Callan v. Walters

190 S.W. 829, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 1224
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 13, 1916
DocketNo. 5700.
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 190 S.W. 829 (Callan v. Walters) 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
Callan v. Walters, 190 S.W. 829, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 1224 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

*830 Findings of Fact.

JENKINS, J.

In February, 1905, and prior thereto, W. K. Ray was the owner of two lots on the north side of the public square in the town of San Saba, each being 30 feet front. Upon the west lot Ray had erected a two-story stone building, the entrance to which was by a wooden stairway, leading from the sidewalk on the east side of said building. The east lot at that time was vacant. At the date above mentioned Ray sold the east lot to the First National Bank of San Saba. Ray was the president and principal stockholder of said bank. He entered into an oral agreement with the bank that it could erect a two-story house upon the vacant lot, and tie the same onto the east wall of the stone building, and that the bank was to build a stairway at the place occupied by the wooden stairway, and that he was to have the right to use the same as an entrance to the stone building. The calls in the deed executed by Ray to the bank are as follows:

“Parts of lots 8 and 9 in block No. 12 of the old town division of San Saba, more particularly described as follows: Beginning at a stake in the south boundary line of said block No. 12, at the S. E. corner of the stone storehouse owned by said Ray on said block No. 12 for the S. W. corner of this subdivision; thence north with the east wall of said building to its N. E. corner and continuing north with the line of said east wall the full distance of 100 feet from said beginning corner to an iron pin set for N. W. corner of this subdivision; thence east parallel with the south boundary line of block No. 12 30 feet to an iron pin set for N. E. corner of this subdivision; thence south parallel with the west lirfe of this subdivision 100 feet to an iron pin set on south boundary line of said block No. 12 for S. E. corner this subdivision; thence west with .south boundary line of said block No. 12 30 feet to the place of beginning, being 30 feet front on the public square”— with the usual habendum clause and covenants of warranty.

It will thus be seen that this deed was in the usual form, making the east wall of the stone house the west line of the lot sold, and not reserving any right of way for a stairway in the lot sold. Thereafter the bank erected a two-story brick house on its lot, with a stairway at its southwest corner, landing in a hall, by means of which entrance through the door as it formerly existed in the east wall of the stone building was made to said building. On September 28, 1906, Ray conveyed the lot upon which was situated the stone house to E. T. Neal, properly describing the same by metes and bounds, with the usual habendum clause and covenants of warranty. No reference was made in this deed to the right to use the stairway in the bank building. On December 13, 1906, the bank, for a valuable consideration, conveyed the east lot to G. A. Walters, the description in said deed being the same as in the deed to the bank.

On November 28, 1913, E. T. Neal conveyed the west lot to Mrs. Maud Neal, now Callan, the description in said deed being the same as in the deed to him. All of these deeds were promptly filed for record in San Saba county. The tenants of W. K. Ray and of E. T. Neal and of Mrs. Maud Callan used the stairway in the bank building as a means of ingress and egress to the stone building until shortly before this suit was filed, November 4, 1915, at which time the appellee herein closed up the door in said east wall with solid masonry. It should have been stated that prior to bringing this suit G. A. Walters sold an undivided half interest in the bank lot to the other appellee herein, J..H. Baker. Neither Walters nor Baker, at the time of their purchase, had any actual notice of the oral agreement between Ray and the bank with reference to the use of said stairway. No objection to such use was made by. the bank while it owned said building, nor by Walters, until some time in May, 1913, at which time appellee Walters wrote E. T. Neal at Ft. Worth, Tex., where said Neal was then residing, that he did not wish him to longer use said stairway, and that he desired him to close the door leading from the upper landing into the stone building. Thereafter, in the summer of the same year, Walters testified that he had a conversation with E. T. Neal in the town of San Saba, in which, after discussing the matter of common use of the stairway leading to the upper stories of said buildings, he agreed with and promised said Neal that, if he would see that his tenants did not injure of deface said stairway, or the walls thereof, he (Neal) might have and enjoy the use of said stairway so long as he owned said building. Neal admitted receiving this letter, to which he did not reply, but denied the subsequent conversation; but, as the court before whom this case was tried •without a jury rendered judgment in favor of appellees, it is our duty to find the facts in accordance with Walters’ testimony, and we accordingly do so. Walters testified that he closed the door in the store building by consent of the agent of appellant, but this was denied by said agent.

J. P. Gallan; the husband of Mrs. Gallan, was joined pro forma as party defendant in the suit. This suit was brought to enjoin ap-pellees from interfering with appellant’s use of the stairway, and to establish her easement therein. The court rendered judgment in favor of appellees.

Opinion.

An easement may be briefly defined as the right which one person has to use the land of another for a specific purpose. 9 R. C. L. p. 735; Stephenson v. Ry. Co., 181 S. W. 568; Harrison v. Boring, 44 Tex. 267; Jackson v. Trullinger, 9 Or. 397.

It may be created by grant, express or implied, by estoppel, and by a way of necessity. If by grant it must be in writing.

“That an easement over land is such an interest in the land as to require in its conveyance the same formality as is necessary for the con *831 veyance of the fee is too well settled for_ discussion.” King v. Driver, 160 S. W. 416, citing Railway Co. v. Durrett, 57 Tex. 48; Shepard v. Railway Co., 2 Tex. Civ. App. 535, 22 S. W. 267; Irrigation Co. v. Hutchins, 21 Tex. Civ. App. 275, 52 S. W. 101; San Antonio v. Grandjean, 91 Tex. 430, 41 S. W. 477, 44 S. W. 476.

See, also, Bowington v. Williams, 166 S. W. 719; Railway Co. v. Johnson, 156 S. W. 256; Ives v. Edison, 124 Mich. 402, 83 N. W. 120, 50 L. R. A. 134, 83 Am. St. Rep. 329.

As Ray did not expressly reserve in his deed to the bank the right to use the stairway when erected, and as the bank never executed a written conveyance of such easement to Ray, it follows that no easement was created in the stairway by express grant.

Appellants insist that the deed from Ray to Neal conveyed such easement by implication. If it had done so in express terms, it would be of no avail, except as a basis' for limitation, if Ray had no such easement. He could not convey a greater estate than he had. Ray, as is evident from the authorities above cited, had no easement in the stairway, unless he obtained- the same by estoppel, by prescription, or by way of necessity, which features of this case will be discussed in a subsequent part of this opinion.

Appellants rely chiefly upon the case of Howell v. Estes, 71 Tex. 693, 12 S. W. 62, in support of their proposition that the easement passed by implication in the deed from Ray to Neal.

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Bluebook (online)
190 S.W. 829, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 1224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/callan-v-walters-texapp-1916.