Guadalupe Sandoval v. Patricio Guzman and Jose Salinas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 24, 2002
Docket13-01-00180-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Guadalupe Sandoval v. Patricio Guzman and Jose Salinas (Guadalupe Sandoval v. Patricio Guzman and Jose Salinas) 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
Guadalupe Sandoval v. Patricio Guzman and Jose Salinas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

                                   NUMBER 13-01-180-CV

                             COURT OF APPEALS

                   THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                        CORPUS CHRISTI-EDINBURG

GUADALUPE  SANDOVAL,                                                    Appellant,

                                                   v.

PATRICIO GUZMAN AND JOSE SALINAS,                              Appellees.

                       On appeal from the County Court at Law  

                                  of Kleberg County, Texas.

                                   O P I N I O N

          Before Chief Justice Valdez and Justices Yañez and Castillo

                              Opinion by Chief Justice Valdez


Appellant, Guadalupe Sandoval, brings this appeal following a trial court order denying him possession of a thirty foot wide easement on appellee Guzman=s tract of land.  Sandoval attacks the trial court=s judgment by fifteen points of error.  We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

I.  FACTS

On March 24, 1973, Manuel Luera and his wife purchased a tract of land from Barbara Dawson.  The land purchased is a rectangular partition, which the Lueras later divided into three rectangular subdivisions. On July 11, 1988, the Lueras filed for record a plat of the Luera Subdivision No. 1 on the eastern portion of their tract of land.  The plat did not reference easements of any kind.  Subsequently, the Lueras erected a fence twenty-two feet from the southernmost property line.  The fence creates a twenty-two foot private access and public utility easement. The fence runs east to west along the southernmost property line across the entire tract of land, including what would later be divided into Subdivisions No. 2 and No. 3.

The Lueras then sold a tract of land, Subdivision No. 1, to Guadalupe Sandoval. Sandoval retained a twenty-two foot easement across the southernmost property line based on the existing fence. 

The Lueras subsequently filed a second plat regarding the same general tract of land referring to a thirty-foot private access and utility easement, and an easement agreement was subsequently and separately filed, specifically describing the thirty-foot easement. 


The Lueras then sold the property adjacent to Sandoval to Manuela Mendietta, subject to all reservations of record, and Mendietta subsequently sold that property to Patricio and Olga Guzman (AGuzman@) without any reservations. 

The issue in this case is whether Sandoval possesses a twenty-two foot easement across the Guzman land, according to the original fence line, or whether he possesses a thirty foot easement under the recorded easement agreement.

In a bench trial, the court held that Sandoval retained a twenty-two foot easement rather than a thirty foot easement across the Guzman property.  The trial court=s judgment is based on findings of fact and conclusions of law that Luera did not reserve the thirty foot easement in his deed to Mendietta.  Therefore, the Lueras did not have the power to grant the easement to Sandoval because the easement agreement was filed after the conveyance to Guzman.  But, the court held that Sandoval did have a thirty foot easement across other properties in the subdivision because these properties were conveyed after the easement agreement was recorded.  The appeal pertains only to the denial of the right to expand the twenty-two foot easement to thirty feet across Guzman=s property.


Sandoval raises fifteen issues on appeal, contending that the trial court erred by: (1) holding the plat dated November 9, 1992, and the Easement Agreement did not create a thirty foot public utility easement in favor of Sandoval; (2) failing to find Mendietta, Guzman=s prior title holder, acquired an easement by implication; (3) failing to find Guzman=s lot is burdened by a thirty foot wide easement; (4) finding the surveyor erred in noting an easement; (5) finding that Luera sold a tract of land to Mendietta on November 18, 1992; (6) finding that Mendietta sold a tract of land to Guzman on November 18, 1992; (7) finding that Mendietta and Guzman did not have constructive notice of the easement; (8) finding that Guzman=s undivided one half interest was not burdened by an easement; (9) finding the Easement Agreement did not convey an easement in favor of Sandoval because it was not recorded until November 23, 1992; (10) finding Guzman=s undivided interests are not burdened by the November 23, 1992 easement; (11) finding that Sandoval has an easement by necessity; (12) finding Sandoval was not entitled to recovery against Guzman; (13) finding that Sandoval has an easement by necessity that is twenty-two feet wide; (14) finding that Guzman and Sandoval are not entitled to have the fence removed; and (15) finding that Sandoval did not possess an easement by prescription or necessity any greater than that which exists south of the southernmost fence located on the property of Guzman.  

II. STANDARD OF REVIEW

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Guadalupe Sandoval v. Patricio Guzman and Jose Salinas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guadalupe-sandoval-v-patricio-guzman-and-jose-sali-texapp-2002.