McShan v. Pitts

554 S.W.2d 759, 1977 Tex. App. LEXIS 3073
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 15, 1977
Docket15637
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 554 S.W.2d 759 (McShan v. Pitts) 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
McShan v. Pitts, 554 S.W.2d 759, 1977 Tex. App. LEXIS 3073 (Tex. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

CADENA, Justice.

In this trespass to try title suit plaintiff, C. Hunter, McShan, appeals from a judgment, following a nonjury trial, that he take nothing. The judgment is based on the conclusion that defendant, Anthony Pitts, held title acquired by adverse possession under our ten-year Statute of Limitations, Art. 5510, Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. (1958).

The land in question is a tract of approximately .9 of an acre which abuts on the eastern edge of the right-of-way of Harper Road in Kerr County, and is bounded on the north, east, and south by land to which defendant has the record title. Plaintiff owns several acres, title to which is not in dispute here, which lie adjacent to the western edge of the Harper right-of-way. This land Is separated from the tract in dispute by the highway. For many years the land in dispute, as well as defendant’s land lying north and south of the disputed strip, has been separated from the highway by a *761 fence, but there is no fence separating the strip in dispute from the land to which defendant has the record title. The parties agree that record title to the .9-acre strip is in plaintiff.

Until approximately 1939, the land on both sides of New Harper Road was owned by E. C. Fisk, including the land on the west side of the road now occupied by plaintiff, the land on the east side of the road to which defendant holds the record title, and the disputed strip. At that time the land on the east side of the highway was separated from the right-of-way by a fence without gates.

Fisk’s daughter lived with him in a house on the west side of the highway from about 1920 to 1946. After her father conveyed some of the land on the east side of the highway to a man named Hartman in about 1939, no further use was made by her father of the strip in question. Sometimes she crossed the highway and went wading in the creek. Since there was a fence along the eastern edge of the New Harper Road right-of-way, she walked down the Old Harper Road, which adjoins what is now defendant’s property on the north, to the creek. She did not know whether her father, after he conveyed land on the west side of New Harper Road to Hartman in 1939, claimed any land east of such highway.

In 1961 Fisk executed a conveyance to plaintiff’s mother, Mrs. McShan. The description in the deed includes the land on the west side of New Harper Road as well as the disputed strip on the east side of that highway. After 1961 plaintiff, who lived in New York at that time, visited his mother, who lived in a house on the land west of the highway, at least once a year. While staying at his mother’s house, plaintiff would occasionally cross the highway and go on the land in question. Sometimes, friends from New York would visit him and his mother, and these friends, with their children, would occasionally go on the land across the street. The children would play in the creek and the adults apparently liked the scenery. No other use of the disputed strip was made by plaintiff other than these occasional entries. There is no evidence that Mrs. McShan made any use of the disputed strip.

Mrs. McShan died in mid-1973, leaving plaintiff and his brother, who lives in Houston, as her sole heirs. Plaintiff purchased his brother’s interest in the property shortly thereafter and established his residence on the land west of the highway.

In the fall of 1973 plaintiff noticed that the fence on the east side of New Harper Road had been removed. At that time he talked to defendant about the strip in question, informing defendant that he owned the .9-acre tract. Defendant, nevertheless, continued with the work and constructed a deer-proof fence, eight feet high, in place of the old fence which he had removed.

Plaintiff filed this suit on June 20, 1975.

As far as the tract of land east of the highway is concerned, the record contains no evidence of its use between approximately 1939, when Fisk conveyed to Hartman, and 1950, other than the testimony of Fisk’s daughter summarized above.

On August 31, 1950, G. C. McCoy conveyed what is now defendant’s land to T. A. Black and wife, Eyvonne Black. Mrs. Black testified that at the time they purchased the property it was all enclosed by a fence, including the tract in dispute, with no cross-fences separating the ,9-acre tract from the rest of the land east of the highway. The creek often flooded, and they repaired the fencing many times. They knew Mr. Fisk and visited him often, but the question of title to the tract in dispute was never mentioned. They claimed everything within the fence and used the property “just like it was ours.” Fisk made no effort to use the tract in question, and they assumed, and claimed, that everything within the fence belonged to them.

On September 25, 1954, the Blacks conveyed to W. T. Tomlin, in whom the title rested until January 20, 1955. Tomlin apparently purchased the land for investment purposes and made no use of it himself. However, L. B. Hough, Jr. testified that his *762 father leased the land from Tomlin and grazed livestock on it. The property was completely fenced, with no gate in the fence along the New Harper Road. He and his father maintained the “fences.” This witness did not know whether the arrangement between his father and Tomlin was evidenced by an instrument in writing or not.

Tomlin conveyed to Walter Helmke and wife, Irma Helmke, on January 20, 1955. Helmke testified that he cleared the land, dammed up the creek, and built a lake. He operated a fish hatchery in the creek and lake and operated a bait stand, in addition to “running” sheep and cattle on the land. He claimed all the land enclosed by the fences, which he maintained. At the time he purchased the land he cleared it, including the tract in dispute, with a bulldozer. He claimed all the land within the fences.

The Helmkes conveyed to Glen Daniel and wife, Gladys, on February 3,1961. According to Helmke, he claimed all land within the fence and that is what he sold to Daniel. At that time, the Daniels lived in Oregon, but they purchased the land for the purpose of making it their home. They returned to Oregon approximately in March 1961, but Mr. Daniel returned to Kerrville shortly thereafter, with Mrs. Daniel remaining in Oregon to sell the property they owned there. Mr. Daniel was killed in an automobile accident near Kerrville on July 31,1961. Mrs. Daniel then returned to Texas and began living on the tract she and her husband had purchased. She “ran sheep” on the land. In 1967 she built a new house on the land and, except for an area around the new house where she lived, she leased the remainder of the land to tenants who kept horses and cattle on the land. She kept the dam repaired and always maintained the fences, with the help of neighbors. She married Morris Morgan in 1971, and sold the land to defendant on August 2, 1972.

Morris Morgan, who joined his wife in the execution of the deed to defendant, testified that he learned, shortly before the conveyance to defendant, of a possible “discrepancy on the acreage . .

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Bluebook (online)
554 S.W.2d 759, 1977 Tex. App. LEXIS 3073, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcshan-v-pitts-texapp-1977.