Cindy Schlapper v. Rand Forest, Buck Childers, Robert Stewart Leonard, Dorothy Stewart Uzell, Betty Stewart Hanson, Mike Keuhl, Flagship Marine Corporation, Shoreline Development, and Harbor Ventures, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 24, 2010
Docket03-06-00315-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Cindy Schlapper v. Rand Forest, Buck Childers, Robert Stewart Leonard, Dorothy Stewart Uzell, Betty Stewart Hanson, Mike Keuhl, Flagship Marine Corporation, Shoreline Development, and Harbor Ventures, Inc. (Cindy Schlapper v. Rand Forest, Buck Childers, Robert Stewart Leonard, Dorothy Stewart Uzell, Betty Stewart Hanson, Mike Keuhl, Flagship Marine Corporation, Shoreline Development, and Harbor Ventures, 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.

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Cindy Schlapper v. Rand Forest, Buck Childers, Robert Stewart Leonard, Dorothy Stewart Uzell, Betty Stewart Hanson, Mike Keuhl, Flagship Marine Corporation, Shoreline Development, and Harbor Ventures, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-06-00315-CV

Cindy Schlapper, Appellant

v.

Rand Forest, Buck Childers, Robert Stewart Leonard, Dorothy Stewart Uzell, Betty Stewart Hanson, Mike Keuhl, Flagship Marine Corporation, Shoreline Development, and Harbor Ventures, Inc., Appellees

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 201ST JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. D-1-GN-05-000033, HONORABLE GISELA D. TRIANA-DOYAL, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This appeal arises from a real estate title dispute among owners and occupiers of

neighboring tracts of land. Appellant Cindy Schlapper, the undisputed owner of a tract of land in

Travis County near Lake Travis, appeals pro se the district court’s judgment in favor of appellees

Rand Forest, Buck Childers, Robert Stewart Leonard, Dorothy Stewart Uzell, Betty Stewart Hanson,

Mike Keuhl, Flagship Marine Corporation, Shoreline Development, and Harbor Ventures, Inc., on

her various claims against them and its award of title to two disputed neighboring tracts to Harbor

Ventures. In four issues, Schlapper contends that the district court misconstrued the deeds in her

chain of title and erred in severing Harbor Ventures’s claims for declaratory and injunctive relief,

in entering a judgment on all of her claims in favor of appellees, and in denying her attorney’s fees

and costs. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the district court’s judgment. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Appellant Schlapper owns a .416 acre tract near Lake Travis. She also claims a fee

simple interest in all or a portion of three neighboring tracts, which are located directly across a

paved road from Schlapper’s tract and which allow access to Lake Travis. Schlapper’s tract and the

three neighboring tracts all originated from a common 128.5 acre tract owned by A. K. and Annie

Stewart. Schlapper bases her claim to a fee simple interest in the three neighboring tracts on

language in the deeds in the chain of title to her .416 acre tract. The parties do not dispute

Schlapper’s title to the .416 acre tract, but appellee Harbor Ventures asserts ownership to the three

neighboring tracts. Harbor Ventures claims that it owns the three tracts through a chain of

conveyances and that Schlapper possesses only an ingress/egress easement over the tracts to provide

access to Lake Travis.1 No other parties claim an ownership interest in the three disputed tracts.2

The Controversy

The parties’ dispute over the tracts resulted from competing claims to use of the

property. Some time during or after 2003, Harbor Ventures began construction operations on the

1 The district court severed Harbor Ventures’s claim for declaratory relief regarding the extent of the rights conveyed by the access easement and its related claim for permanent injunctive relief. Those issues were tried separately, and the district court entered a default judgment in favor of Harbor Ventures. This Court dismissed Schlapper’s appeal of that final judgment for want of prosecution. See generally Schlapper v. Harbor Ventures, No. 03-07-00246-CV (Tex. App.—Austin Nov. 14, 2007) (mem. op.), available at http://www.3rdcoa.courts.state.tx.us/opinions/pdfOpinion.asp?OpinionID=16351. 2 Because the Stewarts had previously granted the Lower Colorado River Authority a perpetual easement for the right to “inundate, submerge, and overflow” the 128.5 acre tract below the 715 contour line, as described in the instrument recorded in volume 643, page 24 of the deed records of Travis County (“the LCRA easement”), one of the three disputed tracts usually lies under the waters of Lake Travis.

