Brenda Stewart and Judy Valcourt v. Angelina County, Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 7, 2007
Docket12-06-00124-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Brenda Stewart and Judy Valcourt v. Angelina County, Texas (Brenda Stewart and Judy Valcourt v. Angelina County, Texas) 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
Brenda Stewart and Judy Valcourt v. Angelina County, Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION HEADING PER CUR

                NO. 12-06-00124-CV

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

TWELFTH COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT

TYLER, TEXAS

BRENDA STEWART AND

JUDY VALCOURT,  §          APPEAL FROM THE 159TH

APPELLANTS

V.        §          JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT OF

ANGELINA COUNTY, TEXAS,

APPELLEE   §          ANGELINA COUNTY, TEXAS


MEMORANDUM OPINION


            Brenda Stewart (“Brenda”) and Judy Valcourt (“Judy”) (collectively “Appellants”) appeal the trial court’s judgment entered in favor of Appellee Angelina County declaring that Ben Weeks Road is a public road.  In three issues, Appellants contend that the trial court erred in applying an improper standard to determine that an implied dedication was undertaken and that the evidence was both legally and factually insufficient to support the trial court’s judgment.  We affirm.

Background

            Appellants filed the instant lawsuit on October 21, 2004 seeking a declaratory judgment that Ben Weeks Road is not a public road.  A bench trial was conducted on March 23, 2006.


            Appellants own two acres of land in the Beulah Community of Angelina County.  Ben Weeks Road passes through this property.  Appellants have lived on Ben Weeks Road since 1999.  Brenda’s mother, Jo Ann Stewart (“Jo Ann”), has lived on the property where Ben Weeks Road ends since 1991.  Jo Ann grew up in the area where Ben Weeks Road is located but moved away from the area in 1951.  In 1991 Jo Ann moved back to the “old home place” with her husband, Frank.  Jo Ann and Frank have a daughter, Lucy Potter (“Lucy”), who, prior to the time of trial, had lived on Ben Weeks Road for less than a year.

            Jo Ann’s brother, Jack Fairchild (“Jack”), testified that he has lived off Ben Weeks Road since 1991.  Jo Ann and Jack had a brother, Lester, Sr., who was killed in 1975.  Lester, Sr. had a son, Lester, Jr., who also lives in the area. 

            The origin of Ben Weeks Road is not clear from the record.  It is uncontroverted that Beulah School Road was previously used to reach the old home place where Jo Ann, Jack, and Lester, Sr. were raised.  However, the family did not have direct access to Beulah School Road and used a circuitous route through a neighbor’s property to reach it from their property.  When the neighbor who owned the property by which they accessed Beulah School Road decided to disallow its further use for this purpose, Ben Weeks Road was constructed and led in a straight path from the family’s old home place directly to Farm to Market Road 58 (“FM 58"). 

            Jo Ann testified that Lester, Sr. purchased three acres from Frankie Hale in the 1970s.  She further testified that Lester, Sr. used his own bulldozer to build Ben Weeks Road over this land.  However, Jack testified that in 1960, Lester, Sr. had the road built by the county.  He further testified that Lester, Sr. built a fence on both sides of the road.  Moreover, Jack stated that the county had maintained the road ever since its construction.  Jack further stated that the road had been used by the public, including the state game warden, following its construction. 


            Area resident Thomas Eugene Squires (“Squires”) testified that when he left to serve in the United States Marine Corps in 1953, the family used the route off Beulah School Road to access their property.  Squires further testified that upon his return in 1972, Ben Weeks Road led off FM 58 to the family’s property.  Squires stated that Robert Caldwell (“Caldwell”), the County Commissioner for Angelina County, Precinct 4, was maintaining Ben Weeks Road.  David Outlaw (“Outlaw”), a county employee for approximately twenty-five years, testified that he had been trained on the county grader by two men, Clyde Breazeale (“Breazeale”) and Jess Wheeler (“Wheeler”), who were both long time Angelina County employees.  Outlaw testified that they had worked on Ben Weeks Road during the 1960s. Outlaw, Delbert Lee Jones (“Jones”), and Lynn George (“George”)1 each testified that every county commissioner since Caldwell had maintained Ben Weeks Road. 

            Subsequently, the trial court entered a judgment declaring Ben Weeks Road to be a public road.  Thereafter, the trial court entered the following findings of fact and conclusions of law:

Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law

A.            The Ben Weeks Road is located off Farm Road 58 in the Beulah Community of Angelina County, Texas.

B.            Angelina County first began to maintain the Ben Weeks Road over forty years ago.

C.            Angelina County continued to maintain the Ben Weeks Road by and through its employees who testified in this cause.

D.            For an approximate period of at least [five] (5) years a gate was put up on the Ben Weeks Road and the Ben Weeks Road was not maintained by Angelina County during that time from the mid-eighties through 1990.

E.            The gate was taken down around 1990 and the Ben Weeks Road was again maintained by Angelina County employees from then to present.

F.             The Ben Weeks Road is a public road.  The public was free to use the road and did in fact freely use the road for the last [forty] (40) years except when the gate was up.

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Brenda Stewart and Judy Valcourt v. Angelina County, Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brenda-stewart-and-judy-valcourt-v-angelina-county-texapp-2007.