Patricia Gordon Stark v. Fernando H. Loya, Rebecca L. Loya, Timothy J. Myers and Lisa G. Myers

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 12, 2009
Docket03-08-00537-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Patricia Gordon Stark v. Fernando H. Loya, Rebecca L. Loya, Timothy J. Myers and Lisa G. Myers (Patricia Gordon Stark v. Fernando H. Loya, Rebecca L. Loya, Timothy J. Myers and Lisa G. Myers) 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
Patricia Gordon Stark v. Fernando H. Loya, Rebecca L. Loya, Timothy J. Myers and Lisa G. Myers, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-08-00537-CV

Patricia Gordon Stark, Appellant

v.

Fernando H. Loya, Rebecca L. Loya, Timothy J. Myers, and Lisa G. Myers, Appellees

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BASTROP COUNTY, 335TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 26,369, HONORABLE REVA TOWSLEE-CORBETT, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This appeal concerns the scope of an access easement created in a decree partitioning

land. Appellant Patricia Gordon Stark, the owner of the partitioned tract of land burdened by the

easement, appeals the district court’s declaration that appellees Fernando H. Loya, Rebecca L. Loya,

Timothy J. Myers, and Lisa G. Myers, as the owners of the land bordering Stark’s tract, are

beneficiaries of the access easement. In three issues, Stark contends that the district court erred by

allowing parol evidence and submitting a question to the jury on the intent of the drafters of the

partition decree because the decree unambiguously created the access easement for the sole benefit

of the parties in the partition suit. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the judgment of the

district court. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The land subject to the partition suit was owned in undivided interests by members

of the Kellough family (the “Kellough property”). Prior to the partition, the Kellough property was

served by a single public road, Pecan Acres Road. Pecan Acres Road ended on the Kellough

property’s northern boundary line and was connected to an “existing road” that crossed the Kellough

property and provided access to appellees’ property. Appellees’ property is located on the southern

boundary and, at the time of the partition decree, was owned by Oscar Davis and his wife.

Charles Kellough, one of the owners of an undivided interest in the Kellough

property, petitioned the district court to partition and equally divide the property among the family

members with undivided interests. The district court appointed commissioners to partition the land

and a surveyor to assist with the partition. After the commissioners filed their report with the court

and with the agreement of the parties, the district court entered its partition decree confirming the

commissioners’ report. The decree was executed and recorded in the real property records of

Bastrop County in October 1989.

The partition decree states in relevant part:

That each party to whom a share has been allotted by the report above set forth shall be vested, as against the other parties hereto, with fee simple title in both the surface and mineral estates to the property thus allotted to him or her as described in the report and the exhibits attached thereto, and hereby confirmed such exhibits being attached hereto and made a part hereof and shown herein as Exhibits “A”, “B”, and “C”, and all of such tracts being subject to easements as described in the plats above described and attached hereto for ingress and egress roadway and utility purposes.

2 Attached to the partition decree and recorded in the real property records were (i) the

field notes1 for a thirty-foot wide easement and a sixty-foot wide easement, and (ii) a survey plat

identifying the location of the partitioned tracts, the easements, and appellees’ property.2 The

thirty-foot wide easement follows a cattle path that crosses through the partitioned tracts numbers

3 and 4 (the “cattle path easement”).3 Charles Kellough granted and recorded in the real property

records of Bastrop County the cattle path easement for “right-of-way” in December 1989 to Davis

and his wife, as the owners at the time of appellees’ property. The easement was for “the purposes

of vehicular and pedestrian travel, for maintaining, rebuilding or replacing the roadway to be

constructed by Grantees within the Right-of-Way Easement, and for public utilities, of what ever

kind or character in the sole discretion of the Grantees.” The sixty-foot wide easement follows the

perimeter of six of the partitioned tracts of land, providing access from Pecan Acres Road to each

tract and to appellees’ property (the “perimeter easement”). The portion of the perimeter easement

in dispute runs along the boundary line between the partitioned tracts 3 and 4, encumbering

thirty feet on each side of the boundary line between the two tracts and extending to the boundary

line with appellees’ property.4

1 Gary Reynolds, an attorney that testified at trial, testified that field notes refer to the metes and bounds description of property. 2 The survey plat and field notes identify the land on the southern boundary of the Kellough property as “Oscar A. Davis 172 acre tract.” 3 Stark does not dispute that appellees were beneficiaries of the cattle path easement and has not appealed the portion of the final judgment concerning that easement. Appellee Timothy Myers testified at trial that, unless a bridge was built, appellees’ land was accessible only through the cattle path easement or the perimeter easement. 4 The portion of the perimeter easement burdening tract 4 was not at issue in this suit.

3 Stark purchased tract 3 of the partitioned tracts in 1996,5 and appellees purchased the

land formerly owned by Davis and his wife in October 2006. By agreement with the owner of the

land at the time, Amanda Roth, the land was “split [ ] down the middle,” with the Loyas and Myers

each receiving a separate deed for their half of the land. Shortly after appellees purchased their land,

they began clearing and developing the perimeter easement so that it could be used to access their

property as an alternative to the cattle path easement. Stark thereafter filed this suit, seeking

injunctive relief and damages for trespass, contending that appellees were not beneficiaries of the

perimeter easement. Appellees filed a counterclaim, including seeking declaratory relief that they

were beneficiaries of the perimeter easement.

The case proceeded to a jury trial in July 2008. Stark and her husband testified on

her behalf.6 Stark testified to her interactions with appellees, appellees’ “bulldozing” in the

perimeter easement without her permission, the loss of trees and other damage from the bulldozing,

and her understanding of the beneficiaries of the perimeter easement. She testified that no individual

had attempted to use the perimeter easement on tract 3 of the partitioned tracts prior to appellees and

that appellees’ means to access their property was the cattle path easement. When asked during cross

examination if the perimeter easement exists today, she testified that “[o]n paper it does. I mean it’s

drawn out on the survey,” but she testified that only “heirs to the Kellough estate” had the right to

use it. Mr. Stark testified to the number of trees that appellees destroyed in the perimeter easement

5 Stark purchased other tracts from the partitioned land that are not at issue, and tract 3 of the partitioned land is titled in the assumed name of her business, except for a five-acre parcel that is titled in her individual name. 6 Mr. Stark, who was a third-party defendant, has not appealed the final judgment.

4 and the time that he spent because of appellees’ actions, including his efforts to recover lost cattle

from downed fences.

Witnesses to testify for appellees included the Myers; the Loyas; Gary Reynolds and

Allen McMurrey, attorneys that represented parties in the partition suit; Dale Olson, the surveyor and

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Bluebook (online)
Patricia Gordon Stark v. Fernando H. Loya, Rebecca L. Loya, Timothy J. Myers and Lisa G. Myers, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patricia-gordon-stark-v-fernando-h-loya-rebecca-l--texapp-2009.