Boerschig v. SOUTHWESTERN HOLDINGS, INC.

322 S.W.3d 752, 2010 WL 3157152
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 29, 2010
Docket08-09-00071-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 322 S.W.3d 752 (Boerschig v. SOUTHWESTERN HOLDINGS, INC.) 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
Boerschig v. SOUTHWESTERN HOLDINGS, INC., 322 S.W.3d 752, 2010 WL 3157152 (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

GUADALUPE RIVERA, Justice.

John Boerschig appeals the trial court’s judgment in favor of Southwestern Holdings, Inc. (SHI), stemming from his suit for trespass, injunctive, and declaratory relief. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

BACKGROUND

In the early 1900s, John A. Poole owned a sizeable ranch named La Cienega. 1 The northern portion of that ranch, now known as the McCracken Ranch, was later sold to the McCrackens in 1930. In 1950, Poole’s son, Hart Greenwood, purchased La Morita, a western property adjacent to La Cienega.

Forty years later, SHI bought the Cibo-lo Creek Ranch, which abutted the northwest area of the McCracken Ranch, and developed the property into a resort. And in 1992, SHI bought La Morita and La Cienega, and renovated those properties into resorts, as well. Frances Harper, Greenwood’s daughter, retained a portion of the original Poole ranch located to the east of La Cienega, and SHI later purchased a portion of that property as well in 2000, known as the Harper Ranch. 2

Meanwhile, ownership of the McCracken Ranch vested to McClurg and Kelly, and in 1999, they sold the ranch to Wolverine Ventures, who transferred the ranch to John Boerschig the following year. Boer-schig now operates the ranch for cattle ranching and hunting. He later sued SHI over the use of two roads, namely, the Tinaja-China Road and the Morita Road, which as explained below, cross the parties’s respective ranches.

The Tinajar-China Road

From Highway 67, access to the McCracken Ranch and Cienega Ranch is had by the Tinaja-China Road, which first crosses the eastern part of the Cíbolo Creek Ranch and then a portion of the McCracken Ranch. Prior to Ventures’ purchase of the McCracken Ranch, SHI attempted to have the Presidio County Commissioners Court declare the Tinaja-China Road a public road, but the Commissioners Court declined, recommending that the private parties, that is, SHI and the owners of the McCracken Ranch, McClurg and Kelly, resolve the issue among themselves. Accordingly, in October 1993, the parties executed the following reciprocal easement:

For adequate consideration, the receipt and sufficiency of which is acknowledged and confessed, Southwestern hereby Grants and Conveys to McCracken, their heirs, successors and assigns, and McCracken hereby Grants and Conveys to Southwestern, its successors and assigns, an easement 30 feet in width for the purpose of ingress and egress to and from McCracken Tinaja China Ranch and Cíbolo Creek-Cienega Ranch, respectively, over, across and upon the New Road described in this Agreement for its full length as described herein. Such easement shall be appurtenant to the McCracken Tinaja China Ranch and to the Cíbolo Creek-Cienega Ranch, each such ranch being more particularly described on the attached Exhibit “A”.

*757 Following the agreement, McClurg and Kelly never objected to SHI’s or its guests’ use of the road to access its resort at Cienega.

The Monta Road and Fence

The Morita Road runs from an old fort located on La Cienega Ranch to another fort on La Morita Ranch. As the road passes through the Morita Canyon, the road crosses onto the McCracken Ranch for 2,200 feet. Prior to a survey completed in 2001, Boerschig simply assumed the entire road belonged to SHI as did all prior property owners in the area. Indeed, from 1950 to 1992, the road was not open to the public but used on a regular basis and exclusively by the Greenwoods, who also exclusively improved and maintained the road. Similarly, SHI used and maintained the road exclusively since it purchased the Cienega and Morita ranches, and Boerschig, prior to obtaining the survey, only used the road with SHI’s permission.

The survey also concluded that a small portion of a fence that SHI erected in 1992 near- the renovated buildings on La Morita was actually on the McCracken property.

The Suit

Boerschig sued SHI, alleging, among other things, that: (1) SHI trespassed by using a portion of the Morita Road that was on his property; (2) SHI violated the express easement by using it for its invitees to access a resort rather than a ranch, and to access nonappurtenant properties; and (3) SHI trespassed by erecting a fence on the Morita Road. Boerschig moved for injunctive and declaratory relief, asking the court to declare that portion of the Morita Road his, to enjoin SHI’s trespasses, and to determine the scope of the express easement. Boerschig further moved for damages based on permanent and temporary injuries, and exemplary damages. SHI generally denied the allegations, claimed it had an easement by estoppel, implication, or prescription on the Morita Road, alleged that Boerschig’s fence claims were barred by standing and limitations, and also moved for declaratory relief concerning the language in the express easement.

Boerschig’s Summary Judgment

SHI later counterclaimed that it had an implied easement by existing use or necessity across the Tinaja-China Road and that the express easement had been impliedly dedicated to the public. Boerschig moved for summary judgment on SHI’s most recent counterclaims, contending that SHI failed to show any evidence that met the elements for an implied easement by existing use or necessity, that any implied easement terminated when the express easement was entered into, and that there was no evidence that the easement was impliedly dedicated to the public. Boer-schig also filed a motion to dismiss SHI’s counterclaim for implied public dedication, arguing that SHI lacked standing to bring such an action. In response, SHI asserted that there were genuine issues of material fact concerning whether: (1) there was an implied easement before the express easement issued; (2) the implied easement ended when the express easement was signed; and (3) there was an implied public dedication of the easement in question. The trial court granted Boerschig’s motion for summary judgment.

SHI’s Summary Judgment on Declaratory Action for Express Easement

SHI moved for summary judgment as to the declarations of the rights of the parties concerning the express easement. SHI’s motion asserted that the express easement was: (1) an easement appurtenant; (2) a general easement for ingress and egress; *758 (3) an easement not limited as to the purposes of such ingress and egress; and (4) an easement that included the right of the parties’ guests, invitees, and licensees to use the easement. Boerschig stipulated that the easement was an easement appurtenant from the McCracken Ranch to the Cíbolo Creek Ranch and Cienega Ranch, but contested whether the easement was appurtenant to access any of SHI’s other properties. He also asserted that the easement was not a general easement that could be enlarged by changes in the use or character of SHI’s property; rather, Boer-schig alleged that the easement was limited by the intentions of the parties at the time the easement was entered into and that what is expressly not included in the easement is prohibited.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
322 S.W.3d 752, 2010 WL 3157152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boerschig-v-southwestern-holdings-inc-texapp-2010.