Mike Boulanger, Trustee, on Behalf of Westlum Trust v. Waste Management of Texas, Inc., Waste Management, Inc., and USA Waste Landfill Operations & Transfer, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 15, 2011
Docket01-10-01002-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Mike Boulanger, Trustee, on Behalf of Westlum Trust v. Waste Management of Texas, Inc., Waste Management, Inc., and USA Waste Landfill Operations & Transfer, Inc. (Mike Boulanger, Trustee, on Behalf of Westlum Trust v. Waste Management of Texas, Inc., Waste Management, Inc., and USA Waste Landfill Operations & Transfer, Inc.) 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.

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Mike Boulanger, Trustee, on Behalf of Westlum Trust v. Waste Management of Texas, Inc., Waste Management, Inc., and USA Waste Landfill Operations & Transfer, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Opinion issued December 15, 2011.

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

————————————

NO. 01-10-01002-CV

———————————

Mike Boulanger, Trustee, On behalf of Westlum Trust, Appellant

V.

Waste Management of Texas, Inc., Waste Management, Inc., and USA Waste Landfill Operations and Transfer, Inc., Appellees

On Appeal from the 334th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 2010-28400

MEMORANDUM OPINION

          Appellant, Mike Boulanger, as Trustee on behalf of the Westlum Trust, and appellees, Waste Management of Texas, Inc., Waste Management, Inc., and USA Waste Landfill Operations and Transfer, Inc. (collectively, Waste Management), each claim fee title to an abandoned railroad right-of-way through separate deeds.  The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Waste Management and against Boulanger.  In five issues on appeal, Boulanger contends the summary judgment should be reversed because the trial court looked beyond the four corners of the deed to ascertain the parties’ intent, considered the rules for deed construction and extrinsic evidence in the absence of any pleading or finding of ambiguity, and failed to recognize the existence of a fact issue as to the ownership of the right-of-way. 

          We affirm the trial court’s summary judgment.

Background

          The Sam Houston Recycling Center sits at the southwest corner of Westview Drive and Lumpkin Road in Houston, Texas.  The property consists of two tracts of land:  (1) the “Main Tract” of approximately 3.6406 acres and (2) the “Panhandle Tract” of approximately 2.117 acres.  Running in a north-south direction between the Main Tract and the Panhandle Tract is the forty-foot-wide railroad right-of-way that is the subject of this appeal. 

          The Main Tract and the Panhandle Tract originally were part of a larger, 142 acre tract of land owned by C.P. Lumpkin.  Lumpkin split the 142 acres into various parcels.  The Main Tract and the Panhandle Tract were included in one parcel, which consisted of 14.177 acres.  In 1955, Lumpkin conveyed 13.697 acres of the parcel, including the Main and Panhandle Tracts, by deed to Cramerus Realty Company (the Cramerus Deed).  The Cramerus Deed identified the property conveyed by metes and bounds description and stated that it was “LESS the following tract of land reserved for railroad right-of-way:” 

BEGINNING at a point in the North line of Tract “F” above from which the Northwest corner of tract “F” bears N. 88 deg. 38’ 23” W. 681.93 feet;

THENCE S. 88 deg. 38’ 23” E., along the North line of Tract “F”, 40.01 feet to a point;

THENCE S. 88 deg. 38’ 33: W. along the South line of Tract “F” 40.01 ft. to a point;

THENCE North 522.70 feet to the place of beginning, and containing 0.480 acres of land.

          The parties dispute whether this language conveyed fee title to the right-of-way along with the Main and Panhandle Tracts.  Waste Management alleges that it did and that, through a series of subsequent conveyances, Waste Management acquired the right-of-way. Specifically, in 1991, separate grantors conveyed both the Main and Panhandle Tracts by deed to Waste Management’s corporate predecessor (the Waste Management Deeds), who then established the recycling center.  According to Waste Management’s regional Director of Planning and Project Development, Charles Rivette, Waste Management has used the right-of-way to operate the recycling center and to cross back and forth between the Main and Panhandle Tracts for more than fifteen years.  There is no alternate route between the Main and Panhandle Tracts.  Because the right-of-way was abandoned by the railroad in 1999, Waste Management contends that, “if [the right of way is not] utilized as part of the Sam Houston Recycling Center, [it] would be a useless, land-locked piece of real estate.”  In contrast, Boulanger denies that Lumpkin conveyed fee title to the right-of-way in the Cramerus Deed; instead, Boulanger alleges that Lumpkin retained the right-of-way in the Cramerus Deed and that Boulanger later purchased the right-of-way as part of the 0.7175 acres he acquired from Lumpkin’s heirs in 2005. 

Boulanger filed suit against Waste Management for trespass and unjust enrichment.  Waste Management filed counterclaims for trespass to try title and suit to quiet title.  Waste Management also filed a combined no-evidence and traditional motion for partial summary judgment, asserting that Boulanger had no evidence of the ownership element of his trespass claim or, alternatively, that Waste Management had conclusively negated that element.[1]  Without stating its reasons, the trial court granted Waste Management’s motion.  Thereafter, the parties dismissed the remainder of their claims, rendering the trial court’s partial summary judgment order a final and appealable judgment.  This appeal followed.      

Summary Judgment Standard of Review

          We review a summary judgment de novo.  Valence Operating Co. v. Dorsett, 164 S.W.3d 656, 661 (Tex. 2005); City of Galveston v. Tex. Gen. Land Office

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Mike Boulanger, Trustee, on Behalf of Westlum Trust v. Waste Management of Texas, Inc., Waste Management, Inc., and USA Waste Landfill Operations & Transfer, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mike-boulanger-trustee-on-behalf-of-westlum-trust-v-waste-management-of-texapp-2011.