Janis Fair and River Rock Event Center, Inc.// Gabriela Powell, Keith Powell, and Grove Operating, LLC v. Gabriela Powell, Keith Powell, and Grove Operating, LLC// Cross-Appellee, Janis Fair and River Rock Event Center, Inc.

CourtTexas Court of Appeals, 3rd District (Austin)
DecidedMay 8, 2026
Docket03-24-00789-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Janis Fair and River Rock Event Center, Inc.// Gabriela Powell, Keith Powell, and Grove Operating, LLC v. Gabriela Powell, Keith Powell, and Grove Operating, LLC// Cross-Appellee, Janis Fair and River Rock Event Center, Inc. (Janis Fair and River Rock Event Center, Inc.// Gabriela Powell, Keith Powell, and Grove Operating, LLC v. Gabriela Powell, Keith Powell, and Grove Operating, LLC// Cross-Appellee, Janis Fair and River Rock Event Center, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Court of Appeals, 3rd District (Austin) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Janis Fair and River Rock Event Center, Inc.// Gabriela Powell, Keith Powell, and Grove Operating, LLC v. Gabriela Powell, Keith Powell, and Grove Operating, LLC// Cross-Appellee, Janis Fair and River Rock Event Center, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-24-00789-CV

Appellants, Janis Fair and River Rock Event Center, Inc.// Cross-Appellants, Gabriela Powell, Keith Powell, and Grove Operating, LLC

v.

Appellees, Gabriela Powell, Keith Powell, and Grove Operating, LLC// Cross-Appellees, Janis Fair and River Rock Event Center, Inc.

FROM THE 274TH DISTRICT COURT OF COMAL COUNTY NO. C2022-1731C, THE HONORABLE STEPHANIE BASCON, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This appeal arises from a family dispute about the existence of an easement and

the loss of a house sale because of that dispute. Janis Fair and River Rock Event Center, Inc.

(the Fair Parties) appeal a final judgment rendered after a bench trial awarding damages for

trespass and attorney’s fees to Fair’s granddaughter, Gabriela Powell; her husband, Keith Powell;

and Grove Operating LLC (the Powells). The final judgment incorporated partial summary

judgments declaring that the Fair Parties have no easement across the Powells’ real property and

finding the Fair Parties liable to the Powells for trespass, slander of title, and tortious interference

with existing contract. The Powells cross-appeal the denial of damages on their slander-of-title

and tortious-interference counterclaims, which were based on the loss of the sale of their house

after Fair, through her attorney, misinformed a buyer about her alleged easement. For the reasons explained, we will modify the trial court’s judgment and as modified, affirm the

judgment in part; and reverse and render judgment in part.

BACKGROUND 1

Janis Fair is the president and sole owner of River Rock Event Center, Inc. The

Fair Parties own property in Comal County that includes a guesthouse parcel and an event-center

parcel. The Fair Parties contend that their property is landlocked and accessible only by

Saratoga Lane. Saratoga Lane runs in front of the Powells’ house on adjacent property, which

they bought and later transferred to their LLC, Grove Operating. The geographic relationship

between the properties is shown in a diagram from the summary-judgment evidence.

1 The facts are taken from the parties’ evidence submitted when litigating the partial

summary-judgment motions and the bench trial on damages. 2 The Fair Parties do not dispute this diagram, but Fair testified during her deposition that she

lacked personal knowledge of it and denied knowing who owned the portion labeled as the

“Powell Property.”

The Fair Parties and the Powells acquired their properties after a series of family

conveyances reflected in the Comal County Official Records. In the 1950s, Fair’s in-laws at the

time, Ralph E. Fair, Sr. and Dorothy Exline Fair, deeded all the above-depicted parcels to Ralph

E. Fair, Inc. In 1998, Fair, Inc. imposed residential-use restrictions applicable to all lots to be

held, sold, and conveyed in the Fair Oaks Ranch subdivision, except the guesthouse parcel

referenced as “Lot 1860-C,” which is allowed to continue its existing commercial use. Fair,

Inc.’s 1998 warranty deed shows its subsequent sale of the commercial-use guesthouse parcel,

referenced as “Lot 1860, Fair Oaks Ranch Unit C-5,” to Fair and her then-husband, Ralph E.