2 three tracts.3 Schlapper objected to their presence on the tracts and in 2005 filed suit against the

individual appellees asserting various causes of action, most based on her contention that she owns

all or part of the tracts on which the operations were being conducted. In her original petition,

Schlapper claimed to be “the owner in fee simple of a strip of an unimproved, original land . . . North

of, adjacent to and immediately below” her undisputed .416 acre tract, subject to the LCRA

easement. Harbor Ventures, asserting that it owned the tracts claimed by Schlapper, intervened

seeking to establish and quiet title, declaratory relief regarding the existence and extent of the rights

granted to Schlapper by the language in the 1944 deed to her predecessors conveying an

ingress/egress easement, temporary and permanent injunctions, and other relief.

In seven amended petitions,4 Schlapper claimed to own all or part of the three

disputed tracts, claiming at various times to own “part of a larger unimproved tract that is in

easement [sic] to LCRA,” “a part (a partition) of a 4.0 acre estate of land,” and “more than one-third

of the approximately 2.72 acres” across the road from her .416 acre tract, and alternately referring

to the claimed property as “my land,” “my easement,” “my conservation easement,” and “the

partition.” In her amended petitions, Schlapper also added Harbor Ventures, Flagship Marine, and

Shoreline Development as defendants. The district court struck Schlapper’s seventh amended

3 The record is not clear, but it appears that Harbor Ventures conducted operations that included construction of marina equipment. It further appears that Harbor Ventures leased all or part of the three disputed tracts to appellee Flagship Marine Corporation, which conducted barge construction, and that Harbor Ventures and/or Flagship Marine engaged Shoreline Development to perform work in connection with the construction. It also appears that appellees Rand Forest and Buck Childers are principals in Harbor Ventures, appellee Mike Keuhl is a principal in Flagship Marine, and Shoreline Development is a sole proprietorship owned by Forest. 4 The record does not contain the first, fourth, or fifth amended petitions.

3 petition as untimely filed, and the case was tried on Schlapper’s sixth amended petition, in which

she claimed to own the three disputed tracts directly across the road from her .416 acre tract and

asserted causes of action for suit to quiet title, slander of title, fraud, negligent misrepresentation,

nuisance, civil conspiracy, conversion, assault, title by limitations, and injunctive relief.

The Trial

In a brief trial to the bench, the parties offered evidence and Schlapper testified.

Schlapper’s Evidence

Schlapper offered deeds in the chain of title to her undisputed .416 acre tract. The

two deeds she primarily relied on as proof of her ownership interest in the three disputed tracts were

the 1944 deed conveying the .416 acre tract to her predecessors in interest and the 1991 deed

conveying the same tract to Schlapper.

The 1944 Deed

The 1944 deed conveying the .416 acre tract to Schlapper’s predecessors in interest

described the tract as follows:

. . . all that certain tract or parcel of land lying and being situated in Travis County, Texas, a part of the John McDonald Survey No. 102, and being part of a tract of land sold by F. J. Clifton and wife, Susan R. Clifton to A. K. Stewart and wife, Annie Stewart, by deed dated October 20, 1916 recorded in Book 307, pages 386-387, of Travis County Deed Records, to which reference is here made; and the tract herein conveyed being more particularly described by metes and bounds as follows, to wit: BEGINNING at the N. E. corner of a tract of land sold by me this day to Herman Peavey and wife, Lois Peavy, for the N. W. corner of this tract. Thence S. 78 deg. 54 min. E. 85 ft. to an iron stake for the N. E. corner of this tract; Thence

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Cindy Schlapper v. Rand Forest, Buck Childers, Robert Stewart Leonard, Dorothy Stewart Uzell, Betty Stewart Hanson, Mike Keuhl, Flagship Marine Corporation, Shoreline Development, and Harbor Ventures, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cindy-schlapper-v-rand-forest-buck-childers-robert-stewart-leonard-texapp-2010.