Brown v. Farwell

285 S.W. 688, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 551
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 22, 1926
DocketNo. 1335. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 285 S.W. 688 (Brown v. Farwell) 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
Brown v. Farwell, 285 S.W. 688, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 551 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

HIGHTOWER, C. J.

This suit was filed in the district court of Orange county by the appellee, Farwell, as plaintiff, against Carrie Brown and others, who are appellants, the appellee alleging, substantially, that the appellants were threatening and were proceeding to close and obstruct a certain roadway by putting a fence across the same, and praying for a temporary injunction to restrain and enjoin appellants from closing the roadway, and that the injunction be made permanent upon final hearing. It was alleged toy appellee, in substance, that the roadway in question had been openly, continuously, exclusively, and adversely used and claimed by appellee and by the public in general as a public roadway for a period of 27 years and more, and that by reason of such open, continuous, exclusive, and adverse use of the road it had become stamped in favor of the appellee and the public in general with the character of a public road, and that the ap-pellee and the public in general had acquired an easement in the road and land over which it runs by prescription under the statutes of ten years’ limitation of this state.

Appellee made the city of Orange a party defendant, alleging as his reason for doing so that the roadway in question was a part of the city of Orange, and by adverse user by the people of the city had become one of the streets of the city of Orange, and that if appellants were permitted to close and obstruct the same their acts in doing so would toe in violation of the law of this state and of the ordinances of the city of Orange, and prayed that the city of Orange be made a party to the suit in order that it may protect its rights to the street.

Carrie Brown and the other appellants here answered by general demurrer, general denial, and by cross-action, the nature of which becomes immaterial. The city of Orange answered and adopted the allegation of appellees’- petition, and prayed for the same relief as was sought by appellee.

The case was tried before a special trial judge, without a jury, and resulted in a judgment in favor of the appellee and the city of Orange, the- judgment declaring the road in question to be a public road and highway, and establishing a permanent easement in the same in favor of the appellee and of the city of Orange, and perpetually enjoining appellants from in any manner obstructing the roadway.

From this judgment all the original defendants, with the exception of the city of Orange, who became, in effect, a plaintiff, have prosecuted this appeal, their main contention being that the evidence adduced upon the trial was wholly insufficient to warrant a finding and conclusion toy the trial court that the plaintiff and the city of Orange had established an easement in the road or land over which it runs by adverse user. The statement of facts in the case is very voluminous, and we shall not undertake to detail the_ evidence to any extent, but will state what we think the substance of it all is.

The trial judge, at the request of appellants, filed findings of fact and conclusions of law, but it is apparent that some of his findings, denominated “findings of fact,” are but conclusions of law themselves. The' findings and conclusions will serve as a sufficient *689 statement showing the character of this con-' troversy. They are as follows:

“Findings of Fact.
' “This suit was filed by the plaintiff against the defendants to restrain them from closing a certain roadway across a portion of outlot No. 13, N. Oordray survey, Orange, Tex. The case was tried upon the first amended original petition of the plaintiff, in which the city of Orange was a party defendant. The city of Orange filed its answer adopting, as against its codefendants, the allegations made by plaintiff in his amended petition.
Outlot No. 13 in the N. Cordray survey is somewhat in the shape of a dipper or fan with the handle pointing towards the west with a river forming its extreme western boundary. The road in controversy is located across the extreme western end of said outlot No. 13.
At an early date property owners living north of the Oordray survey used an old road across the western end of said outlot No. 13, near the road in controversy. The old road, through long continued use, became so washed out in the year 1896 that it was no longer practicable to use it as a road. In that year C. H. Grubbs made the road in controversy.
“In the year 1896 Grubbs and his employees cut through virgin timber across the western end of outlot No. 13 in the Oordray survey, made the necessary clearing, and built the road in controversy. Grubbs thereafter regularly used the road made by him to go to and from his home, and allowed the public to use it. O. H. Grubbs used this road from the year 1896 down to the year 1918, when he sold his property lying north of the Oordray survey to the plaintiff. Since that time plaintiff and others have constantly used the road in controversy.
“Grubbs secured no one’s permission to either cut the timber, or to make the necessary clearings, or to build the road in controversy. Such preparation and building of the road was not with the consent of the record owners, or any of them, or any one else, but with the intent to use it adversely as a road. Grubbs used this 'road adversely, without recognizing anybody’s right to prevent him from so using it, continually and continuously from the year 1896 until the sale by him of his property lying north of the Oordray survey to the plaintiff, F. H. Far-well, in the year 1918. Farwell since that time had adversely used the road without recognizing anybody’s right to prevent him from so using it.
“When the'plaintiff, F. H. Farwell, made the purchase from O. H. Grubbs of his land lying north of the Cordray survey, the road in controversy was open and being used by Grubbs and others, and had been so used by Grubbs and others adversely since the year 1896.
“Conclusions of Law.
“I conclude as a matter of law that the plaintiff, F. H. Farwell, is entitled to the relief prayed for by him in his petition as against all of the defendants, and accordingly render judgment in his favor against the defendants restraining them permanently from closing or obstructing the roadway in question, finding as I do that he and his predecesor, C. H. Grubbs, had acquired a prescriptive right to the road through an adverse user from the year 1896 down to the time of the trial of this case, under and by virtue of the ten-year statute. I further conclude as a matter of law that the’ city of Orange, having adopted the pleadings of the plaintiff as against its codefendants, .is entitled to the same relief as against its codefendants, and render judgment accordingly in its favor.”

The only question for our determination is whether the evidence adduced upon the trial was sufficient to show that there had been such an open, continuous, exclusive, and adverse use of the roadway in question by the appellee and the public in general as to warrant the court’s legal conclusion that a permanent easement in favor of the appellee and the city of Orange had been established in or over the land of appellants across which this roadway runs by prescription under the ten-year statute of limitation.

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Bluebook (online)
285 S.W. 688, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-farwell-texapp-1926.