Allen and Martha Lewis Revocable Trust and Martha Lewis, Individually v. Daniel Perales and Erin Perales

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 12, 2010
Docket01-09-00140-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Allen and Martha Lewis Revocable Trust and Martha Lewis, Individually v. Daniel Perales and Erin Perales (Allen and Martha Lewis Revocable Trust and Martha Lewis, Individually v. Daniel Perales and Erin Perales) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen and Martha Lewis Revocable Trust and Martha Lewis, Individually v. Daniel Perales and Erin Perales, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Opinion issued August 12, 2010

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

————————————

NO. 01-09-00140-CV

———————————

The Allen and MarthA Lewis Revocable Trust and MarthA Lewis, IndividualLY, Appellants

V.

Daniel PERALES and Erin Perales, Appellees

On Appeal from the 55th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 0808471

MEMORANDUM OPINION

          Appellants, the Allen and Martha Lewis Revocable Trust and Martha A. Lewis, individually (“Lewis”), sued Daniel and Erin Perales (“Perales”) to establish title to land by adverse possession.[1]  Lewis appeals the trial court’s grant of Perales’s motion for summary judgment, arguing that the trial court erred: (1) in failing to rule on or refusing to sustain Lewis’s special exception complaining that Perales’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment was legally insufficient as a matter of law; (2) in failing or refusing to rule on the special exception, evidentiary objections, and motion for leave because it had a legal duty to do so and denied Lewis a proper record for review; (3) in granting Perales’s motion for summary judgment because Lewis raised genuine issues of material fact and thus Perales was not entitled to judgment as a matter of law; and (4) alternatively, in overruling Lewis’s evidentiary objections, because such errors were calculated to render an improper judgment.

          We affirm.

BACKGROUND

          Lewis purchased Lot Nine in Block Two of Replat of Del Monte, Section Two, at 5238 Piping Rock Lane, Houston, Texas (“Lot 9”) on August 29, 1954.  The conveyance included a five-foot easement at the back of the property and an aerial easement.  On January 30, 2007, Lewis transferred the property to the Allen and Martha Lewis Revocable Trust (“the trust”).  Perales purchased a neighboring property, Lot Ten in Block Two of Replat of Del Monte, Section Two, at 5246 Piping Rock Lane, Houston Texas (“Lot 10”), on December 27, 2007.

          In January 2008, Perales had his property surveyed and learned that the property line ran seven feet east of the existing fence that divided his yard from that of Lewis.  Perales solicited bids to landscape his yard, and, on January 4, 2008, notified Lewis that the fence would be moved.  Perales also had a pecan tree removed from the front portion of his property, where there was no fence.  Lewis retained attorney Stephen Baker, and on January 8, 2008, Baker sent a letter to Perales disputing the boundary between the lots and claiming either that the survey was incorrect or that Lewis had acquired the property by adverse possession.  Baker also argued that even if Lewis had not acquired the property by adverse possession, he had acquired an easement on it due to a sewer line that ran from the Lewis home under the disputed land.  On January 30, 2008, Lewis, through his attorney, sent Perales a “Notice to Vacate” the disputed land.  Perales received the notice on February 5, 2008.

On February 11, 2008, Lewis sued Perales for title to the disputed five-foot strip of land, acknowledging that the disputed property was not included in his deed to Lot 9 but claiming ownership by adverse possession under the ten-year limitations statute[2] and claiming that Perales thus unlawfully ousted Lewis from the property.  In his petition, Lewis alleged that he “first entered the Real Property, described above [as the northwest 5.0 feet (adjoining lot 9) of Lot 10], on or about August 19, 1954” and that he had “held the Real Property continuously in peaceable and adverse possession from that date.”  He further alleged that he had “cultivated, used, maintained, and enjoyed the real property.”  Lewis specifically alleged that he had “exercised possession of said Real Property up to the fence line established in the 1950’s between the then-neighbors” and that he had “planted a pecan tree and grass, cultivated, maintained, used, and enjoyed the Real Property and dug and installed an underground sewer line in the Real Property to service an addition to [his] home [that was constructed in 1963].”

Lewis argued in the alternative that he had acquired a prescriptive easement on “that portion of the Real Property used for the sanitary sewer” added in 1963.  Lewis alleges that “the use of the easement by The Lewis Trust and its predecessors-in-interest was and continued to be open, notorious, hostile, exclusive, and continuous for 10 or more years before this suit was filed.”  Lewis alleged that the trust was the “current holder of the easement” and was thus “entitled to use this easement for a sanitary sewer line and to have access for maintenance thereof,” and that Perales interfered with these rights by building a new fence “that enclosed the easement within [his] backyard and denied [Lewis] access to and possession of said easement.”

Finally, Lewis pleaded a trespass cause of action, alleging that Perales removed a pecan tree that was situated on the disputed property.  The petition also requested title and possession to the disputed property, a declaration of the validity of the easement, actual and exemplary damages, attorney’s fees, and costs.

          On September 26, 2008, Perales filed a motion for summary judgment.  Perales argued:

Lewis offered no evidence during litigation in this cause to show that he is entitled to the 5 feet of land belonging to Perales, either by superior title or through any cognizable act under the adverse possession doctrine.  Accordingly, Perales is entitled to judgment under the no evidence standard of summary judgment.  Even assuming salient evidence had been offered, Lewis’ claims are baseless. . . .

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Allen and Martha Lewis Revocable Trust and Martha Lewis, Individually v. Daniel Perales and Erin Perales, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-and-martha-lewis-revocable-trust-and-martha--texapp-2010.