Cecola v. Ruley

12 S.W.3d 848, 2000 Tex. App. LEXIS 1056, 2000 WL 174981
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 16, 2000
Docket06-98-00142-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 12 S.W.3d 848 (Cecola v. Ruley) 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
Cecola v. Ruley, 12 S.W.3d 848, 2000 Tex. App. LEXIS 1056, 2000 WL 174981 (Tex. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion by

Justice GRANT.

Gerald Ruley sued under the Declaratory Judgments Act 1 for the court to declare that an easement exists across a certain piece of property or, in the alternative, to order the property partitioned in kind. Thomas Cecola denied that any easement existed and countersued for a partition by sale. After a bench trial, the trial court ordered that Ruley had an easement across the property, ordered that the property be partitioned in kind, and awarded him attorney’s fees.

On appeal, Cecola contends (1) that the trial court erred in construing the Ceeolas’ divorce decree as granting an express easement, (2) that the trial court erred in determining that there is an easement of necessity, (3) that the trial court erred in ordering the land partitioned in kind and not by sale, and (4) that the trial court abused its discretion in awarding Ruley attorney’s fees.

On May 4, 1988, Thomas and Starla Cecola bought an 8.19-acre landlocked parcel of land during their marriage. This parcel was bought with community funds and was community property. On May 20, 1988, the Ceeolas purchased an .257-acre strip of land, measuring 40 feet wide by 280 feet long, which connected the larger parcel of land with a roadway. This second parcel of land was purchased with Thomas Cecola’s separate funds, but was titled in both Thomas’s and Starla’s names. When the Ceeolas divorced, the trial court stated in the divorce decree that the second, smaller tract was separate property, with Thomas and Starla each owning half. Neither Thomas nor Starla objected to the trial court’s characterization of the Cecola strip, and the divorce decree was final at the time of this trial. Thus, the second piece of land was separate property, with Thomas and Starla each owning a one-half undivided interest.

The Ceeolas divorced in 1993. In dividing the estate, the trial court awarded Starla Cecola the 8.19-acre tract of land as her separate property. The trial court then “confirmed” that Thomas Cecola and Starla Cecola each owned fifty percent of the .257-acre parcel as their separate property. In confirming this separate *852 property, the trial court utilized the term easement as describing the smaller tract.

After the divorce, Starla Cecola sold the 8.19-acre tract and her fifty percent undivided interest in the .257-acre tract to Gerald Ruley. Hereafter, the larger 8.19-acre tract mil be referred to as the “Ruley tract,” and the smaller .257-acre tract will be referred to as the “Cecola strip.”

Sometime during the divorce proceedings, Cecola placed a railroad boxcar across the roadway on the Cecola strip, which completely blocked the roadway. After Ruley bought the property, he filed a motion for declaratory judgment alleging that the divorce decree granted him an express easement over the Cecola strip, that, there was an implied easement of necessity over the Cecola strip, or that the Cecola strip should be partitioned in kind. Cecola filed a counterpetition requesting that the Cecola strip be partitioned by sale.

After a bench trial, the court rendered a declaratory judgment 1) that Ruley had an easement across the Cecola strip, 2) permanently enjoining Cecola from obstructing Rule/s use of the easement across the Cecola strip, 3) ordering that the Cecola strip be partitioned in kind, and 4) awarding Ruley attorney’s fees.

Express Easement

In his first point of error, Cecola contends that the trial court erred in construing the divorce decree as granting an express easement. An easement is defined as “a right of use over the property of another." (Emphasis added.) 2 Under the merger doctrine, if an easement exists and then the owner of that easement acquires a greater estate, the two estates merge into the greater of the two and the lesser is extinguished. 3 One who owns fee simple title no longer needs an easement across his own property, since the fee simple gives him the right to use all of the property. The merger doctrine has been accepted by Texas courts. 4 As stated by the Texas Supreme Court, “The principle is elementary that, to constitute an easement, the dominant and the servient estates must be held by different owners; and when the owner of an estate enjoys an easement over another, and acquires title to the latter, the easement is thereby extinguished.” 5

This Court is not aware if any easement existed that belonged to the Ruley tract before the Cecolas purchased a fee simple in the Cecola strip. But, nevertheless, any easement that might have existed over what became the Cecola strip before the purchase by the Cecolas was extinguished by the merger doctrine when it was purchased. Therefore, at the time of the Ce-colas’ divorce, the Ruley tract was owned as fee simple community property and the Cecola strip was owned as fee simple separate property with no easements. This characterization in the decree was not challenged and cannot be collaterally attacked at this time.

In the divorce decree, the court confirmed the status of the Cecola strip as that which it found already existed: the Cecola strip was separate property, fifty percent owned by Starla Cecola, and fifty percent owned by Thomas Cecola. The trial court had no statutory authority to change that in the decree. 6 The court was merely clarifying the status of the property as separate property. At the time of the divorce, no easement existed on the Cecola strip. The court could not confirm the existence of something that did not exist. The court also could not grant an express easement under these circumstances because of the merger doctrine.

*853 The divorce decree should be construed to comport with the law. Under this construction, the divorce decree’s classification of the Cecola strip as an “easement” was merely a misnomer, the drafter’s understanding of what the tract was being used for, not as a declaration of an express easement.

Therefore, Cecola’s point of error number one is sustained.

Easement by Necessity

In his next point of error, Cecola contends that the trial court erred in finding that Ruley had an easement by necessity. The landowner seeking an easement by necessity over a servient estate must show the necessity of that easement in accessing his property. 7 For an easement to be necessary, the property must be landlocked.

The co-ownership of separate, undivided interests in land is a cotenancy. In Texas, this situation frequently results when spouses co-own separate property, as in the instant situation. 8 When Ruley bought Starla Cecola’s interest in the Ce-cola strip, he became a cotenant with Thomas Cecola, each owning a fifty percent undivided interest in the land.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 S.W.3d 848, 2000 Tex. App. LEXIS 1056, 2000 WL 174981, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cecola-v-ruley-texapp-2000.