Dortch v. Sherman County

212 S.W.2d 1018, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1390
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 21, 1948
DocketNo. 5883.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 212 S.W.2d 1018 (Dortch v. Sherman County) 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
Dortch v. Sherman County, 212 S.W.2d 1018, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1390 (Tex. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

PITTS, Chief Justice.

This appeal is from an action in the nature of trespass to try title filed by appellant, M. Dortch, against appellees, Sherman County, Texas, and the members of the Commissioners Court of the said county, on .February 28, 1947, but the issue finally presented to this Court on appeal is ths question of whether or not appellees have acquired a public road by prescription over and across two sections of land situated in Sherman County and owned at the time by appellant.

On March 21, 1947 appellees answered with a plea of not guilty and a general denial. Thereafter on June 21, 1947 appel-lees filed an application for injunctive relief, alleging in effect that in the year 1906 the Commissioners 'Court of Sherman County had legally laid out and ordered opened a public highway along the east boundary lines of the two sections of land in question owned then by one of appellant’s predecessors in title, but the court later found that a portion of the road selected by the jury of view was impractical for road purposes because of the existence of natural barriers, as a result of which they varied the route a little westward of the east section lines of the said land and located the road as near as practical to the said east section lines there to meet the urgent necessity for a public highway; that such was there established on a definite route by authority and permission of the then owners of the said two sections of land and thereafter the same was graded and continuously used as a public highway; that on June 17, 1947 appellant, who had recently acquired ownership of the said two sections of land, had it interfered with the efforts of appellees’ agents to maintain and repair the said public highway across the said two sections of land, for which reasons appellees sought to have appellant restrained from such interferences. The trial court granted a temporary restraining order as requested and set the matter down for an early hearing on the issues at which time the parties appeared and agreed that the temporary restraining order may remain in force; and in order to meet the urgent needs to market grain by local farmers during the summer harvest of 1947, it was further agreed that appel-lees’ agents may complete the construction of a bridge across Beaver Creek on appel *1020 lant’s said land to replace a bridge that had previously washed out and that appel-lees’ said agents might do light repairs on the said public highway in order that the public may use the said bridge and the said highway to harvest and market the season’s grain crop; and it was further agreed that the issues in the case would be heard after the harvest season for 1947 was over. The trial court approved the agreement and entered its order accordingly.

On January 19, 1948 the parties joined issues on the question of whether or not appellees have acquired the public highway by prescription, with each party asking for injunctive relief against the other, and ap-pellees sought to apply the doctrine of es-toppel. The case was heard before a jury and both parties asked for a peremptory instruction. The trial court overruled appellant’s motion for a peremptory instruction but instructed the jury peremptorily for appellees and entered its judgment accordingly defining the road sixty feet wide by metes and bounds as prayed for by ap-pellees from which judgment appellant perfected his appeal. Appellant attacks the action of the trial court for instructing the jury for appellees rather than for him and he charges also that the trial court erred in refusing the admission of certain testimony offered by appellant.

At the beginning of the trial it was agreed by stipulation that a map showing the location of the public road across the two sections of land was made by Harvey Schmidt, a consulting engineer and surveyor, and that if Schmidt were present he would so testify and that he would further testify in effect that the said map correctly represented conditions on the ground. Other material matters that are not contested were agreed to by stipulation. Appellant then offered in evidence his chain of title to the two sections of land showing that he acquired the same on February 21, 1944. He then offered a report of a jury of view of date November 12, 1906, approved by the Commissioners Court of Sherman County on the same date, establishing a public road along the east line of the said two sections of land, after which appellant rested.

Appellees offered the testimony of several citizens who had lived in Sherman County for many years, most of whom had served as county officials of the said county for long periods of time and were well acquainted with the use of the said road in question from its origin or for a period of many years at least. There is little, if any, controversy between the parties about the law that controls the questions here presented and the controlling facts are not controverted. Some discrepancies about nonessential matters can be found in the testimony of some of the witnesses but the testimony of each corroborates that of the others on the material issues. Their testimony covers more than one hundred pages but we find as a result of a careful examination of all of the evidence that the section of road in question was a part of a public road leading from Stratford, the county seat of Sherman County, north to the Oklahoma State line where it connected up with a system of public roads in that State; that the original road had been laid out by a jury of view as heretofore stated; that the route selected by the jury of view had some natural barriers that would have made it expensive and impractical to have tried to build a road over it with the kind of road equipment then available, for which reason the road for the use of the general public deviated a little from the original road site except for a short distance at each end of the original site selected by the jury of view; that the line established followed the original site for a short distance at each end while the remaining part deviated therefrom but was in the same general direction and practically parallel to the original site selected by the jury of view; that the road site selected was continuously used, with a few slight deviations made in the route, from a date prior to the year 1915 until the filing of this suit, and subsequently thereto by order of the trial court, except for a slight change made in the road approaching the location of a new bridge built in 1937 across Beaver Creek, which change was made by mutual agreement between the Commissioners Court and the owner of the land at that time, and except for a slight change made in the route by appellant, who *1021

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Bluebook (online)
212 S.W.2d 1018, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dortch-v-sherman-county-texapp-1948.