Allen v. Allen

280 S.W.3d 366, 2008 Tex. App. LEXIS 6527, 2008 WL 3890210
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 21, 2008
DocketNo. 07-06-0150-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 280 S.W.3d 366 (Allen v. Allen) 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 v. Allen, 280 S.W.3d 366, 2008 Tex. App. LEXIS 6527, 2008 WL 3890210 (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

JAMES T. CAMPBELL, Justice.

The motions for rehearing of appellees Barbara Allen and Andrew Allen and Jan Yates Boultinghouse are denied. We withdraw our opinion of April 15, 2008, and substitute the following opinion. The judgment issued April 15, 2008, remains in place.

This declaratory judgment action concerning access to land was partially resolved by summary judgment with the remaining issues tried by jury. In its judgment, the trial court declared a north-south road across appellant Thomas Everett Allen’s property a public road and an east-west way across the same land an easement by prescription and es-toppel in favor of appellees Barbara Allen and Andrew Allen. We reverse and render in part and remand in part.

Background

Barbara Allen’s parents James and Ella Johnson owned some 1300 acres of ranch land in Llano County, Texas. After James Johnson died, the land was divided among their three children. Barbara’s tract, some 457 acres, is referred to in this litigation as the “Barker Hill Pasture.” By a 1970 deed, Barbara’s mother Ella Johnson conveyed a life estate in the Barker Hill Pasture to Barbara, and the remainder interest to Barbara’s son Andrew Allen. Barbara Allen and Andrew Allen were plaintiffs in the trial court.

Directly west of the Barker Hill Pasture lies a 3500-acre tract of ranch land owned by appellant, who is referred to in his brief, and in this opinion, as Tommy Allen.1 This property includes land Tommy inherited from his parents Tom and Iva Allen as well as property he purchased. Collectively we refer to this property as the “Allen property.” North of the Allen property lies the Yates Ranch which at the time of trial was operated by Jan Boultinghouse, as executor of the estate of her father, Mack Yates.

[371]*371At the heart of this dispute is the issue of passage across the Allen property to the Yates Ranch on the north and the Barker Hill Pasture on the east. A road known in this litigation as County Road 216A (CR-216A) traverses the Allen property in a north-south direction, terminating at the gate of the Yates Ranch. Branching off CR-216A and heading east approximately eight-tenths of a mile to the fence line separating the Allen property and the Barker Hill Pasture is a way known in this litigation as the Barker Hill Pasture Road.

Near the point where it enters the southwest corner of the Allen property, Tommy placed a gate on CR-216A during the late 1980s (the “1987 gate”). Near the center of the Allen property, but south of the intersection of CR-216A and the Barker Hill Pasture Road, Tommy earlier installed another gate on CR-216A (the “1974 gate”). At the point CR-216A reaches the Yates Ranch is a third gate, the “Yates gate.”

When the Johnson land was divided, Barbara’s sister Millie Ward received a tract lying to the south of the Barker Hill Pasture. Llano County Road 217A enters Millie Ward’s tract and from that road a way exists northwesterly into the Barker Hill Pasture.

In 1970, Andrew and his father, Sidney Allen, demolished a building in Austin and used some of the salvaged materials to construct a small house on the Barker Hill Pasture. At trial there was testimony, over objection, that during 1970, as Andrew and his father worked on the house, Tom Allen asked if help was needed cutting limbs “over there on your road.” There was testimony that it was often necessary to cut limbs to permit travel along Barker Hill Pasture Road. Before his death in 1981, Sidney Allen also constructed a “bunk house” and cabin for deer hunters, both in proximity to the cabin built in 1970. Barbara later made additional improvements to the property, which served family gatherings and later was used by deer hunters.

Tom Allen died in 1971 and in 1974 Tommy began locking the 1974 gate with concern for the welfare of his elderly mother, Iva Allen, who lived on the Allen property. When Tommy later acquired property to the south, along CR-216A, and installed the 1987 gate, he moved the lock from the 1974 gate to the 1987 gate. Andrew and Barbara did not oppose the lock and they received access by a combination and later, as the lock changed, a key. However, the arrangement proved less than satisfactory as locks disappeared.

There also was testimony that after Tom Allen’s death Iva Allen referred on at least one occasion to the Barker Hill Pasture Road as “your way” when she asked Andrew to pick up her mail as he went to town.

According to Andrew, during 1990 he and Barbara encountered Tommy at the 1987 gate and complained about the locked gate. Also according to Andrew, Tommy told them “Your way to go is down by [Millie Ward’s].” Andrew responded that he and Barbara possessed an easement over the Barker Hill Pasture Road. Thereafter, Tommy retained control of the gate and its access to the Allen property.

Andrew further testified he and Tommy had another conversation at the gate in 2002. This time Tommy said he might have to sell his property and if this occurred Andrew and Barbara could no longer use the Barker Hill Pasture Road. This conversation prompted the suit by Barbara and Andrew.

In their suit, Barbara and Andrew sought a declaration that CR-216A was a public road and an easement in their favor existed over the Barker Hill Pasture Road. [372]*372They also sought temporary and permanent injunctive relief assuring their right to use CR-216A and the Barker Hill Pasture Road.

Boultinghouse intervened in her representative capacity seeking declaratory and injunctive relief to ensure use of CR-216A. She joined Llano County as a defendant, asserting it refused to keep the road open for the public and provide maintenance.

On the cross motions for summary judgment of Boultinghouse and Tommy, the court entered an interlocutory order declaring CR-216A a public road dedicated by statutory proceeding of the Llano County commissioners court in 1932. The remaining issues were tried by jury which found Barbara and Andrew possessed a prescriptive easement and easement by es-toppel over the Barker Hill Pasture Road. It also found no portion of CR-216A was abandoned. The court entered a judgment conforming its summary judgment order and the jury’s findings. Tommy timely appealed. Llano County did not appeal.

Issues

Tommy presents four issues, three containing multiple sub-parts, challenging: (1) the grant of summary judgment that CR-216A is a county road; (2) the judgment of an easement by prescription in favor of Barbara and Andrew; (3) the judgment of an easement by estoppel in favor of Barbara and Andrew; and (4) the award of attorney’s fees in favor of Boultinghouse, Barbara, and Andrew.

Issue One: The Cross-motions for Summary Judgment

Boultinghouse moved for a partial summary judgment declaring that CR-216A, as it traverses Tommy’s property, is a public road of the third class. Tommy filed a cross-motion seeking a declaration that no public roadway exists on his property, and as to the claims of Barbara and Andrew, that no easement by prescription or estoppel exists on the Barker Hill Pasture Road. Tommy filed a separate response to Boultinghouse’s motion and Boultinghouse and Barbara and Andrew each filed responses to Tommy’s motion. The trial court rendered judgment in favor of Boultinghouse and denied Tommy’s motion. On appeal, Tommy contends the court erred by granting summary judgment for Boultinghouse.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
280 S.W.3d 366, 2008 Tex. App. LEXIS 6527, 2008 WL 3890210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-allen-texapp-2008.