City of Lubbock v. Merrill Roberds

278 S.W.2d 254, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2618
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 21, 1955
DocketNo. 6456
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 278 S.W.2d 254 (City of Lubbock v. Merrill Roberds) 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
City of Lubbock v. Merrill Roberds, 278 S.W.2d 254, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2618 (Tex. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

MARTIN, Justice.

Appellees, the surviving heirs at law of M. E. Merrill and wife, Amorett Merrill, deceased and J. C. Roberds and wife, Pearle Roberds, deceased, instituted this suit in the usual form of trespass to try title against appellant, City of Lubbock, alleging that they were the owners of a tract of land approximately 82.25 feet wide fronting on Avenue H and extending east about 175 feet in the form of a small triangle adjoining the west line of the right-of-way of the Fort Worth & Denver South Plains Railway. The tract in issue is a part of the Northeast Quarter of Section No. 7 in Block B, T. T. Ry. Co. Survey. The appellant sought condemnation of the tract in the event appellees recovered title to the same.

Merrill & Roberds filed of record a plat of an addition in the above survey of land which plat is bounded on the west by a street and on the east by a country road but no boundary is shown for the south line of the plat. The lots as platted in the addition do not extend to the south boundary line of the Northeast Quarter of Section 7 and neither the south boundary line of the addition nor of the Northeast Quarter of Section 7 is shown upon the plat of the addition. The record reveals that the streets running east and west in the plat as dedicated are 50 feet in width but the distance between the lots as platted and the south boundary line of the Northeast Quarter of Section 7 is a distance of approximately 85 feet. No street is named or shown on this 85-foot strip of land. In 1917 following the filing of this plat of record, on petition of the Merrill Addition owners, the Commissioners’ Court abolished all the lots, blocks, streets and alleys in the addition save the three west tiers. The released property was then fenced and used for farming purposes.

• Upon the trial of the cause, the -parties’ agreed that the issue as to dedication should be withdrawn from-the jury and‘submitted' to the court and that the jury would, only pass on the issue of damages that appellees would be entitled to. The trial court found that the tract of'land in issue had not been dedicated to the public for use as a street and that appellees had not lost title by limitation, prescription or adverse user. The court further found that until the strip of land in issue was paved by the city in 1949, it had never been used as a street, road or highway. The land was adjudged to be the property of the appellees, was ordered condemned by the court for a public street and appellees were awarded the sum of $8,800 damages as found by the jury-in the cause.

. Appellants appealed from the judgment of the trial court and assign eight points of error. The first three points assert that the trial court erred in finding that Merrill & Roberds did not intend to and did not dedicate the land in controversy as a street because such findings are contrary to, the undisputed evidence and are not supported by the evidence. Appellants’ fourth point ■ of error complains of the court’s finding of fact that the tract had not been opened and used as a street by the public. Appellant’s fifth point asserts that the court erred in finding, contrary to the evidence, that the City of Lubbock and the Fort Worth & Denver South Plains Railway Company entered into 'an agreement whereby the City agreed to pay the railroad $800 for procuring easements and right-of-[256]*256way to cüt a ditch east from Avenue H to the Santa Fe tracks. Its sixth and seventh points of error complain of the admission' in evidence, against the City-of Lubbock, of testimony showing that the railroad paid to Merrill & Roberds the sum of $1,000 in damages by reason of such ditch. Its eighth point of error is that'the court erred in finding that the City, in the fall- and winter of 1946, for the first time claimed the strip as a public street asp such finding is contrary to the evidence.

Appellant’s brief presents the principle of law governing its first three points of error. Appellant quotes at length from “Elliott, Roads and • Streets' (2d Ed.)” as cited with approval by the Supreme Court in Owens v. Hockett, 151 Tex. 503, 251 S.W.2d 957. The principle therein expounded is briefly as follows: “It is essential that the donor should intend to set the land apart for the benefit of the public, for it is held, without contrariety of opinion, that there can be no dedication unless there is present the intent to appropriate the land to the public use. If intent- to dedicate is absent, then there is no valid dedication. The intent which the Ig/w means;- however, is not a secret one, hut is that which is expressed in the visible conduct and open acts of the owner.” (Emphasis by appellant.) .

The above principle of law is applicable to the case here in issue and the facts are detailed thereunder. The record reveals that the tract of land was originally platted as an addition and such plat filed of record by one McClelland’ and the addition • so platted was bounded by a line of the plat on the south and the tract now in issue was a part of a' street dedicated on the plat as “Cottage Lane”. However this plat, ánd also a later plat filed by Merrill &’ Roberds, were abolished and the entire tract returned to acreage by the Commissioners Court. Merrill & Roberds then filed a second plat which shows this same strip of land approximately 85 feet in width along’the south part of the Northeast one-fourth of Section 7. But, this strip of land bore no' name or designation as a street and was not bounded on the south by any line on the plat of the addition. Nor was the south boundary line of the entire tract of land shown on such plat. The tract of land here in issue was a part of this 85-foot strip fronting on Avenue H.

The above facts will now be examined with reference to the intent of Merrill & Roberds to dedicate the land in issue as a street. Since the tract was originally dedicated as a street, “Cottage - Lane”, with definite boundaries oil the plat and. such street was not re-incorporated into the final plat filed by Merrill & Roberds, it evidences there-was no intention on their part to dedicate the land in issue as a street. Further, there is no evidence in the record revealing that any plat was ever filed of record by Merrill &- Roberds showing a south boundary line of the 85-foot strip nor was any plat ever filed of record by the owners either naming or numbering the 85-foot section of land as a street.

In addition to the fact that the record reveals no visible conduct and open acts on the part of Merrill & Roberds to dedicate the land in issue as a street, the record further conclusively reveals that neither the public nor the City of Lubbock ever recognized any intent on the part of the owners to dedicate the land as a street. First, the record reveals, without dispute, that the tract in issue was never used as a public street or passageway for the public until paved by the city in 1949. Even the witnesses for the City of Lubbock testified that the strip in issue had never been used as a street or road by the public. In' fact, the record reveals conclusively that a railroad traversed the 85-foot strip and cut off the tract here in issue on the west side of such railroad tracks. Both the railroad and the drainage ditches on each side thereof would have effectively prevented- any use -of the strip here in issue as a public road or street had the public shown any disposition to use the same.

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Bluebook (online)
278 S.W.2d 254, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2618, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-lubbock-v-merrill-roberds-texapp-1955.