Cozby v. Armstrong

191 S.W.2d 786, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 878
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 7, 1945
DocketNo. 14734.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 191 S.W.2d 786 (Cozby v. Armstrong) 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
Cozby v. Armstrong, 191 S.W.2d 786, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 878 (Tex. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

BROWN, Justice.

Appellees, T. M. Armstrong and wife, Martha May, brought this suit against Grace Cozby, surviving wife of J. R. Coz-by, deceased, Reuben B. Willburn and his wife, Ruby, alleging, in substance, that plaintiffs own a tract of about 150 acres which lies west of a tract of about 37 acres, owned by defendant Willburn and wife, and a tract of about 62 acres owned by defendant Cozby. That the three described tracts were, at one time, incorporated in one tract of about 250 acres, which large tract was owned by E. C. D. Willburn and wife during their lifetime; that all of these three tracts face north upon the old Benbrook road, all are intersected and crossed by the right of way of the Texas and Pacific Railway Company, and over which there is but one crossing, and there is and has been no access to or from the plaintiffs’ lands and defendants’ lands ex *787 cept for one crossing of such railway-right of way located on the lands owned by defendant Cozby; that there is “an old, established, seasoned roadway and way of necessity, well defined on the ground, that has been used by plaintiffs and defendants and those under whom they hold for more than twenty years (the same is described and a plat as an exhibit is referred to) * * * over and across the said lands of the defendants.”

That on January 28, 1939, the defendants, Reuben B. Willburn and wife, joined by Church O. Willburn and wife, executed and delivered “that certain right-of-way easement to the plaintiffs,” and a copy of same is made an exhibit to the petition.

This instrument recites that on September 21, 1933, E. C. D. Willburn and wife executed four deeds which conveyed the above-mentioned 250 acre tract as follows: “To Reuben B. Willburn 50 acres off of the •west side of said 250 acre tract, and another of which deeds conveyed to Church O. Willburn 25 acres lying just east of said Reuben B. Willburn 50 acre tract, and another of which deeds conveyed to M. Annie Ritz 25 acres lying just east of said Church O. Willburn 25 acre tract, and the remaining one of which deeds conveyed the entire 150.19 acres lying east of the Ritz 25 acre tract (same being the east 150.19 acres of said original 250 acre tract) in undivided interests of an undivided one-sixth interest each to Frank E. Willburn, Ira B. Willburn, Ruth F. Kennedy, Polk White, May Armstrong and Jessie Murray.”

It further recites that Armstrong and wife purchased all outstanding interests in the 150 acre tract and also the Annie Ritz 25 acre tract, and continues: “Whereas the Fort Worth and Benbrook Road runs along the north side of said original 250 acre tract, and all four tracts described in said deeds made Sept. 21, 1933, reach to and front on said highway, but the Texas & Pacific Ry. Co. right of way cuts through the northern end of said 250 acre tract, and the only crossing over said railway right of way is located on the Reuben B. Willburn 50 acre tract, so that in respect of the major portion of said lands so purchased by Armstrong and wife access therefrom to said highway can be obtained only by the use of said railway crossing on the Reuben B. Willburn tract, and whereas, Reuben B. Willburn and Church O. Willburn are desirous that said Armstrong and wife sell to Church O. Willburn the 25 acre tract referred to as the M. Annie Ritz 25 acres, which Armstrong and wife are willing to do for the purchase price named in a deed to said tract contemporaneously this day executed by them to Church O. Willburn, and here referred to for further description, and for the further consideration moving to said Armstrongs of the right of way easement hereinafter granted, now, therefore, we, the said Reuben B. Willburn, joined herein by his wife, Ruby Willburn and the said Church O. Willburn joined herein by his wife Cana Willburn in consideration of the premises and in consideration of the sum of $1.00 cash and other good and valuable consideration to us this day paid by said T. M. Armstrong and wife, Martha May Armstrong, the receipt and sufficiency of all of which consideration is hereby acknowledged by grantors, do hereby give, grant and convey unto the said T. M. Armstrong and wife, Martha May Armstrong, a perpetual easement of full, free and convenient access to and from the above described 150.19 acres, over and across the aforesaid Ritz 25 acres, Church O. Willburn 25 acres and Reuben B. Willburn 50 acres to the present crossing over to T. & P. Ry. Company now located on said Reuben B. Willburn 50 acres, and continuing northward therefrom to said Fort Worth and Benbrook Highway; to have and to hold same unto said grantees, their heirs, and assigns, it being expressly agreed that the rights of easement herein granted shall pass to and be held by any subsequent owner or owners of the said 150.19 acre tract or any part thereof lying south of said T. & P. Ry. Company right-of-way.”

The petition further alleges: “That on and before the 28th day of January, 1939, when said express right-of-way and easement was granted to the plaintiffs herein by the defendants herein and those under whom they hold, the west 50 acres of said lands now owned and held by the defendant, Grace Cozby, was owned by the defendant Reuben B. Willburn and wife; that the west 25 acres of the east 50 acres of the 100 acres, now owned by the defendants herein was formerly owned by Church O. Willburn and his wife; and the east 25 acres of the said 100 acres now owned by the defendants herein was formerly owned by Mrs. M. Annie Ritz, who, joined by her husband, Ernest Clarence Ritz, conveyed the east 25 acres of said 100 acres now owned by the defendants herein to the *788 plaintiffs herein * * *. That on January 28, 1939, the plaintiffs herein conveyed to Church O. Willburn, by warranty deed, as recorded, * * * the said east 25 acres of the said 100 acres of land now owned and held by the said defendants herein, to which said Special Warranty Deed and record thereof reference is here made for more particular description of said 25 acre tract conveyed and in said special Warranty Deed, the plaintiffs herein retained and reserved an express right-of-way and easement as follows: ‘However, since the tract of 150.19 acres out of the same surveys, lying to the east of the above property, has no access to the north across the T. & P. right-of-way, an easement is hereby reserved, in favor of the present and future owners of said 150.19 acres of access over and across the here-inabove described 25 acres westward to a crossing over the right-of-way located on the 50 acre tract owned by Reuben B. Will-burn out of said surveys.’

It is next alleged, in substance, that subsequent to the granting of the perpetual easement on January 28, 1939, the defendants and those under whom they hold have resubdivided the 100 acres by making of same two tracts, one of 62.5 acres owned by defendant Cozby, and one of 37.5 acres owned by defendant Willburn.

It is next alleged that on March 13, 1943, defendant Willburn conveyed the east 62.5 acres to one Goostree and that in such deed it is recited that: “This conveyance is made subject to the T. P. & R. R. Co. right-of-way, as well as to an easement for passage way reserved in deed from T. M. Armstrong and wife to Church O. Will-burn, bearing date of January 20, 1939, and recorded in Book 1381, page 173, Deed Records, Tarrant County, Texas,” and that on the same day, March 13, 1943, Goostree and wife conveyed the said 62.5 acre tract to John R.

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Bluebook (online)
191 S.W.2d 786, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 878, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cozby-v-armstrong-texapp-1945.