Thatcher v. Matthews
Thatcher v. Matthews
Opinion of the Court
Findings of Pact.
This is a boundary suit, the issue being whether or not the survey patented to John Matthews conflicted with the prior *811 survey in the name of Thos. Cartwright. Th£ Cartwright survey, league No. 10, was an Austin Colony survey, made by Rowson Alley in 1824, and was one of a number of league surveys made by the same surveyor, beginning at the Kinehloe No. 1, and extending up the Colorado river on the north side to and including No. 13, in the name of James Ross. The relative positions of surveys Nos. 9 to 13, inclusive, as called for in their original field notes, is shown by the following sketch from the Austin Colony map on file in the General Land Office:
No name appears on the survey shown on the sketch as lying north of the Cartwright survey. A sketch of the official map of Colorado county made in 1841 shows the same relative positions of these league surveys and has the name of T. Cochran marked on the survey north of the Cartwright. This survey has evidently been abandoned, as, regardless of where the northeast corner of the Cartwright is situated, the land covered by it is now covered by surveys made in 1873 and subsequently.
The field notes of the Cartwright are as follows:
“Beginning at the S. "Wl corner of No. 9 (the Rabb league); thence N. 20° E., 13,400 vrs., to a stake in prairie; thence S. 70° W., 2,000 vrs., to stake in prairie; thence S. 20° W., 12.500 vrs., to S. W. comer on cottonwood, marked No. 10. 2 feet dia., from which a mulberry brs. S. 20° W., 10 vrs., 12 in. dia., a cotton brs. N. 20° E., 15 vrs., 4 feet dia.; thence down the Colorado river with the meanders thereof, including in these lines one sitio (league) of land.”
The field notes of No. 9 are as follows:
“Beginning at the S. W. comer of league No. 8; thence N. 20° W., 12,500 vrs., to the N. E. corner, stake in prairie; thence N. 20° W., 2,000 vrs., to the S. W. (N. W.) corner, a stake in prairie; thence S. 20° W., 11,200 vrs., to the S. W. corner on a cottonwood, marked No. 9 and 10, 18 in. dia. a cottonwood brs. N. 87° W., S vrs., 9 in. dia. a hackberry brs. S. 78° E., S vrs., 7 in. dia.; thence down the river with meanders thereof to the beginning, including one sitio (league) of land.”
The Dyer calls to begin at the lower corner of No. 12, and to run thence N. 47° E., 10,300 varas, to “a corner planted in prairie”; thence S. 70° W., 12,500 varas, to the upper corner of No. 10 on the Colorado river.
No. 12 calls to begin at the upper comer of No. 11, giving bearing trees, and to run thence N. 47° E., 10,300 varas, to corner planted in prairie. Thence N. 20° E., 1,000 varas, where another corner was planted in prairie. Thence S. .77° W., 8,900 varas, to river, giving bearing trees. Thence down the river with its meanders to the beginning.
It will thus be seen that, according to the calls in the field notes, Nos. 9 and 10 have a common corner on the river, and that the east line of No. 10 exceeds in length the west line of No. 9, 2,200 varas; that Nos. 10 and 11 have a common corner on the river; and that the west line of No. 10 exceeds in length the east line of No. 11 400 varas, and is 600 varas S. 20° W. from the east comer of No. 12.
The following sketch will serve to illustrate the respective contentions of the parties hereto:
Plaintiffs in- error claim river formerly ran as indicated by tracing from point H. through E. to point below A. The evidence does not sustain this contention.
*812 The Cartwright survey, as claimed, by defendants in error, is embraced in the lines A, B, C, D, and, as claimed by plaintiffs in error, is embraced in the lines E, E, G, H. There is no dispute between the parties hereto as to the location of the side lines of the Cartwright survey from E to B, nor from C to H, but the defendant in error contends that the original corners are ⅜⅛ A, B, C, and D, while the plaintiffs in error contend that the same are at E, F, G, and H. None of the original trees or stakes called for in the field notes can now be found, and it is doubtful if any of them were ever seen by any one who testified in this case. The plaintiff in error, defendant, claims to have been with a surveyor in 1852, who found what he recognized as a marked tree at the southeast corner of No. 10 at the point E, and also the original stake in the prairie at the point F, called for as the northeast corner. Plaintiff in error was then 12 years old. One of plaintiffs’ witnesses, a survey- or, claims to have found the tree called for on the southwest corner at the point D, but that was in 1894 or 1895, when he was surveying a subdivision of the Cartwright survey, and it does not appear that he then knew there was any dispute as to this corner, by reason of which, perhaps, he did not make a careful examination. On the east line of No. 10 there is a brick monument, placed there some time in the 80’s by the then owner of a part of No. 9, for the northwest corner of said survey, and it has ever since been, and is now, recognized as the northwest corner of said survey.
At the point “m” on the sketch there is a! large rock, some 3 or 4 feet high, which has been, since the memory of man runneth not to the contrary, and still is, recognized as the north corner of the Dyer. The defendant himself testified that ever since he could remember, this rock has been recognized by everybody in that community as the corner of the Dyer.
April 1, 1846, Dyer and Chaney deeded to Foote and Foote a part of the Cartwright survey, beginning on the bank of the river (point “i” in sketch) calling for two bearing trees and running thence N. 20° E., 2,200 varas, to south corner of the Geo. W. Thatcher land (to point “5”); thence N. 70° W., 516 varas, to said Thatcher’s southwest corner (to point “k”); thence N. 20° E., 9,153 varas, to stake in prairie (point “1”); thence N. 20° W., 924 varas (point C); thence S. 20° W., 12,500 varas, to river (point D) calling for bearing trees; thence down the river with its meanders to beginning. The record does not show that any of these bearing trees were found. At the time this deed was made, Geo. W. Thatcher, father of plaintiff in error, owned the lower part of the Cartwright survey.
