Barrick v. Gillette

187 S.W.2d 683, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 701
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 6, 1945
DocketNo. 2509.
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 187 S.W.2d 683 (Barrick v. Gillette) 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
Barrick v. Gillette, 187 S.W.2d 683, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 701 (Tex. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

GRISSOM, Justice.

W. D. Gillette instituted this suit against Grady Barrick for the purpose of estab *684 ■lishing an easement over a corner of defendant’s land and to obtain an injunction restraining defendant from obstructing said right of way. Plaintiff alleged he was the owner of a 110 acre tract of land that he purchased from W. J. Hart; that prior to plaintiff’s purchase Hart owned said 110 acre tract and also owned and occupied a 100 acre tract which adjoined said 110 acres on the east; that there was then a gate in a division fence separating said tracts, giving ingress and egress to said 110 acre tract, which gate was reached by a used road across the northwest corner of the 100 acre tract on the east occupied by the Harts and thereafter sold to Barrick. That said road was the only opening permitting ingress and egress by the Harts to a lane running north of the 100 acre tract. That said road was obvious and known and understood by the parties to be the only route by which Gillette (who owned and occupied a 32 acre tract adjoining the northeast corner of the 100 acre tract then owned and occupied by the Harts and later sold to Barrick) could travel from the 110 acre tract to a lane along the north side of the 100 acre tract. That Gillette’s 32 acre tract adjoins the Beaty and Comanche road. That the road in controversy, running from near the northeast corner of Gillette’s 110 acre tract across the northwest corner of Barrick’s 100 acre tract, was the only means of ingress and egress open to the plaintiff. That the defendant, Barrick, had built a fence across said opening.

Gillette further alleged that Hart sold the 110 acre tract to him with said means of ingress and egress, and that it was the only means of ingress and egress to said property, and that Hart was thereby bound to furnish plaintiff a right of way or easement across the 100 acre tract of land owned by Hart at the time he sold the 110 .acres to plaintiff. Plaintiff alleged that Hart’s 100 acre tract, adjoining plaintiff’s 110 acre tract on the east, purchased by Barrick from the Harts, was purchased by Barrick with the opening, road and means .of ingress and egress open and obvious at the time and that “the same comes to the plaintiff impressed with the liability of said ingress and egress into and out from said property, (and) must necessarily come from the said Hart and wife against said land as a part and parcel of his said purchase ■* * Plaintiff alleged that after plaintiff’s purchase of the 110 acre tract on the ■west the Harts “later” conveyed the 100 acre tract adjoining it on the east to Bar-rick, “with the road the only opening and only means of ingress and egress regularly used and occupied by the plaintiff, and it was known 'and understood to be used by the plaintiff at the time said defendant purchased the same.”

Plaintiff alleged that Barrick by stopping plaintiff from using the road across the corner of his land had caused him to suffer damages. He prayed for an injunction restraining Barrick from interfering with his use of the road and for a judgment “fixing said easement and right of ingress and egress permanently * * There were no exceptions to plaintiff’s petition.

Defendant denied that there was such a road across his land as alleged by plaintiff. Defendant alleged plaintiff attempted to purchase a road across defendant’s land, but was unable to pay therefor; that plaintiff was seeking a “prescriptive right” across defendant’s land for his own use and benefit; that when plaintiff purchased the 110 acre tract from the Harts he did so knowing that no convenient means of in-^_ gress and egress from the 35 acre tract then owned by plaintiff was available to him; that plaintiff offered to pay his grant- or, Hart, $100 in excess of the purchase price of the 110 acres for a right of way across the tract now owned by Barrick, which was refused by Hart, but that Hart deducted $100 from the purchase price of the tract sold to plaintiff, and that plaintiff is estopped to claim a “prescriptive right” across defendant’s land.

The cause was submitted to the jury on one issue, which issue and the definition given in connection therewith are as follows :

“Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence in this case that the road closed by the defendant was the only practical way of egress and ingress to and from the properties of the plaintiff described (in plaintiff’s) petition?

“By the term ‘practical’ as used in the preceding issue, is meant that the road must be adequate and reasonably convenient to meet the necessities of the person entitled thereto.”

The jury answered said issue “Yes.”

Defendant filed a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict upon the following grounds: (a) that there had been a merger by unity of title to the dominant and servient estate. That Hart on April *685 3, 1944, owned the 100 acre tract now owned by Barrick and the 110 acre tract now owned by Gillette. That on said date Hart conveyed the “alleged former dominant estate” to Gillette, but did not by his deed to Gillette convey or attempt to convey an easement over the alleged servient estate now the property of Barrick. (b) That there had been a merger by unity of title to the dominant and servient estates. That title to both tracts was in Hart on April 3, 1942, when Hart conveyed the “alleged former servient estate” to Barrick but did not in such conveyance expressly reserve the alleged easement involved in this suit, (c) That by the expenditure of a reasonable amount of money, plaintiff’s property could be made as accessible to a public highway as it is by the use of the alleged way involved in this suit. (d) That at the time the 110 acres was conveyed by Hart to Gillette it was agreed between them that no easement could be had across the 100 acres “because same had been sold to Grady Barrick * * * and he would not agree to such easement” and because no such easement could be given, it was agreed that $100 would be deducted from the agreed price Gillette was to pay for the 110 acre tract, (e) That said alleged easement is one of mere convenience and not of strict necessity, “there being a way of ingress and egress to and from the alleged dominant estate, dear and open, from the west, and by the expenditure of a reasonable amount of money, a way of ingress and egress can easily be opened from the road or highway on the north of said alleged dominant estate, and another easement, a way of ingress and egress to and from said alleged dominant estate can easily be opened, by the expenditure of a reasonable amount of money, from the southeast of said alleged dominant estate.” (f) That the alleged servient estate was conveyed to Barrick with covenants of warranty without reservations of an easement on the 3d of April, 1944, “before” Hart conveyed the alleged dominant estate to Gillette.

Defendant concluded that because of such allegedly undisputed evidence no issue of fact was raised and a directed verdict should have been given.

Defendant also filed a motion for new trial.

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Bluebook (online)
187 S.W.2d 683, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barrick-v-gillette-texapp-1945.