John B. Gordon and Ruth A. Gordon v. Jason Demmon and Jutta Demmon

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 23, 2019
Docket07-17-00133-CV
StatusPublished

This text of John B. Gordon and Ruth A. Gordon v. Jason Demmon and Jutta Demmon (John B. Gordon and Ruth A. Gordon v. Jason Demmon and Jutta Demmon) 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
John B. Gordon and Ruth A. Gordon v. Jason Demmon and Jutta Demmon, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Seventh District of Texas at Amarillo

No. 07-17-00133-CV

JOHN B. GORDON AND RUTH A. GORDON, APPELLANTS

V.

JASON DEMMON AND JUTTA DEMMON, APPELLEES

On Appeal from the 169th District Court Bell County, Texas Trial Court No. 249,484-C, Honorable Gordon G. Adams, Presiding

April 23, 2019

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before QUINN, C.J., and CAMPBELL and PIRTLE, JJ.

Appellants John B. Gordon and wife Ruth A. Gordon sued appellees Jason

Demmon and wife Jutta Demmon to establish an easement allowing access to their

landlocked property. They pled entitlement to an easement under various theories,

including necessity. Mona Marie Counts and Joy Dale Nugent intervened in the suit

seeking similar relief.1 After a bench trial, the court declared two easements by necessity

1 Evidence showed Counts and Nugent owned a tract of land north of the Gordons. in favor of the Gordons and an easement by necessity in favor of Counts and Nugent.

Dissatisfied with the extent of the relief granted, the Gordons appeal. Counts and Nugent

did not join the appeal. The Demmons present a cross-point on appeal. We will overrule

the Gordons’ issues and the Demmons’ cross-point and affirm the judgment of the trial

court.

Background

During 1969 the Gordons contracted with William L. Bremser and his wife, Marleen

L. Bremser, to buy an irregularly-shaped, 6.02-acre tract severed from the Bremser’s

larger tract. The Gordons satisfied the contract terms and title was conveyed to them by

warranty deed in 1971. It is undisputed that the land the Gordons purchased is

surrounded by land owned by others and does not abut a public road.

From the time of their purchase, the Gordons used two routes to access their

property. On the south and west side of their tract is a gravel road known as “South

Road.” Along the north side of the property is a way known as “Schrader Road.” The

center twenty-foot strip of Schrader Road is paved with what was described at trial as

chip seal or old asphalt.

In 2003, the Demmons acquired the tracts that contain Schrader Road and the

South Road adjacent the Gordons’ property. According to the Gordons, thereafter the

Demmons began obstructing the Gordons’ means of access from Schrader Road and the

South Road by locking a gate on Schrader Road. In 2011, the Gordons filed suit to

establish easements over Schrader Road and the South Road.

2 Throughout trial the parties disputed the Gordons’ request for two access routes

to their land. According to the Gordons’ testimony, the topography of the property is

complicated by a canyon or ravine2 running across its center, making Schrader Road the

only means of access to the northern part and the South Road the only access on the

south. Mr. Gordon testified it would be “very difficult” to get to the south side of the

property without driving on the South Road, and said a forty-foot-deep “culvert - - gulch”

made it “very impassible by vehicle” to go from the south side of the property to the north

side. Mr. Demmon disputed the limited access the Gordons claimed, telling the court that

from a point inside a gate on Schrader Road the Gordons could drive “anywhere on [their]

property except for the ravine itself.”

The court’s judgment granted the Gordons easements by necessity along both

roads. The judgment limited both easements “to that portion of the described property

reasonably required to permit the holder to accomplish the purpose of the easement,

which is ingress and egress” to the Gordons’ property. The easements were “no wider

than reasonably necessary to afford” the Gordons “ingress and egress to their” property.

On the Demmons’ motion, the court granted a partial new trial solely to determine the

scope and location of the easements it declared.

At the partial new trial, Mr. Gordon testified at length of his future plans to develop

his tract into a subdivision with private residences and recreational facilities such as tennis

and volleyball courts, a picnic pavilion, a zip-line, and nature trails. Based on his claims

that accessibility to parts of the tract was limited, he reiterated the necessity of a sixty-

2 The feature also sometimes was referred to as a gulch and a gully.

3 foot easement along Schrader Road and along South Road. Otherwise, he maintained,

portions of his property would be inaccessible, costing him potential homesites.

Mr. Gordon and Mr. Demmon disagreed over the feasibility of the Gordons’

development plan.3 According to Mr. Demmon, the “back half,” or about two and one-half

acres of the Gordons’ land, is a flood zone which is not “buildable.” The court also heard

conflicting evidence regarding the need for use of the Demmons’ property for ingress and

egress by heavy equipment and truck traffic during the Gordons’ possible future

construction.

The judgment which followed granted the Gordons an easement by necessity for

the general purpose of ingress and egress covering Schrader Road “plus an additional

30 foot wide easement to access” the Gordons’ property. 4 A second easement was

granted along the South Road. Findings of fact and conclusions of law, following the new

trial and final judgment, were neither requested nor filed.

Jurisdiction

On our own motion, we notified the parties of our concern that the Gordons’ notice

of appeal appeared untimely filed. We requested letter briefing and the parties complied.

The Gordons filed suit in 2011 with trial settings during November 2013 and June

2014. On August 15, 2014, the court signed an instrument entitled “memorandum ruling.”

3 Mr. Gordon also testified that his property had been annexed by the City of Killeen. The impact of annexation on the issues before the court is not clear from the record.

The easements are further described by surveyor’s field notes appended to the 4

judgment. We have no need to attempt a further description of their parameters.

4 On November 12, 2015, the trial court signed an instrument entitled “final judgment.” The

Demmons filed a motion for new trial on December 11, 2015, and the court heard the

motion on January 22, 2016. By order signed on February 2, 2016, the court granted a

partial new trial “solely with respect to the scope and location of the easement.” The trial

court conducted a partial new trial on October 3, 2016, and on October 31, 2016, signed

an instrument entitled “memorandum ruling.”

On January 9, 2017, the trial court signed a “final judgment.” The Gordons filed a

motion for new trial on February 8, 2017, which was denied after a March 10 hearing.

The Gordons filed notice of appeal on March 24, 2017.

In their letter brief, the Gordons argued the February 2016 order granting a partial

new trial was signed more than seventy-five days after the November 2015 final judgment

and was therefore a nullity because the trial court no longer had plenary jurisdiction to

grant a new trial.

We disagree that the trial court acted outside its plenary power by granting the

partial new trial. The Gordons are correct that a timely filed motion for new trial is

considered overruled by operation of law if not determined by written order signed within

seventy-five days after the judgment was signed. TEX. R. CIV. P. 329b(c). But Rule

329b(e) invests a trial court with plenary power to grant a new trial for thirty days following

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