The act orea'ting Wharton county (April 3, 1846) calls for same to cross the river at the southeast corner of the Cartwright survey, and to run thence to the northeast corner of same, and thence N. 45° E., etc. The map of Colorado county, dated 1841, showed the northeast corner of the Cartwright to be located as claimed by defendant in error. The map of said county, dated September 30, 1881, showed said corner to be located as claimed by plaintiff in error. The map of Wharton county, dated April 1, 1906, shows said corner to be located as claimed by defendant in error.
This is the third appeal in this case. See Matthews v. Thatcher, 33 Tex. Civ. App. 133, 76 S. W. 61, and Thatcher v. Matthews, 105 S. W. 1006.
Opinion.
"l set up my instrument here (indicating) and had the willows and everything cut out .until I could see a point there (indicating'). * ‘ ⅜ * It appeared that the erosion was not only at this point (indicating) but was also here (indicating). It cut here (indicating) and there (indicating) too. * * ⅜ The way the map shows it comes across there (indicating) and there (indicating). There (indicating) is the first place we crossed it. It runs along in that direction (indicating).” .
Presumably the witness had some of the various maps iu Ms hand, and when he said “here” and “there,” he indicated the places to which he referred by pointing them out on the map. But as the language is transcribed in the statement of facts, it “indicates” nothing to us. By carefully reading the entire testimony, and comparing it from time to time with the various maps and rereading portions of it several times, we have been able to surmise what the witnesses meant. He who seeks a reversal at the hands of an appellate court should send up a statement of facts wMeh plainly shows what the testimony was.
Measuring from the point A, N. 20° E., 13,400 varas, as called for in the field notes, and thence N. 70° W., 1,862 varas, a point is reached 400 varas north of the corner of No. 11 as it should be according to the distances called for for the west line of No. 10 and the east line of No. 11. But beginning at the point B and running the same courses and distances, the point reached is 1,000 varas, N. 20° B., of the Dyer corner, and extending the line from E to F where plaintiff in error claims the stake planted by Rowson Alley in 1824 was found in 1852, and running thence N. 70° W„ 1,862 varas, a point is reached north of the northeast corner of No. 12. If the west line of No. 10 be run from the point G to H, as claimed by plaintiffs in error, it will be 12,980 varas, instead of 12,500 varas, as called for in the field notes; but if it be run from C to D, it will be 12,500 varas. If the brick monument be taken as the correct northwest corner of No. 9, and the point A be taken as its southwest corner, there is an excess of 957 varas in its west line. If the point E be taken as its southwest corner, the excess is 357 varas. There is nothing in the record to show how this point at the brick monument was located as the northwest corner of No. 9.
The land sold by Dyer to Foote in 1847 was presumably surveyed, as it calls for bearing trees at its beginning corner on the bank of the river. These bearing trees cannot now be found, but there seems to be no dispute as to where this corner is. It is on a high bluff of such a nature that the north bank has probably washed in but little since 1824. This bend is indicated by the plat accompanying the field notes made by original surveyor Alley, and while he does not give the meanders of the river, he .must have allowed for the same, as otherwise the area of No. 10 would not be correct. This is also true as to bends indicated in the original plat of No. 9. Beginning at this bend in the river, and running courses and distances as called for in the deed, shortening the line from “i” to “j” 7 varas, the north line of No. 10 is reached, as claimed by defendants in error.
Judge Wells Thompson, as administrator of the estate of Foote, subdivided the Foote land, the west part of No. 10, in 1872, up to, but not beyond, the north line, as claimed by defendants in error, and down to the point D. There are rocks at the points B, “1,” and O, and there is evidence in the record to the effect that they have been recognized for many years by the owners of No. 10, including plaintiffs in error, as marking the north line of said survey.
Beginning at the point “i” and running S. 70° E. to the east line of No. 10 at the point “n,” the distance to the southwest corner of No. 10 should be 2,027 varas. From “n” to A is 2,100 varas, but to the point E is only 1,500 varas. In other words, if we begin at the point “i” and run N. 20° E., 11,366 varas *814 (allowing 7 varas shortage, as found between “i” and “j”) for the north line of No. 10; thence north 70° E. the distance for the northeast corner of No. 10, and thence S. 20° W. to A, we have an excess of 66 varas, which is about as accurate as a line over 7 miles long would ordinarily be claimed. But if we stop the line at E, we have a shortage of 534 varas. The shortage in the north line of No. 10 is 138 varas. This may be accounted for by the surveyor who ran the line in 1852, using the same variation as called for in Alley’s field notes, whereas he should have made an allowance for the change in the variation occurring for a period of 28 years. The evidence shows that this change for this time would have amounted to 132 varas. In other words, if the surveyor in 1852 had used the same variation that was used in 1824 in running a line 13,-400 varas, he would have placed the corner 132 varas too far west. The evidence shows that this east line was cut out and marked in 1852, and if in subsequent surveys it was adopted as the true line, and the west line was fixed from the rock marking the Dyer corner, there would be a shortage of 132 varas in the north line of No. 10.
We do not think there is any merit in the objection to remarks of counsel, as shown by the fourth and ninth assignments of error.
The certified sketch of Austin Colony surveys was undoubtedly admissible. The assignment of error as to the certificate of the commissioner of the land office is overruled for the reason that we think it appears therefrom that he was certifying only to matters which appeared from the records of his office, and not as to facts he may have learned aliunde.
We do not think that the charge of the court is subject to the criticism made against it in the assignments of error, nor that there was error in refusing the special charges requested.
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
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Reference
- Full Case Name
- THATCHER Et Al. v. MATTHEWS Et Al.
- Cited By
- 3 cases
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- Published