequently incorporated in the conveyance testified that he did not find the Moore corner; that he supposed it to be on the east boundary line of the Perkins survey as actually run and marked on the ground, and that the place he took to be the Moore corner was on that line. According to this testimony the land surveyed for Coudry embraces the land in controversy; but the southwest corner of the Moore, though not well marked, can be readily ascertained, and there being no ambiguity or conflict in the calls which suggest a mistake, it may be doubted whether in a proceeding of this character it was competent to show by parol testimony that the surveyor made a mistake in calling for that corner. But fortunately for the defendant, he is not called upon to show any title until the plaintiff has established a prima facie right to the land for which he sues.
It is clear that Warren intended to convey to Perkins all the land extending as far east as the Moore line. But it is equally clear that on account of the surveyor’s mistake the field notes of the deed described
The plaintiffs deed from E. E. Perkins is probably sufficient to have conveyed the land in controversy if Perkins had had title. His difficulty is that the title still remains in Warren, who was agreed to be the common source, unless it passed by the deed from Warren to Coudry under which defendant claims.
There is no error in the judgment and it is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Delivered April 25, 1890.