Maisen v. Maxey

233 S.W.2d 309, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1614
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 2, 1950
Docket6084
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 233 S.W.2d 309 (Maisen v. Maxey) 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
Maisen v. Maxey, 233 S.W.2d 309, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1614 (Tex. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

PITTS, Chief Justice.

On May 25, 1949, appellee, Carl E. Max-ey, sued appellant, J. E. Maisen, seeking, an injunction to restrain appellant from exercising certain acts of ownership over a previously dedicated park area made by appellant within the city limits of Lubbock inconsistent with the terms of the said dedication so made by appellant and in derogation of the rights of appellee Maxey as a property owner adjacent to the designated park area. Thereafter on June 17, 1949, upon a motion by appellant, the City of Lubbock- was made a party defendant to the suit with appellant alleging a cause of action against the said City in the nature of trespass to try title and for damages. against the said City. All parties have joined issues in the case and the issues here presented involve the dedication, title and use of that part of Tech Terrace Addition to the City of Lubbock marked and designated on a map as “Terraced Park Area”, bounded by Jackson Avenue, 23rd Street, 25th Street and a driveway on the west side of the designated area.

The case was tried to a jury on April 10, 1950.' At the close of the evidence the trial court peremptorily instructed the jury against appellant Maisen and for the ap-pellees Maxey and the City of Lubbock. Thereafter on April 18, 1950, the .trial court rendered judgment granting Maxey the.injunctive relief sought, denying appellant Maisen any recovery against the City *310 of Lubbock and awarding the said City as a public authority the use of the' said area in question as a park' and a catch-basin for flood waters. Appellant ’perfected his appeal to this court and predicates the same upon eleven points presented.

The record reveals that on July 26, 1945, appellant obtained title to the lands now comprising Tech Terrace Addition to the City of Lubbock by a . deed executed by Minnie Slaughter Veal, individually and as joint executrix with executor Wm. H. Flip-pen of the estate of George T. Veal, deceased, at which time there was located on the said lands a natural lake covering an area of approximately seventeen acres draining a watershed of several hundred acres. Soon thereafter appellant employed H. N. Roberts, an engineer, to prepare plans, specifications and construction drawings for platting Tech Terrace Addition. After such were prepared appellant and H. N. Roberts presented them for approval by the Lubbock City Engineer and City Planning Commission, who approved such plans and specifications after amendments were made thereto, and such were likewise thereafter approved by the Lubbock City Commission, thus making the Addition a part of the City and showing appellant as owner and developer. Thereafter on January 25, 1946, appellant and others associated with him prepared and executed a dedication deed covering Tech Terrace Addition with a plat or map of the same attached thereto and made a part thereof and filed the same for record in Lubbock County. The dedication deed contained restrictions as to improvements to be made thereon and others not material to the issues here presented. Both the plat approved by the Lubbock city officials and the one made a part of the dedication deed showed the surface lake area near the center of the Addition designated and marked thereon as “Terraced Park Area”. The dedication deed contains the following provisions: * * * the undersigned, as owners of said land, have plotted the same into blocks and lots and have likewise plotted on and across the same in said addition, avenues, streets, boulevards, drives and alleys, all according to the map of the same attached hereto and made a part hereof, and as such owners hereunder they desire to impress upon said land, the map and plat thereof, attached hereto and to dedicate as public ways the ■streets, avenues, boulevards, drives, and alleys as shown thereon, and desire to impress upon said land the name, Tech Terrace, an addition to the City of Lubbock, Lubbock County, Texas, and to impress thereon the names of the streets, avenues, drives, and boulevards as indicated on attached Plat.”

The said deed further recites that appellant and others “ * * * do hereby impress thereon the map and plat attached1 hereto, subdividing said land in accordance therewith, into blocks and lots as numbered thereon, by these presents so impress said map thereon and subdivide the same, and do hereby impress upon said land the name of Tech Terrace, an addition to the City of Lubbock, Lubbock County, Texas, and do-hereby dedicate to the public for use as. streets and public ways all drives, streets,, boulevards, avenues, and alleys indicated' on the map when, and so long as the same may be used as such publicways; and do by these presents dedicate and grant the easements indicated upon said map to the extent and as fully as is described by separate easement instrument hereinafter to be given and granted by the undersigned as owner of the land.

“By This Dedication, the undersigned irrevocably grant -to the public the public, ways shown upon said map.”

The area designated and marked on the map as “Terraced Park Area” is definitely marked by fixed boundaries on the map as. well as on the ground. On the ground it is completely surrounded by a concrete curb and paved boulevard 60 feet wide, constructed by appellant, adjacent to the outer rim of the said park area.

Appellant used miniature copies of a map-made by his engineer Roberts in selling lots located in the Tech Terrace Addition which map shows parts of the park area set in shrubbery. Appellant testified that he intended originally to make a park area and that he had topsoil spread in the area and began development of such area by planting between 220 and 250 trees thereon and *311 kept them watered for a time and tried to keep the park area grounds clean and level. There is direct evidence by purchasers of lots to the effect that appellant represented the park area to be a dedicated park in selling the lots around . it and that such representation helped induce the sales of such lots. During the latter part of 1945 and the spring and summer of 1946 appellant was improving the lake area or park area in accordance with the approved plans and- specifications and was selling many lots about and near the said area in the Tech Terrace Addition for residential purposes. During development of the Addition and the park area many nice residences were built in that Addition and numerous other permits for such were secured. Among the lots sold by appellant was Lot 5 in Block 2 of the said Addition facing the park area and separated from it only by the paved boulevard adjacent to the said area. It was first sold by warranty deed executed by appellant to I. A. Stephens early in 1946. I. A. Stephens observed a map of Tech Terrace Addition in appellant’s office before purchasing the lot. Stephens sold the lot without any improvements thereon by warranty deed on March 17, 1947, to appellee Carl E. Maxey who examined a map as well as the premises and surrounding conditions before purchasing, the said lot. Maxey testified, in effect, that he bought the lot for the purpose of building a home on it, which he later built, and that the designation of the “Terraced Park Area” and the developments on the ground helped to induce him to buy the lot for such a purpose. The habendum clauses in the Stephens and Maxey deeds each contain the usual statements: “To Have And To . Hold the above described premises, together with all and singular the rights and apurtenances thereto in anywise belonging * * * ” etc.

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Bluebook (online)
233 S.W.2d 309, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maisen-v-maxey-texapp-1950.