Perry v. String Fellow

113 S.W.2d 1012, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 879
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 3, 1938
DocketNo. 10712.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 113 S.W.2d 1012 (Perry v. String Fellow) 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
Perry v. String Fellow, 113 S.W.2d 1012, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 879 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

CODY, Justice.

This appeal is from the action of the trial court granting, after hearing on notice, a temporary injunction. As such it has been advanced on the docket of this court. For convenience appellees and appellants will be designated as they were below, plaintiffs and defendants, respectively-

Plaintiffs, husband and wife, alleged that they own and are in charge and control of all those certain tracts of land, consisting of about 3,200 acres out of the J. F. Colvit Survey in Brazoria County, commonly known as the S. H. Hudgins pasture, which is bounded on the west by a good substantial fence, and on the north, east, and south by Oyster Creek, Intercoastal Canal, and East Union Bayou, respectively, which are natural barriers, and that such inclosing fence and natural barriers are sufficient to turn ordinary livestock. That the pasture is of the type designated on the Gulf Coast as “salt grass” and is capable of properly maintaining' one head of cattle to eight acres. That defendant owns 15 acres of land inclosed within plaintiffs’ pasture, and is thereby entitled to keep within said inclosure such number of head of livestock as 15 acres will sustain, namely, two, and no more. But that defendant has driven a large number of cattle into plaintiffs’ inclosure, and is threatening to place additional cattle therein sufficient to exhaust the grazing capacity thereof. That plaintiffs have a large number of cattle to feed and fatten during the fall and winter months of 1937 and 1938, and have no place or means other than said pasture in which to do so. And that if defendant’s trespass and threatened trespass is not restrained and enjoined, the cattle placed within said inclosure by him will consume all the grass, and leave plaintiffs without forage for their cattle for such period, to their irreparable injury, and against which they have no adequate remedy at law. That plaintiffs are therefore entitled to expel from said inclosure all cattle except the number defendant is lawfully entitled to keep therewithin because of his ownership of, and control over, said 15 acres within plaintiffs’ inclosure. The petition closes with the usual prayer for restraining and enjoining defendant from keeping within such inclosure moré cattle than his land therewithin will properly maintain.

The learned trial judge filed findings of fact to the effect that 35 years ago a man by the name of Hudgins leased the land involved in this suit from its then owner, the Brazos River Channel & Dock Company, and constructed a fence across its west end. That such fence, together with the natural water boundaries, consisting of East Union Bayou, Oyster Creek, and Inter-coastal Canal, was sufficient to confine therein, and repel therefrom, ordinary livestock. That Hudgins went into possession of all such inclosed land, consisting of approximately 3,600 acres, 200 acres of which he owned in fee, and over all of which he exercised control. That in 1909, subsequent to the lease to Hudgins, the Brazos River Channel & Dock Company subdivided into 5-acre tracts a large body of land, including a large portion of the land within the inclosure involved in this suit, and sold such tracts to numerous persons. That after this subdivision was made, and the 5-acre tracts sold, Hudgins continued in possession of the inclosure, fenced by him as aforesaid before the subdivision, using it for grazing. He made no claim, however, that his occupancy was adverse to the right of the owners of these 5-acre tracts to use and occupy their land, situated within his inclosure, should they choose to do so. That during the year 1929, Hüdgins leased the inclosure to plaintiff R. E. L. String-fellow, who had previously acquired the fee to 300 acres therewithin; and that Hudgins at that time sold to Stringfellow the fence theretofore constructed, and which formed the only artificial barrier inclosing the 3,600 acres, and put String- *1014 iellow in possession of all the land within the inclosure. Thereafter, about October 1, 1'930, Hudgins leased 200 acres of the land within the inclosure that he had turned over lo Stringfellow to one Moller, who placed two to three hundred head of cattle in said pasture. That about October 1, 1931, Moller withdrew his cattle therefrom. During the period Moller kept cattle in the pasture, defendant kept about 40 head of horses there. That at the time of the 1934 tidal wave, defendant had in the pasture, in addition to the 40 head of horses, about 130 head of cattle; that some of his horses were lost in the tidal wave, and the re-unainder of the horses remained in the inclosure up until the present.1

The court found further that after December 14, 1929, and prior to August 21, 1933, plaintiffs acquired from Hudgins the-lands owned by him in fee within the inclosure. And that subsequent to the withdrawal of the Moller cattle, plaintiffs have been in exclusive possession and control of the inclosure, and all of the lands therein, but are exercising such control in full recognition of the right of defendant to his 15 acres of land. That plaintiffs hold deeds and leases to about 2,000 acres, hut regardless of whether the grantors in said deeds or lessors in said leases owned the land described in them, respectively, plaintiffs are asserting their right to control said 2,000 acres within the inclosure by reason of such deeds and leases, and have been in exclusive possession of such lands, claiming the right to use and occupy the 2,000 acres by virtue of such deeds and leases, and by virtue of possessing them.' That subsequent to the time plaintiffs took over the control and possession of the lands within the inclosure, defendant acquired the fee to 15 acres therein. That since the institution of this suit defendant has acquired deeds and leases purporting to convey and lease to him 125 additional acres, but that no evidence was offered showing any right in the grantors and lessors in such deeds and leases to convey or lease the lands described therein.

The court further found that the tidal wave of 1934 washed down a portion of the fence placed there by Hudgins some 35 years before. And that defendant, with the consent of 'plaintiffs and under an agreement that he might use the inclosure for the remainder of the year 1934, repaired and rebuilt the fence; and in so doing used new material in rebuilding 2,800 feet of the fence, at the cost to himself of about $100. That during a part of the years of 1936 and 1937, the inclosure was laid under tick quarantine, during which time plaintiffs did not place cattle therein, as they did not want to incur the trouble and expense of dipping, and Mrs. Stringfellow caused a hundred yards of fence, as well as the gate, to be removed. But when the quarantine was lifted shortly before this suit was instituted, and plaintiffs had the fence repaired and the gate re-installed, shortly thereafter defendant drove 200 head of cattle into the' pasture, and, but for the fact he was restrained by court order in this suit, would have placed therein 400 head of steers, additionally.

The court found further' that plaintiffs used the land within the inclosure for a winter pasture, removing their cattle in the summer months, at which time the gate was left open by permission, and plaintiffs made no effort during the summer months to keep the gate closed. Further, no complaint was ever made by any owners of the 5-acre tracts, across which the fence (the west end or artificial barrier) runs, of the acts of Hudgins and of plaintiffs in maintaining such fence.

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Related

Owens v. Texaco, Inc.
368 S.W.2d 780 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1963)
Griffith v. Mauritz
308 S.W.2d 599 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1957)
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227 S.W.2d 834 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1949)
Perry v. Stringfellow
134 S.W.2d 1031 (Texas Supreme Court, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
113 S.W.2d 1012, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 879, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-string-fellow-texapp-1938.