Benjamin Caine Riddle v. Ronald Joe Smith, Gregory John Ganss, Angela G. Ganss, and Alfred W. Ganss, Jr.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 2, 2018
Docket07-18-00016-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Benjamin Caine Riddle v. Ronald Joe Smith, Gregory John Ganss, Angela G. Ganss, and Alfred W. Ganss, Jr. (Benjamin Caine Riddle v. Ronald Joe Smith, Gregory John Ganss, Angela G. Ganss, and Alfred W. Ganss, Jr.) 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
Benjamin Caine Riddle v. Ronald Joe Smith, Gregory John Ganss, Angela G. Ganss, and Alfred W. Ganss, Jr., (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Seventh District of Texas at Amarillo

No. 07-18-00016-CV

BENJAMIN CAINE RIDDLE, APPELLANT

V.

RONALD JOE SMITH, GREGORY JOHN GANSS, ANGELA G. GANSS, AND ALFRED W. GANSS, JR., APPELLEES

On Appeal from the 46th District Court Wilbarger County, Texas Trial Court No. 27,748, Honorable Dan Mike Bird, Presiding

August 2, 2018

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before QUINN, C.J., and PIRTLE and PARKER, JJ.

This appeal involves the issue of adverse possession. Benjamin Caine Riddle was

the record or titled owner of the 17 acres of rough ranch land in question. He purportedly

lost ownership to the acreage under the doctrine of adverse possession. Approximately

half of the 17 acres became the property of Ronald Joe Smith (Smith) while the other half

became the property of Gregory John Ganss, Angela G. Ganss, and Alfred W. Ganss

(collectively referred to as Ganss) through application of the doctrine. Invoking the claim

of trespass to try title, Smith and Ganss sued Riddle to claim the property after Riddle engaged in efforts to clear portions of it. Trial was to the court, which body ruled in favor

of Smith and Ganss. Riddle appealed, asserting three issues. Two concern the legal

and factual insufficiency of the evidence to support the trial court’s finding of adverse

possession; they focus upon whether or not grazing alone on the disputed acreage would

support a finding of adverse possession if the subject land is or is not enclosed. The third

issue also implicates the sufficiency of the evidence, but its focus lies upon the trial court’s

decision to award Smith and Ganss title to land under a public roadway. We reverse.

Background

As mentioned, the parcel of land consists of about 17 acres (disputed parcel) laying

east of but abutting County Road 103 in Wilbarger County (CR 103). The parties describe

it as consisting of rough terrain with breaks ranging from 10 to 12 feet deep. If visualized

on a map, it could be likened to a bulge that follows the contour of CR 103 as the road

curves around the deep breaks. According to the record, the land was previously made

the subject of the H&TC RR land survey. That survey actually placed the 17-acre bulge

into sections 26 and 27 of the surveyed land. The county road was also placed in those

two sections.

Separating the road from the western edge of the bulge, though, is a multi-stranded

barbed-wire fence containing two gates (i.e., the road fence). No one testified as to the

exact date on which the fence was built or who built it. However, evidence indicates that

it had been in existence for over 40 years. The same fence also separates the disputed

parcel from those portions of sections 26 and 27 found west of the road fence.

2 Unlike the western edge of the bulge, its eastern edge (i.e., the edge demarcating

the eastern border of sections 26 and 27) has no fence. It simply abuts sections 29 and

30 without indication of where sections 26 and 27 end and 29 and 30 begin.

Smith acquired section 30 from a relative in 1971.1 Ganss bought section 29 in

2010 from Shelton, who bought it in 2000 from McDuff, who inherited it from Sullivan, who

bought it in 1968 from Smith’s uncle. Prior to the acquisition of section 29 by Sullivan, it

and section 30 had no fence or like structure depicting the northern and southern borders

of sections 29 and 30, respectively.2 A fence, though, was built demarcating the boundary

(i.e., the dividing fence) soon after Sullivan bought the property, and the builder connected

the western end of the dividing fence to the road fence. So connecting the dividing and

road fences effectively dissected the disputed parcel between a portion north of the

dividing fence and a portion south of the dividing fence. Yet, there remained no fence

that divided the eastern edge of the disputed parcels from sections 29 and 30.

In addition to the dividing fence, Sullivan also built or installed structures onto the

disputed property, or at least upon the part south of the dividing fence. They consisted

of cattle pens and a milk truck or like vehicle capable of being used for storage. Both

structures were visible from CR 103, and both were used for the purpose of maintaining

a cattle operation upon both section 29 and the disputed land. Apparently, Sullivan

grazed cattle upon section 29 and the portion of the bulge abutting it. When it came time

to sell the livestock, they were moved onto the bulge and into the pens. The cattle would

1 Though Smith does not own the entirety of section 30, we allude to him as owning it here to

simplify an understanding of the properties involved. 2 Like Smith, Ganss and his predecessors in title did not own all of section 29, but we, nonetheless, allude to him as owning it here for reasons of simplicity.

3 then be moved from the pens through a gate maintained within the southern portion of

the road fence and onto a trailer. When not in use, the gate would be locked, thereby

preventing others from entering the land without Sullivan’s permission. Of further note is

evidence indicating that this gate was also the sole means available to Sullivan of

accessing section 29. In addition to operating his cattle business, Sullivan also engaged

in recreational activities (such as hunting) on both section 29 and the disputed parcel

abutting it. Moreover, his successors in interest (including Ganss) continued the practices

he started once they acquired it. They placed cattle and engaged in recreational activities

upon both tracts. They, like Sullivan, also repaired the road fence when such repairs

were needed.

Unlike Sullivan, Smith did not place structures upon the northern part of the

disputed land abutting section 30. He did utilize the parcel, however, by allowing cattle

to graze upon it on a seasonal basis. So too did he and other family members ride horses

and/or motorcycles upon both tracts, hunt on them, and use them as a means of

accessing section 30 in general via a second gate built into the road fence north of the

dividing fence. As did Sullivan, Smith also repaired the road fence when needed.

Again, the disputed parcel was actually within the boundaries of sections 26 and

27, rather than 29 and 30. Furthermore, neither Smith nor Sullivan (or his successors)

owned recorded interests in sections 26 or 27. In 1968, those sections were owned by a

different family named Smith, who apparently conducted a farming operation on the lands.

They were then conveyed to a family named Mitschke, who continued the operation. The

Mitschkes eventually conveyed the two sections to Riddle in 2014.

4 Despite the fact that the disputed parcels were part of sections 26 and 27, we have

been cited to no evidence indicating that any of their owners ever utilized the 17-acre

bulge. Nor have we been cited to evidence that they ever attempted to 1) access it without

permission from Smith or Sullivan or 2) repair the road fence. Additionally, it was not until

some 30 years after Smith bought section 30 that anyone holding the record title to the

bulge verbally informed Smith of his or her interest in it. That occurred when a Mitschke

family member saw Smith on the disputed parcel and mentioned that the land belonged

to the Mitschkes. Smith responded by informing the person that he had not heard that

before. Nothing else was said of the matter until Riddle bought the land. Controversy

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Benjamin Caine Riddle v. Ronald Joe Smith, Gregory John Ganss, Angela G. Ganss, and Alfred W. Ganss, Jr., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benjamin-caine-riddle-v-ronald-joe-smith-gregory-john-ganss-angela-g-texapp-2018.