Colonel Kent Scott Coker v. Frederic W. Geisendorff and Wife, Billie G. Geisendorff

370 S.W.3d 8, 2012 WL 2123319, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 4664
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 13, 2012
Docket06-11-00040-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 370 S.W.3d 8 (Colonel Kent Scott Coker v. Frederic W. Geisendorff and Wife, Billie G. Geisendorff) 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
Colonel Kent Scott Coker v. Frederic W. Geisendorff and Wife, Billie G. Geisendorff, 370 S.W.3d 8, 2012 WL 2123319, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 4664 (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion by Justice MOSELEY.

Frederic W. Geisendorff and wife, Billie G. Geisendorff (the Geisendorffs), brought suit against Colonel Ken Scott Coker (Coker) and others in Van Zandt County, Texas, regarding the title to a called 131-acre tract which is situated astride the Van Zandt County and Henderson County lines. 1 A jury answered questions which favored Coker, but the trial court granted the Geisendorffs a judgment non obstante veredicto (NOV) against Coker. It is from the grant of that judgment NOV which Coker now appeals.

There were two types of problems the Geisendorffs were apparently seeking to resolve in their lawsuit. In one part of the lawsuit, there was a question of a boundary line (couched in terms of an action in declaratory judgment), this dispute involving Carmichael and Langham, the owners of property that abuts the north line of the 131-acre tract. The other part of the lawsuit involved a dispute with Coker (with pleadings in trespass to try title as to the. entire 131-acre tract) 2 regarding a 26-acre portion of the western portion of the 131-acre tract.

The matter was tried to a jury in a week-long trial. Among the jury questions that were posed were two which are significant here:

QUESTION NUMBER ONE
Do you find that the Geisendorffs have proved the actual location of the boundaries on the ground of the Called 131 Acre Tract?
*10 [[Image here]]
QUESTION NUMBER TWO
Do you find that the Geisendorffs have proved a valid chain of title to the Called 131 Acre Tract from the State of Texas to them?

The jury answered “NO” to both of these questions.

In the other findings, the jury also found that Farm-to-Market (FM) Road 1861 was not the correct boundary between the tract and the Carmichael property, that there was not a conflict of boundaries between the 26-acre tract claimed by Coker and the 131-acre tract claimed by the Geisendorffs, and that there was not a conflict of boundaries between a 7-acre tract claimed by Coker and the 131-acre tract claimed by the Geisendorffs. 3

No judgment was entered in the matter for about a year. When the trial court finally acted upon the matter, it severed the cause of action by the Geisendorffs against Carmichael and Langham from the case against Coker and awarded the Geis-endorffs a new trial in that part of the conflict. The trial court then awarded a judgment NOV in favor of the Geisen-dorffs as to their claim against Coker, awarding them title to the 131 acres as it pertained to the claim of Coker.

The controversy between the Geisen-dorffs with Carmichael and Langham remains pertinent to this matter only because it involves the true location of the north boundary of the 131-acre tract. The description of the tract (in use for many years) calls for the north boundary of the 131-acre tract to be the old Tyler and Porters Bluff Road; it is the location of that road when the description was originally written that is in dispute. Over forty years ago, the Texas Department of Transportation constructed FM Road 1861, which basically followed the general route of the old Tyler and Porters Bluff Road. The Geisendorffs claim that the new FM Road tracks the location of the old Tyler and Porters Bluff Road almost precisely, but Carmichael and Langham (and Coker) claim that the original road — which the defendants claim has since been abandoned — was located (at least in one place) some 183 feet south of FM Road 1861.

In his appeal, Coker contends that the judgment NOV was improper because the Geisendorffs failed to prove the location of the north boundary of the 131-acre tract as a matter of law, and the jury finding should therefore prevail. Coker also contends that the trial court erred by not entering a take-nothing judgment against the Geisendorffs because the Geisendorffs failed in their burden of proof as to the title to the property.

In a cross-argument, the Geisendorffs attempt to ameliorate the result of their own pleadings by arguing that should Coker prevail on appeal, any award to Coker should be only as to the 26-acre tract Coker claimed, not the entire 131-acre tract put at risk by the Geisendorffs’ pleadings.

The trial court found the evidence legally insufficient to support the jury’s answers to questions one and two, and found that a directed verdict in favor of plaintiffs would have been proper regarding plain *11 tiffs’ trespass-to-try-title cause of action. Therefore, the court rendered judgment in favor of the Geisendorffs and against Coker, and awarded possession of the 131-acre tract to the Geisendorffs.

The disputations above pertaining to the true location of the old Tyler and Porters Bluff Road (which is yet to be settled) is the basis for Coker’s claim that the Geis-endorffs failed to prove the boundaries of the Geisendorffs’ called 131-acre tract of land.

There was conflict in the testimony between experts (surveyors) for both sides and between long-time residents of the area as to whether FM Road 1861 coincided with the location of the old Tyler and Porters Bluff Road, evidence falling on both sides. However, no one actually presented testimony as to the precise location that Carmichael, Langham, and Coker claimed the road to be. It is quite pertinent that the metes and bounds description in the deed upon which Coker relies called for the north boundary of the 26-acre tract he claimed to be the old abandoned Tyler and Porters Bluff Road and called for that boundary to be some 183 feet south of the current FM Road. 4 Accordingly, the 26-acre tract claimed by Coker would lie entirely within the called 131-acre tract, irrespective of whether the current FM Road tracks the location of the old Tyler and Porters Bluff Road or whether it lies north of the old road.

Judgment NOV

Judgment without or against a jury verdict is proper at any course of the proceedings only when the law does not allow reasonable jurors to decide otherwise. Accordingly, the test for legal sufficiency is the same for directed verdicts and judgments NOV. City of Keller v. Wilson, 168 S.W.3d 802, 823 (Tex.2005). Under either scope of review, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict, crediting favorable evidence if reasonable jurors could, and disregarding contrary evidence unless reasonable jurors could not. Id. at 807; Dodd v. Tex. Farm Prods. Co., 576 S.W.2d 812, 814-15 (Tex.1979); Zinda v. McCann St., Ltd., 178 S.W.3d 883, 890 (Tex.App.-Texarkana 2005, pet. denied); CPS Int’l, Inc. v. Harris & Westmoreland, 784 S.W.2d 538

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370 S.W.3d 8, 2012 WL 2123319, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 4664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colonel-kent-scott-coker-v-frederic-w-geisendorff-and-wife-billie-g-texapp-2012.