Griffith v. Allison

96 S.W.2d 74, 128 Tex. 86, 1936 Tex. LEXIS 390
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1936
DocketNo. 6602.
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 96 S.W.2d 74 (Griffith v. Allison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Griffith v. Allison, 96 S.W.2d 74, 128 Tex. 86, 1936 Tex. LEXIS 390 (Tex. 1936).

Opinion

Mr. Judge GERMAN

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section A.

Defendants in error, F. R. Allison, L. Kaffie and W. F. Harris, who will be referred to herein as plaintiffs, instituted this suit in the District Court of Nueces County against plaintiffs in error, L. B. Griffith and wife, Illse Griffith, C. G. Sanford and wife, Lucile Sanford, M. C. Gann and W. E. Pope, who will be referred to herein as defendants. Plaintiffs sought to obtain a permanent injunction against defendants restraining them from in any manner obstructing or interfering with the free use of a certain park or parkway which they claimed was a part of what was at one time designated “Port Aransas *88 Cliffs,” a subdivision fronting on Corpus Christi Bay and lying immediately south of the City of Corpus Christi. There was also a prayer for a mandatory injunction requiring defendants to remove all fences and other obstructions from this parkway. Plaintiffs at first sought an injunction with reference to what was designated in their petition as “Ocean Drive,” but later dismissed the suit as to this drive and confined it solely to the parkway. They obtained the relief prayed for in the district court, and the judgment of this Court was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals. 60 S. W. (2d) 899.

In the year 1889 one E. H. Ropes conceived an ambitious plan of establishing a pretentious city adjoining the City of Corpus Christi and fronting on Corpus Christi Bay. To that end he entered into contracts with Matthew Dunn and Prokop Hoffman for acquisition of the lands upon which this city was to be builded. Generally speaking, these contracts provided that Dunn and Hoffman would convey certain lands to Ropes, who would on his part have same surveyed and subdivided into lots, blocks, streets, parks, etc., and made ready for sale to the public. Ropes on his part further undertook to build within the proposed city a hotel, a line of railroad for steam or horse cars, to build a driveway along the bluff and make other minor improvements. Provision was also made for setting aside grounds for race track and for amusement pavilion. After these things were done, Dunn and Ropes were to select alternative blocks within the city, so far as lands provided by Dunn were concerned, and Hoffman and Ropes were to select alternative blocks in the city so far as lands furnished by Hoffman were concerned. According to agreement of the parties these contracts were satisfactorily performed, as Ropes is agreed to be the common source of title so far as the lands claimed by plaintiffs and defendants are concerned. The contracts referred to provided that the map of lands to be prepared by Ropes should include among other things “a park running along the entire front of the bluff or bay so far as our several lands extend. Also a boulevard along the inner edge of said park and avenue to average not more than 150 feet wide.” The entire acreage to be included in this subdivision extended along the bay front a distance of about three miles and back from the bay a distance of about one mile, and contained approximately 1500 acres.

In pursuance of his agreement Ropes employed C. F. H. von Blucher, a civil engineer and then County Surveyor of Nueces County, to subdivide the lands acquired under the Dunn *89 and Hoffman contracts, as well as certain tracts acquired under contracts with Uriah Lott and O. C. Lovenskiold, and make a map or plat of such subdivision. After making several preliminary maps or plats, Blucher delivered final map to Ropes sometime about July, 1889. This original map was not found, but we are of opinion that the copies of maps offered in evidence showed with substantial accuracy all that appeared upon the original map. This original map was entitled “Map of Port Aransas Cliffs, Nueces County, Texas.” It was very elaborately prepared and showed more than 1700 blocks, with many streets and avenues running generally east and west and north and south and several avenues running diagonally through the general plan. There were some four or more wide avenues of approximately 200 feet in width. There were several circular park areas at the intersection of various streets and avenues. The lots were not designated on the plat, but apparently the blocks were to consist of 64 lots each.

The original map adopted by Ropes appears to have been filed for record in Nueces County October 14, 1889. One of the copies offered in evidence was made by J. S. Peters September 19, 1891, and purported to have been a correct copy of the map filed October 14, 1889. Another map offered in evidence was taken from an office once occupied by Ropes, being a wall map of immense size, and in our judgment was a duplicate of the original. On the Peters map there appears a strip of land approximately three miles in length lying between Blocks 4 to 21 and the margin of Corpus Christi Bay, and approximately 300 feet in width. This strip of land is designated on the map “Ocean Drive,” and near the middle of same and running its full length is a dotted line. Almost exactly in the middle of the strip, between the blocks of land reserved for the hotel site and the bay front, is the word “Park.” Nowhere else upon this map does this word appear. Blucher testified that on his preliminary maps the strips of land along the bay front was marked by- him in several places “Parks.” However, before making his final map Ropes stated to him that when a park was turned over to the public it was usually neglected and became a detriment to adjoining property, and for that reason he wanted to reserve the control of this strip. Blucher thereupon put on the final map the word “Private” above the word “Park” where it appeared. On the large wall map offered in evidence the words “Private Park” appear some four times upon the strip of land lying adjacent to the bay front.

All doubt, however, as to the exact nature of the easement *90 intended to be created in this strip of land is removed by the provision contained in a deed by Ropes to Port Aransas Company dated July 17, 1889, some three months before the original map was filed for record in Nueces County. The Port Aransas Company was a corporation, of which Ropes was president, and apparently was created to take over the title to the property and become the agency through which sales were to be made. This deed conveyed a great many of the blocks shown on the map entitled “Map of Port Aransas Cliffs, Nueces County, Texas,” and then conveyed the following:

“A strip of land 300 feet wide upon the average lying between the easterly line of Block 4 to 21 inclusive and the waters of Corpus Christi Bay, as the same appears upon said map, said strip being about 3 miles in length and the same to be used exclusively for a free public park and pleasure ground for the people and to be under the exclusive care of said Port Aransas Company. If the said company or any other corporation or corporations or person or persons shall ever divert such proposed park to any other uses whatsoever then so much of such park as is so diverted shall revert to myself or my legal representatives.”

Plaintiffs in this suit hold title to certain blocks and parts of blocks designated upon the map of Port Aransas Cliffs. The lands claimed by them apparently all adjoin what was originally shown on the map as “Ocean Drive.” The title of plaintiff Allison appears to have originated with a deed from E. H. Ropes to J. B.

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Bluebook (online)
96 S.W.2d 74, 128 Tex. 86, 1936 Tex. LEXIS 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffith-v-allison-tex-1936.