Fair, Jr. (the Fairs). Fair, Inc.’s 2002 warranty deed shows that it also sold to the Fairs the

2.13-acre event-center parcel. The Fairs’ 2003 warranty deed shows their conveyance of the

event-center parcel to their entity, Fair Trading Post, Ltd.

In 2005, as part of the Fairs’ separation agreement, Fair, Jr. conveyed the event

center and guesthouse parcels to Fair. A 2013 warranty deed filed after the Fairs’ separation

shows that Fair, Inc. sold a 60.77-acre tract—including a 33.371-acre tract that would become

the Powell property—to Fair, Jr. “as his sole and separate property.” Fair, Jr.’s 2020 warranty

deed with vendor’s lien shows his sale of the 33.371-acre tract to the Powells. And the Powells’

2021 assumption warranty deed shows their transfer of the Powell property to their LLC,

Grove Operating. 2

2 We refer to the 33.371-acre tract that the Powells bought and transferred to their LLC as the “Powell property” or the “Powells’ property.” 3 Before the Powells bought the 33.371-acre tract from Fair, Jr., he executed an

affidavit confirming his ownership of the entire tract and that Fair had no property interest in it.

Specifically, Fair, Jr. averred that he had owned the property since July 1, 2013; he had used the

main building on this property as an office since 1991; he had allowed Fair to use the asphalt

road on his land for her occasional events at River Rock Event Center; Fair has a dirt road on her

own property by which she can access the River Rock Event Center from a public road called

Keeneland Drive; he allowed Fair and her event guests to use his asphalt road because it is nicer;

this arrangement had always been by his casual permission for Fair’s convenience; he had never

entered into any formal access agreement or arrangement of any type with Fair other than a

January 1, 2019 agreement for parking and access during River Rock Event Center events; the

agreement would expire July 1, 2020, and he could terminate it if the property were sold; he was

the owner of the entire property, including the asphalt road; Fair had no property interest in the

asphalt road or any portion of the property; and he never communicated to Fair or led her to

believe that she had a property interest in the asphalt road or any other portion of the property.

Based in part on these averments, the Powells purchased the 33.371-acre property

on June 22, 2020, and began renovating the residence on the property, which was built in 1881.

On July 1, 2020, Fair’s then-attorney requested that the Powells renew the parking-and-access

agreement. The Powells were amenable to such temporary access because of the time required

to complete their home renovations, and they sent a temporary-access agreement to Fair’s

attorney. He responded that instead, Fair wanted a permanent easement over the Powells’

driveway. Fair refused to sign the temporary-access agreement and did not try to negotiate

anything else. After Fair rejected the temporary-access agreement that the Powells offered, the

parties stopped communicating with each other for months.

4 Fair testified during her deposition that she refused to sign an agreement to use

the road because she thought it was hers to use, and she “just assumed” she had permission to

use it because she had done so for twenty years. Her use of the roadway during that time was not

exclusive. Fair and her event-center tenants and their patrons traveled to and from her

event-center property using a dirt road from Keeneland Drive, which has existed since before the

recording of the residential-use deed restrictions in 1998. She recalled that the dirt road existed

“on [a] very old copy of [a map of] the ranch.” She improved the road to Keeneland Drive using

only gravel because paving it would be expensive, and she wanted an easement for use of

Saratoga Lane instead.

The Powells were concerned about safety risks to themselves and their children—

and diminished use and enjoyment of their property—posed by Fair’s event-center patrons using

the Powells’ driveway, potentially after consuming alcohol. The Powells constructed a gate at

the entrance to their driveway that could be opened only with a gate code, and starting

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Related

§ 37.010
Texas CP § 37.010
§ 38.01
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Janis Fair and River Rock Event Center, Inc.// Gabriela Powell, Keith Powell, and Grove Operating, LLC v. Gabriela Powell, Keith Powell, and Grove Operating, LLC// Cross-Appellee, Janis Fair and River Rock Event Center, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/janis-fair-and-river-rock-event-center-inc-gabriela-powell-keith-txctapp3-2026.