Elsie Goodgion and Gregory E. Sikes v. Wanda Guthrie

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 11, 2002
Docket11-01-00001-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Elsie Goodgion and Gregory E. Sikes v. Wanda Guthrie (Elsie Goodgion and Gregory E. Sikes v. Wanda Guthrie) 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
Elsie Goodgion and Gregory E. Sikes v. Wanda Guthrie, (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

                                                             11th Court of Appeals

                                                                  Eastland, Texas

                                                                        Opinion

Elsie Goodgion and Gregory E. Sikes

Appellants

Vs.                   No. 11-01-00001-CV B Appeal from Brown County                          

Wanda Guthrie

Appellee          

Elsie Goodgion and Wanda Guthrie are sisters.  They are involved in a dispute in connection with land that their mother and father, the Parsons, owned and later divided between the two daughters and two of the Parsons= grandsons.[1]  Appellants maintain that they are entitled to an implied easement across appellee=s property.  The trial court disagreed and, after a bench trial,  held that there was no implied easement because appellants had access to their property by way of a public roadway or easement.  We reverse and render judgment that an implied easement appurtenant or  by prior use exists across appellee=s property for access to appellants= property.

Appellants present three points of error.  The points as stated by appellants are:

(1) The trial court erred in making a findings of fact that appellants= property had legal access to a public roadway based on insufficient evidence to support the finding.

(2) The trial court erred in failing to make a findings of fact and conclusions of law that the evidence established appellants had an implied easement or easement by necessity as a matter of law.

(3) The trial court erred in making an implied findings of fact that the property of a necessary party not made a party to the suit was encumbered by a public roadway or an easement for the benefit of appellants= property.


In 1961, the Parsons purchased 22.53 acres of land.  The tract is AL@ shaped and lies immediately to the north and to the east of a tract of land that belonged, at one time, to A. V. and Annie Eula Dodds.  F.M. Highway 585 is located on the west boundary line of the Dodds= tract and the most westerly boundary line of the Parsons= tract.  Property not involved in this suit abuts the south boundary line of both properties.  R. B. Flores owned a tract of land immediately to the east of the Parsons= tract.

In 1962, the Dodds and the Parsons deeded Flores a roadway easement across the south boundary lines of their properties.  The easement extended from the Flores= tract, across the southern boundary line of the Parsons= tract, across the southern boundary line of the Dodds= tract, and finally to the east boundary line of F.M. Highway 585.  After he obtained the easement, Flores deeded his land to the Texas Veteran=s Land Board who in turn sold it to others.

In 1970, the Parsons purchased a 22.186-acre tract of land known as the AThomas Place.@  The south boundary line of the Thomas Place was also the north boundary line of a portion of the original 22.53-acre tract owned by the Parsons.  Another tract of land not included in this lawsuit abutted the remainder of the north boundary line of the original 22.53-acre tract.

The Parsons subsequently deeded the Thomas Place to their daughter Goodgion and her son, Sikes.  A correction deed was executed in February 1995 to correct the consideration clause as stated in the original deed and to reserve Athe minerals@ to the Parsons.  On October 25, 1994, the Parsons conveyed to Goodgion and Sikes, a 30-foot roadway easement running north and south along the east boundary line of the original 22.53-acre tract.  On that same date, the Parsons also conveyed a 10-foot utility easement to Goodgion and Sikes.  This easement runs east and west along the north boundary line of the original 22.53-acre tract and was for the purpose of Ainstallation, repair, replacement and inspection of the utility line and the easement.@

On December 6, 1994, the Parsons executed a purported conveyance of a 40-foot roadway easement to Goodgion, but it did not name Sikes as a grantee.  This easement ran along the south boundary line of the Dodds= tract.  The Parsons never owned any interest in the Dodds= tract.

On December 6, 1994, the Parsons deeded the original 22.53-acre tract to their daughter Wanda F. Guthrie and her son, Phillip A. Wells.  The property was subsequently conveyed to  Guthrie as trustee of The Wanda F. Guthrie Family Trust.


At some point in time, a dispute arose between appellants and appellee as to the proper ingress and egress to the Thomas Place.  Appellee filed suit against appellants seeking declaratory relief, injunctive relief, and damages.  Appellants answered and also sought declaratory relief, injunctive relief, and a declaration that they were entitled to an implied easement.  Appellants maintained that the Parsons, as well as themselves, had always gained access to the Thomas Place by entering the original 22.53-acre tract close to its northwest corner.  They entered off F.M. Highway 585, drove between a house and a barn which were located in that corner of the original 22.53-acre tract, and then would Ameander@ to the southwest corner of the Thomas Place and enter the Thomas Place there.  Appellants claim that their property is landlocked, and it is this route which they claim as an implied easement appurtenant and as an implied easement by necessity.

Appellee maintains that the Thomas Place is not landlocked.  Appellee claims that access is available by using an easement which she asserts runs along the south boundary line of the Dodds= and Parsons=

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