Gregory R. Mattox and Barbara Wilkerson v. Grimes County Commissioners' Court

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 27, 2015
Docket01-14-00535-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Gregory R. Mattox and Barbara Wilkerson v. Grimes County Commissioners' Court (Gregory R. Mattox and Barbara Wilkerson v. Grimes County Commissioners' Court) 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
Gregory R. Mattox and Barbara Wilkerson v. Grimes County Commissioners' Court, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Opinion issued August 27, 2015

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-14-00535-CV ——————————— GREGORY R. MATTOX AND BARBARA WILKERSON, Appellants

V.

GRIMES COUNTY COMMISSIONERS’ COURT, Appellee

On Appeal from the 506th District Court Grimes County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 32,015

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellants, Gregory R. Mattox and Barbara Wilkerson, challenge the trial

court’s rendition of summary judgment in favor of appellee, Grimes County

Commissioners’ Court (the “County”), in the County’s suit against Mattox and

Wilkerson for nuisance. In two issues, Mattox and Wilkerson contend that the trial court erred in denying them summary judgment and granting the County summary

judgment.

We affirm.

Background

In its third amended petition, the County alleged that Mattox and Wilkerson

own lots 35 and 36 (the “lots”) in the southwest corner of Hill Forest Manor

Subdivision (the “subdivision”). A road, known as Hill Forest Lane, runs along

the southern border of the subdivision and the lots.

In 2006, Mattox , Wilkerson, and B.J. Aldredge, a neighbor who owns a lot

at the eastern end of Hill Forest Lane, filed applications with the County for it to

vacate1 the eastern and western ends of Hill Forest Lane, asserting that the County

had abandoned these portions of the road. The County, concluding that it had

abandoned the easternmost 119 feet of Hill Forest Lane, granted Aldredge’s

application and vacated the eastern end. However, the County denied Mattox and

Wilkerson’s applications to vacate the westernmost 134 feet. It is this 134-foot

strip of land, which abuts the southern boundary of the lots, that is at issue in this

case.

In March 2007, Clifford and Eleanor Jackson, who own the acreage which is

west of and abuts lot 36 and the subdivision, sued Mattox and Wilkerson to 1 See TEX. TRANSP. CODE ANN. § 251.051 (Vernon 2013) (authorizing county commissioners’ court to close, abandon, or vacate public roads).

2 determine the Jacksons’ access to Hill Forest Lane. 2 The Jacksons asserted that the

western end of Hill Forest Lane did not terminate along the southern border of the

lots; rather, it extended across both of the lots to the eastern boundary of the

Jacksons’ property.

In April 2007, Mattox and Wilkerson filed an application asking the County

to “cancel”3 the west end of Hill Forest Lane. After the County denied the

application, Mattox and Wilkerson filed suit against the County in the district

court, seeking to compel the County to grant their application. After the district

court granted summary judgment in favor of the County, the Fourteenth Court of

Appeals reversed and remanded, concluding that summary judgment was

precluded by fact issues regarding whether there was any pending or existing

development on the Jacksons’ property and whether Hill Forest Lane was a

proposed interconnection of infrastructure. 4

In 2010, Mattox and Wilkerson “erected/constructed an obstruction of the

causeway of the [r]oad,” a fence, which closed off the westernmost 134 feet of Hill

Forest Lane. The Jacksons obtained injunctive relief, requiring the removal of the

fence, and Mattox and Wilkerson appealed. After this Court reversed the

2 Jackson v. Mattox, No. 30,753 (506th Dist. Ct., Grimes Cnty., Tex., filed Mar. 6, 2007). 3 See TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE ANN. § 232.008 (Vernon Supp. 2014). 4 See Mattox v. Grimes Cnty. Comm’rs’ Court, 305 S.W.3d 375, 387 (Tex. App.— Houston [14th Dist.] 2010, pet. denied).

3 injunction and remanded the case to the trial court, the Jacksons non-suited their

claims against Mattox and Wilkerson. 5

The County further alleged that Mattox and Wilkerson reconstructed their

fence, which is a “public nuisance per se” because it constitutes an “unreasonable”

interference with the public’s use of the Hill Forest Lane and prevents the County

from maintaining the road. The County sought a declaration that

the entirety of Hill Forest Lane, as shown on the map of Hill Forest Manor Subdivision recorded . . . [in the] deed [r]ecords of Grimes County, Texas, except the easternmost 119 feet thereof which on August 14, 2006 was found by the Commissioners’ Court to have been abandoned and was therefore vacated, is a public road subject to use by the public and maintenance by [the County].

(Emphasis added.) It also sought a declaration that it “has the right to remove any

and all obstructions of the [road],” and an injunction, enjoining Mattox and

Wilkerson from further obstructing the road. The County sought both actual

damages and exemplary damages, alleging that Mattox and Wilkerson had acted

with “malice or gross negligence” in constructing the fence. Mattox and

Wilkerson answered, generally denying the allegations and asserting various

affirmative defenses.

5 See Mattox v. Jackson, 336 S.W.3d 759, 760–64 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2011, no pet.) (concluding Jacksons did not file verified application for temporary injunction or present evidence of probable right to relief and probable, imminent, and irreparable injury in interim).

4 The County then moved for summary judgment on its nuisance claim,

arguing that it was entitled to judgment as a “matter of law” because the evidence

conclusively establishes that Hill Forest Lane is a “public road” and Mattox and

Wilkerson had obstructed it. It asserted that the subdivision developer, Bond

Blackman, had “expressly dedicated” Hill Forest Lane to the public via the plat of

the Hill Forest Manor Subdivision,” filed on May 9, 1966 and “accepted by the

[County].” Also, Blackman had impliedly dedicated Hill Forest Lane to the public

by selling lots with reference to the plat. And, in 2007, the County “conclusively”

established a public interest in Hill Forest Lane by adopting a County road map

(the “map”).6 Moreover, Mattox and Wilkerson, after receiving notice that Hill

Forest Lane was to be included on the map, did not contest its inclusion. And their

construction of the fence across Hill Forest Lane constitutes a “purpresture,” an

“encroachment on public rights or the appropriation to private use of that which

belongs to the public,” and is, thus, a “common law public nuisance per se.”

The County further asserted that although Mattox and Wilkerson

“contest[ed] the public nature of” the westernmost 134 feet of the Hill Forest Lane

and alleged that “such portion ha[d] not been maintained by the County or used by

the public,” the County’s “use and improvement of only a part of [a] dedicated

property does not constitute an abandonment of the balance of the property.”

6 See TEX. TRANSP. CODE ANN. ch. 258 (Vernon 2013).

5 Further, a public road does not depend upon its length or upon the places to which

it leads, nor upon the number of persons who actually travel upon it. The County

also emphasized that Mattox and Wilkerson had never been assessed taxes on the

portion of the lots set aside as a dedicated roadway.

The County also moved for a summary judgment on Mattox and

Wilkerson’s affirmative defenses, asserting that there is no evidence that Mattox

and Wilkerson are “good faith purchasers for value and, therefore, not subject to

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