
    R. L. SKINNER et al., Petitioners, v. C. L. NOLAND et ux., Respondents.
    No. A-5161.
    Supreme Court of Texas.
    July 27, 1955.
    VanZandt & Sanford, Sherman, for petitioners.
    Slagle, Rollins & Hughes, Sherman, for respondents.
   BREWSTER, Justice. ' '

Skinner et al., petitioners, sued Noland et ux., respondents, in trespass to try title, alleging that they were . owners in fee simple of ⅜7 undivided interest in a tract .described as “Beginning at the Southeast corner of Lot No, 16, a stake in channel of Big Mineral Bayou, the same being the Southwest corner of Lot No. 12; thence North 406 varas to a red oak marked X, being 154 varas South of the Northwest corner of Lot No. 12; thence West 345 varas to a rock and a blackjack marked X; thence South 412 varas to the bed of the aforesaid bayou; thence down the channel of said bayou to the place of beginning; containing. 26% acres of land, more or less, and being .the same land described in a deed from R. A. King to Chafin Skinner, dated March 29, 1878, and recorded in Vol.' 40, page 328, of the Deed Records of Grayson County, Texas.” , . .

Noland claims title under a warranty deed which described the property conveyed as follows: “All that certain tract or parcel of land out of the M. B. Lamar Survey, Abstract No. 704, situated in the County of Grayson, State of Texas. It is the intention of this deed to convey my one-third interest in and to the above described property * *

After the testimony was. in the parties agreed that there was no fact issue for the jury, whereupon the court withdrew the case from the jury and entered judgment for respondents. The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed. 277 S.W.2d 812.

Petitioners contend that the above-described deed from Skinner to Noland does “not contain within itself an independently sufficient description of any land” and “contains no reference to any other existing writing for a further description.” This contention recognizes the long-settled rule permitting resort to extraneous evidence to aid in description in an ambiguous deed so as to make it sufficient under Art. 1288, R.S.1925, of our Statutes of Conveyances. See Matney v. Odom, 147 Tex. 26, 210 S.W.2d 980, and the many cases there cited.

Petitioners argue that there is no “key” in the deed here in question to which extraneous evidence may be directly tied to determine the interest of the grantor. Tn support they cite Carter & Bro. v. Ewers, 133 Tex. 616, 131 S.W.2d 86, 87, 123 A.L.R. 908. In that case the language was “ ‘an undivided interest in and to a subdivision of 200 acres of a survey in the name of Swiny, situated in the County of Polk, State of Texas.’ ” We held that the language offered no key because it is nowhere indicated what undivided interest was meant and there were no words of ownership in the grantor.

The language here is different. It plainly says that the land' is “out of' the M. B. Lamar Survey, Abstract No. 704, situated in the County of Grayson, State of Texas.” In the second sentence,- supra-, grantor says that he intends to convey his one-third interest in and to the above described property. Thus we are furnished .a key in the language of the deed itself, susceptible of explanation- by parol, evidence, by which the property can be located on the ground. This coupled with the proof that the land in controversy .was all the land he owned in Grayson County at' the time, of the deed, was a sufficient description. Pickett v. Bishop, 148 Tex. 207, 223 S.W.2d 222.

It seems that the issue here was settled as long ago as 1895, in Curdy v. Stafford, -88 Tex. 120; 30‘ S.W. 551. In that casé Chief Justice Gaines said that an instrument which purports to convey that part of a certain tract which is owned and claimed by the grantor is not void upon its face, for it may be shown by extrinsic evidence what particular part grantor so owned and claimed.

It follows that the judgments below are affirmed.  