Ives v. Karnes

452 S.W.2d 737, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 1951
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 26, 1970
Docket527
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 452 S.W.2d 737 (Ives v. Karnes) 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
Ives v. Karnes, 452 S.W.2d 737, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 1951 (Tex. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

OPINION

GREEN, Chief Justice.

This suit was filed by appellees seeking injunctive relief against appellants Roy Ives and wife Ruby Ives, and other defendants who have not appealed. Appellees alleged that they as owners had been in possession of certain lands under fence in the northeastern portion of Victoria County, Texas for over twenty-five years, and as tenants for years before that, and that in 1967, defendants forcibly breached locked gates and entered and trespassed upon the lands, causing damage thereto. Appellees prayed that appellants be temporarily and upon trial on the merits permanently enjoined from entering and trespassing upon the disputed area. Appellants filed answer and cross-action also seeking injunc-tive relief. They alleged that the disputed area was a dedicated road in which defendants and the public had acquired certain rights, and prayed that appellees be enjoined from obstructing said roadway, or from interfering with appellants’ use thereof. Appellees denied such area to have ever been a public road or to have been dedicated as such, and further alleged that if it was ever so dedicated, the public and defendants by virtue of continuous possession by plaintiffs of such property enclosed by fence for over 20 years had lost their easement and right to use said road under the provisions of Art. 6703a, Vernon’s Ann. Tex.Civ.St.

Based on a jury verdict in which all of the special issues were answered contrary to defendants’ contentions, the trial court rendered judgment that defendants take nothing by their cross-action; that the claimed public road was never dedicated to public use; that defendants never acquired any prescriptive rights to said road or any right therein by user; that the public never acquired any such rights; and decreed that plaintiffs were entitled to judgment that defendants be permanently enjoined from entering and trespassing upon the area alleged by them to be a public road or certain area immediately adjacent thereto. Motion of appellants for new trial was overruled, and these appellants, Roy and Ruby Ives, have perfected their appeal to this Court.

Appellees’ properties in the area consisted of several hundred acres in Higgin-son Colonization Company’s Subdivision of Sections 62, 63 and 64, I. R. R. Co. Survey, Victoria County, Texas. A plat of said subdivision, accompanied by a certificate of the subdividers Henry D & C G Higginson, *739 dated March 11, 1911, was filed for record in the office of the County Clerk of Victoria County on March 29, 1911, and duly recorded on the same date. Both plat and certificate state “The acreage embraced in the roads shown on said map is comprehended in the acreage given in the subdivisions.”

The evidence shows that appellees moved to this area about 1906, and for many years prior to their purchase of their lands here involved in 1941 and 1942 were tenants thereon. In appellees’ deeds whereby they secured title to this land, description was by reference to the aforementioned plat and certificate. From the time of their purchase, several hundred acres including the entirety of the alleged public roadway were under substantial perimeter fences. There was evidence to show that prior to the establishment of the disputed area as a roadway in 1947, appellee Fannie Mae Goodson had permitted appellants’ predecessor in title, Ed Matley, to cross land owned by her along a route several hundred yards north of the disputed area to reach his property. In the late 40’s this route had become difficult and almost impassable, and at Matley’s request and for his convenience and with appellees’ permission the county commissioner sent workmen out to remove heavy brush and dumps of dirt caused by construction of a drainage ditch, and to blade the road here in controversy on appellees’ property. According to the evidence, the roadway was not placed where it was located because of any plat or because of anyone’s contention that a road belonged there, but because of the existence of a spoil bank which could be bladed and used for a considerable distance, and because in the commissioner’s opinion it was the easiest route. From the time the road was built there was a gap at its western end, the boundary on that side of appellees’ property. A county road along appellees’ boundary met the roadway at that gap. There were two other gaps crossing the roadway to interior fences in appellees’ properties, and these gaps remained closed at all times when not in use. In 1958 a pipe line company put an aluminum gate in appellees’ west boundary line to the west end of the disputed roadway, and the gate was locked and a key was furnished to Matley and some of his relatives so they could gain entrance and make use of this roadway constructed largely for Matley’s convenience. In 1967 appellants on two occasions forced the lock and began to assert that the disputed area was a dedicated public road under the recorded plat of 1911.

At the close of the evidence, special issues and answers as follows were submitted to and made by the jury:

“SPECIAL ISSUE NO. 1
Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that in October, 1967 Plaintiffs were in peaceful possession of the area claimed by the Defendants to be a public road?
Answer ‘They were’ or ‘They were not’
We, the jury, answer: ‘Yes, they were’.
SPECIAL ISSUE NO. 2
Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the peaceful possession of the Plaintiffs, if such possession you have found, was interrupted by the forcible entry of Defendant Ruby Ives on the land claimed by Defendants to be a public road?
Answer ‘It was’ or ‘It was not’.
We, the jury, answer ‘Yes, it was’.
SPECIAL ISSUE NO. 3
Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the Plaintiffs had the area claimed by Defendants to be a public road enclosed within a fence for a continuous period of twenty years or more prior to October, 1967?
Answer ‘They had’ or ‘They had not’.
We, the jury, answer ‘Yes, they had’.
*740 SPECIAL ISSUE NO. 4
Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the land between parallel lines indicated on the map recorded in Volume 66, Page 278 of the Deed Records of Victoria County, Texas, and proceeding from Arenosa Creek in a southwesterly direction to Young Road was intended to be a road ?
Answer ‘Yes’ or ‘No’.
We, the jury, answer ‘No’.
SPECIAL ISSUE NO. 5
Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the area in question was dedicated for public use as a road?
Answer ‘Yes’ or ‘No’.
We, the jury, answer ‘No’.
SPECIAL ISSUE NO. 6

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Bluebook (online)
452 S.W.2d 737, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 1951, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ives-v-karnes-texapp-1970.