Bass v. Champion International Corp.

787 S.W.2d 208, 1990 Tex. App. LEXIS 1002, 1990 WL 52635
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 30, 1990
Docket09-88-276 CV, 09-88-277 CV
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 787 S.W.2d 208 (Bass v. Champion International Corp.) 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
Bass v. Champion International Corp., 787 S.W.2d 208, 1990 Tex. App. LEXIS 1002, 1990 WL 52635 (Tex. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

OPINION

WALKER, Chief Justice.

This appeal arises from two suits for injunction against trespass instituted by ap-pellee, Champion International Corporation against appellants Clint Bass and Fred Het-zel.

Champion and its predecessor corporations have been record title holders of the subject timberland since 1951 when it was purchased from Sam Reid, et al. Because of appellants Bass and Hetzel’s trespass on the property, these injunctive actions were filed. Appellants Bass and Hetzel’s defenses were “title by limitation” or “adverse possession” to an unspecified amount of acreage within the property described in Champion’s deed. Appellants, in their an *209 swer, claim title to the subject property by virtue of the five, ten and twenty-five year statute of limitations. They make no claim of record title or any color of title.

The tract of land acquired by Champion in the 1951 Reid deed consists of 1781.79 acres. The far eastern portion of the land in question, which adjoined the Neches River was condemned by the United States Government as part of the Big Thicket Preserve Project. In the federal condemnation proceeding, appellants Bass and Hetzel also made a claim to the condemned land (which is a smaller part of the eastern portion claimed by them in this case). Appellants claim in the federal court was by title by adverse possession based on the same type of uses claimed in this suit to be sufficient for title by adverse possession. After a full hearing on the matters before the United States District Judge, the court affirmed Champion’s record title to the acres within the deed description which included the condemned tracts. The United States District Court had appointed a Substitute Special Master to determine the status and ownership as to certain tracts in the Big Thicket National Preserve, located in Hardin County, Texas. The Substitute Special Master stated his findings and conclusions and made recommendations with regard to the matter. Based upon those recommendations and findings, the U.S. District Court then entered its title decree. Quoting a portion of said title decree for future purposes in this opinion:

“The Court after reviewing said report, the exhibits to the title hearing, and the other pleadings and documents in this cause, find that the report should be approved and it is so hereby approved and adopted by this Court, and the Court further finds, rules, and orders that:
(a) Defendant Champion International Corporation (“Champion”) holds record title to the two tracts involved herein as well as the other property described in a deed to Champion Paper & Fiber Company from Sam H. Reid, Jr., et al., dated October 31, 1951, and filed for record October 31, 1951, in volume 241, page 516 of the Deed Records of Hardin County, Texas, said deed describing land in the Felder Survey.”

The U.S. District Court overruled Bass and Hetzel’s adverse possession claim to any portion of the land owned by Champion and made the following order in that regard:

“That the adverse possession claimed by defendants Bass and Hetzel to the property in the Felder Survey are overruled and denied. Defendants Bass and Hetzel claimed title by adverse possession to property included within the tract to which Champion has record title. This Court hereby denies and overrules such adverse possession claim and rules that Clint Bass and Fred Hetzel do not have title by adverse possession to said property of Champion within the Felder Survey, including the tracts described in Exhibit “A” hereto.”

The Title Decree and final judgment in the federal district court were affirmed and ratified on April 30, 1986.

After the federal court ruling, Champion filed a motion for summary judgment in this state court case which was granted by the district judge. Appellants Bass and Hetzel appealed the trial court’s granting of the motion for summary judgment in favor of Champion. That appeal came to this Court by way of Cause No. 09-87-0666 and Cause No. 09-87-0667. This Court in an unpublished opinion, delivered December 31,1987, reversed that judgment due to Champion’s failure to comply with the strict procedural requirements of Rule 166-A(c) of the TEX.R.CIV.P.

Bass and Hetzel also appealed the adverse federal court title decision. The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in Cause No. 86-2519, United States of America v. 33.71 Acres of Land, etc., et al. on February 23, 1988 affirmed the Federal District Court decision in favor of Champion [841 F.2d 395]. The unpublished opinion was included as an exhibit to the motion for summary judgment.

In that opinion, the Fifth Circuit noted that Bass and Hetzel had attacked Champion’s record title to the property under deed. The Court of Appeals ruled that the “Spe *210 cial Master did not err in awarding record title in Champion”.

The Fifth Circuit further affirmed the lower court’s decision that Bass and Hetzel had failed to prove their adverse possession claim and stated:

“The record is devoid of evidence that would tend to prove adverse possession. On the contrary, the evidence indicates that Bass and Hetzel were aware that Champion was cutting trees on the land and never complained and that Hetzel in fact moved on the land as a Champion employee whose duty as land custodian was to watch out for trespassers and have persons on the property sign tenancy agreements. With this evidence, we cannot say that the Special Master’s finding that Bass and Hetzel failed to prove their claim is clearly erroneous.”

After the Fifth Circuit's decision became final, affirming record title in Champion and overruling the adverse possession claims, Champion filed a second motion for summary judgment in this state court case which was granted by the court along with a permanent injunction against the defendant’s trespasses on the land. This second summary judgment is the subject of this appeal.

Bass and Hetzel have never disputed the fact that they have, at various times, entered upon the subject land without permission of Champion. Rather, they have used their action in trespassing on the property as a basis for arguing their adverse possession claim. It is also undisputed that an unspecified portion of the land under the Reid-Champion Deed is the land at issue in this case.

Appellants in their first point of error contend that the trial court erred in entering a permanent injunction because appellee failed to offer any summary judgment evidence that it was the owner of the land in question, or that it had a superior right of possession. We disagree and overrule point of error number one.

The Title Decree, entered by the U.S. District Court and affirmed by the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, contains a legal description of and for tracts nos. 200-04 and 200-06, the condemned property which was the subject of the federal proceeding. The legal description found by the federal court states that the “above parcel designated as tract 200-4 [200-06], Big Thicket National Preserve, is part of the same land acquired by Champion Paper and Fiber Company from Sam H. Reid, Jr., et al. by deed dated October 31, 1951_”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
787 S.W.2d 208, 1990 Tex. App. LEXIS 1002, 1990 WL 52635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bass-v-champion-international-corp-texapp-1990.