Fender v. Schaded

420 S.W.2d 468, 1967 Tex. App. LEXIS 1991
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 19, 1967
Docket291
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 420 S.W.2d 468 (Fender v. Schaded) 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
Fender v. Schaded, 420 S.W.2d 468, 1967 Tex. App. LEXIS 1991 (Tex. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

MOORE, Justice.

Plaintiff, Enis Schaded, brought this suit against defendant, Harris R. Fender, for title and possession of a one-acre tract of land lying in the Isaac Renfro League in Smith County, Texas, and also sought judgment to enjoin defendant from interfering with his use of a certain roadway leading north from the said one-acre tract across defendant’s intervening land for a distance of 290 feet to Texas Farm Road No. 850. Prior to trial, defendant disclaimed as to any interest in the said one-acre tract, but denied that plaintiff or his predecessors in title had acquired any right to a use of a roadway across his land.

For cause of action for injunctive relief, plaintiff alleged that in 1922, Maryann Warren was the owner of a 119½ acre tract of land in the Isaac Renfro League and that on December 8, 1922, she conveyed one acre out of said tract to Tull Choice, plaintiff’s predecessor in title; that at the time of the said conveyance, there was a roadway from Texas Farm Road No. 850, leading in a southerly direction across the Warren tract to the one-acre tract which she conveyed to Tull Choice. Plaintiff further alleged that the sale of the said one-acre tract, out of the larger tract, prior to the time Maryann Warren conveyed the remainder of the tract to the defendant’s predecessor in title, was made under circumstances which created an easement by implied grant entitling plaintiff to use the roadway across defendant’s land to said *470 Farm Road No. 850. His prayer was for an injunction enjoining defendant from fencing said one-acre tract or from interfering with plaintiff’s use of the roadway. From a judgment granting the injunctive relief as prayed for, defendant perfected this appeal.

The facts established by the court’s findings, insofar as material, may be thus summarized :

On December 8, 1922, Maryann Warren, defendant’s predecessor in title, owned a 119½ acre tract of land in the Isaac Ren-fro League. The North side of the tract was bounded by a public road known as the Old Overton Road, which has since been designated as Texas Farm Road No. 850. On said date, and pri- or thereto, there was a roadway across the land which commenced at the Old Overton Road and ran across the tract in a Southerly direction. On said date, Maryann Warren conveyed Tull Choice, plaintiff’s predecessor in title, a one-acre tract of land out of the above mentioned tract. The one-acre tract conveyed was situated upon the roadway and lay approximately 290 feet South of the Old Overton Road.

At the time of the conveyance, the roadway between the Old Overton Road and the one-acre tract was approximately 25 to 28 feet in width and was being used continuously as a means of ingress and egress from the Old Overton Road to said one-acre tract and that such conveyance was made with the understanding that the roadway would be used as a means of ingress and egress from the Old Overton Road to the one-acre tract. Prior to the grant, Tull Choice owned an 84.07 acre tract of land in the B. C. Walters Survey which adjoined the one-acre tract on the south. Thus, the one-acre tract was bounded on the north, east and west by property owned by Maryann Warren and on the south side by the property owned by Tull Choice in the B. C. Walters Survey. At the time of the grant, the roadway was well-marked on the ground and was being used as a means of ingress and egress from the Old Overton Road to the one-acre tract and across the one-acre tract to the adjoining property owned by Tull Choice in the Walters Survey. After acquiring the one-acre tract, Tull Choice built a house thereon, which was occupied by him and others until the same was torn down in 1963. Tull Choice and others used the roadway leading from the one-acre tract to the Old Overton Road continuously, open and visibly as a means of ingress and egress, and such means of ingress and egress to the said one-acre tract was and has been a most feasible method of reaching the one-acre tract from the Old Overton Road which is the nearest public roadway. By mesne conveyances from Tull Choice, the title to the one-acre tract, as well as to the 84.07 acre tract in the B. C. Walters Survey became vested in the plaintiff on February 8, 1956, at which time he continued to make use of the roadway as a means of ingress and egress to the one-acre tract. By mesne conveyances from Maryann Warren, defendant, on or about September 22, 1961, and on various subsequent dates, acquired title to the Maryann Warren tract in the Renfro League save and except the one acre in question. In the latter part of 1963 and early 1964, defendant caused to be erected a fence on the south boundary line of the Renfro League, thus separating the one-acre tract from plaintiff’s 84.07 acre tract in the B. C. Walters Survey and preventing plaintiff access thereto. Defendant also closed the roadway to the one-acre tract by erecting a fence along the south side of the Old Overton Road (Farm Road No. 850). The trial court further found that at all times since 1922, the said road had been visible on the ground and had been continuously in use as a means of ingress and egress until defendant erected the fence across the road. The court also found that the use of the roadway was necessary to the use of the one-acre tract and not a mere convenience; that such necessity had existed since December, 1922, and that the plaintiff had no other means of reaching his one-acre tract without trespassing upon the property of others and that there had been no abandonment of the roadway.

*471 In the conclusions of law, the court found that defendant had no right to place a fence along the south boundary line of the one-acre tract and that he should be required to remove the same. The court further found that at the time of the grant of said one-acre tract from Maryann Warren to Tull Choice, there was granted by implication an easement appurtenant in favor of said one-acre tract as the dominant estate for the use of the roadway, as means of ingress and egress from Farm Road No. 850 (Old Over-ton Road) to plaintiff’s one-acre tract and that the defendant’s lands, as the servient estate, were burdened with such easement appurtenant and defendant had no right to fence or enclose the same or to do any act which would prevent the free use of said roadway as a means of ingress and egress by the dominant estate.

Defendant contends first that the judgment must be reversed because there was no evidence showing a necessity for an implied easement over the roadway in question. In this connection, defendant takes the position that plaintiff was required to prove “strict” or “absolute” necessity. He therefore argues that since there was some evidence showing that at the time of the grant, the road in question extended not only from the Old Overton Road (Farm Road No. 850) in a southerly direction to the one-acre tract, but continued across the 84.07 acre tract in the B. C. Walters Survey and connected with other roads south of said survey and finally connected with the Henderson Highway, the roadway claimed by the plaintiff over the Maryann Warren tract was not a necessity, but a mere convenience and therefore plaintiff failed to prove that he was entitled to an easement under the requirements set forth in Bains v. Parker, 143 Tex. 57, 182 S.W.2d 397 and Duff v. Matthews, 158 Tex. 333, 311 S.W.2d 637.

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Bluebook (online)
420 S.W.2d 468, 1967 Tex. App. LEXIS 1991, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fender-v-schaded-texapp-1967.