Elliott v. Elliott

597 S.W.2d 795
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 20, 1980
Docket1463
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 597 S.W.2d 795 (Elliott v. Elliott) 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
Elliott v. Elliott, 597 S.W.2d 795 (Tex. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

OPINION

NYE, Chief Justice.

This is an easement case. Larry Ray Elliott, and his wife, Ramona A. Elliott, brought suit to enjoin Larry’s uncle, Henry Clifford Elliott, from interfering with their use of a driveway which crossed defendant’s property. In response to special issues, the jury found in favor of plaintiffs. The trial judge, however, granted defendant’s motion for judgment non obstante veredicto and entered a take nothing judgment against plaintiffs. Plaintiffs appeal.

*798 Plaintiffs purchased a 1.325 acre tract of land (the shaded portion of the map below) from Vernon A. Leissner on October 6, 1977. The defendant is the owner of a 3.82 acre tract of land situated immediately south of plaintiffs’ tract between plaintiffs’ land and State Highway 35. (Plaintiffs’ land has no other access.) The driveway in question connects plaintiffs’ property with Highway 35 by crossing the northeast portion of defendant’s triangular tract. The record shows that, before this dispute arose, John Dollery, one of plaintiffs’ predecessors in title, had used the driveway continuously for at least a period of 32 years, and possibly, for as long as 45 years. The defendant erected a fence across the northern entrance to the driveway and refused to permit its further use.

Plaintiffs filed suit alleging, in essence, that John W. Dollery “built a road (the driveway) from Highway 35 to his property in the 1930’s or early 1940’s,” pursuant to an express easement contained in Dollery’s deed, and that defendant acquired title to his particular tract of land after the granting of the easement to Dollery. Plaintiffs pled, in relevant substance, that they were entitled to an easement for right-of-way purposes based on three theories: 1) an express grant; 2) prescription; and 3) es-toppel. Defendant filed a general denial.

This case involves a bitter family fight over access from plaintiffs’ property to Highway 35. The record suggests that all of the land in the immediate area in question was, at one time, part of a much larger individual tract owned by an ancestor of most of the witnesses and all of the current parties in this case. The vague and confusing record shows that, over the years, certain family members acquired and traded out ownership interests pursuant to oral agreements, executed warranty deeds, executed quit claims deeds, made verbal assurances based upon assumed ownership rights, and participated in other transactions without concern to the resulting legal consequences. Only some of the instruments supporting these transactions were offered into evidence. Other instruments containing lengthy metes and bounds descriptions of land were introduced into evidence without identifying the location of the land in question and without clarifying the relationship to the issues in the case.

Defendant testified that his mother, Melissa Rouse, had originally owned the tract of land located north of his 3.82 acre tract since “about 1909” when “Grandpa Elliott gave it to her.” The defendant stated that he and two of his brothers, Oliver Elliott and Alvie Elliott, had originally owned undivided interests in a tract comprising approximately 50 acres out of which the defendant later acquired his 3.82 acre tract by a partition deed executed in 1942. The defendant stated that in 1931 his mother, Melissa Rouse, orally swapped her northern tract of land for Oliver Elliott’s undivided one-third share of the southern tract and then, on behalf of Oliver, sold the northern 15.357 acre tract to Dollery. A deed executed on July 28, 1931, by Oliver Elliott conveying his undivided portion of the southern tract to Melissa Rouse was introduced into evidence. This deed was executed approximately two months after Melissa Rouse executed the deed on the same property to Dollery.

The 1931 deed from Melissa Rouse to Dollery contained the following recitation:

“. . . containing within said boundaries 15 and 3/10th acres, more or less, same being out at the south end of an original 20.3 acre tract formerly owned *799 by Gertrude E. A. Elliott in her own right, and known as the ‘Homestead Place,’ together with a right-of-way over other lands of grantor between this tract and State Highway N. 58, at S.E. corner, . ” (emphasis added)

The 1977 general warranty deed from Leissner to the plaintiffs contained the following recitation:

“As part of the consideration for this conveyance, the Grantor herein conveys unto the said Grantees herein all of his right, title and interest in and to that certain easement contained in that certain Deed dated May 27, 1931, from Melissa Rouse to John W. Dollery, . . . ” (emphasis added)

Approximately ten years after the 1931 deed to Dollery was executed, a quit-claim deed to Dollery which covered the same property was executed on July 15, 1941, by Melissa Rouse and several other relatives, including the defendant Henry Elliott. This 1941 deed contained a similar recitation concerning the easement which stated as follows:

“. . . together with a right-of-way over other lands or (sic) grantors between this tract and Highway formerly known as No. 58, and now known as No. 35 at the southeast corner of this tract.”

Defendant acknowledged that his signature appeared on the 1941 quit claim deed to Dollery, but stated that he could not recall any of the facts or circumstances surrounding its execution. Defendant stated that at the time the 1941 deed was executed, he, his mother Melissa Rouse, and his brother (Oliver) owned undivided interest in the southern tract, and that he assumed possession and ownership of the 3.82 acre tract pursuant to a partition deed executed by them on May 14, 1942. A certified copy of this partition deed was introduced into evidence.

The deed (or deeds) conveying land from Dollery to plaintiffs’ immediate predecessor in title, Vernon A. Leissner, was not introduced into evidence. There is testimony in the record to the effect that plaintiffs moved into a rental house located on that portion of the property they eventually purchased about seven months prior to the time they purchased the property. Plaintiffs initially were tenants of Dollery, and sometime during this intervening seven month period, Leissner purchased all or a portion of the 15.357 acre tract, out of which, 1.325 acres was conveyed to the plaintiffs. 1

Defendant testified, on the other hand, that he was the one who built the driveway in question, and he did so in 1945. It was his testimony that Dollery started using the driveway at that time. According to defendant, he and Dollery had an agreement whereby each used a part of the other’s property. Defendant stated that Dollery asked him to put in the driveway in exchange for defendant’s use of some of Dol-lery’s property for a garden. The defendant admitted that at least from 1945 to 1977, Dollery, his tenants and guests used the driveway openly and exclusively until he closed the driveway after hearing that Dollery planned to sell his property.

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Bluebook (online)
597 S.W.2d 795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elliott-v-elliott-texapp-1980.