Ronald Doll v. Amor Forwood, III and Wife, Suzanne Forwood

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 9, 1994
Docket03-93-00153-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Ronald Doll v. Amor Forwood, III and Wife, Suzanne Forwood (Ronald Doll v. Amor Forwood, III and Wife, Suzanne Forwood) 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
Ronald Doll v. Amor Forwood, III and Wife, Suzanne Forwood, (Tex. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

doll
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT OF TEXAS,


AT AUSTIN




ON MOTION FOR REHEARING


NO. 3-93-153-CV


RONALD DOLL,


APPELLANT



vs.


AMOR FORWOOD, III, AND WIFE, SUZANNE FORWOOD,


APPELLEES





FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 98TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT


NO. 913474, HONORABLE JERRY DELLANA, JUDGE PRESIDING




The opinion issued herein on August 17, 1994, is withdrawn, and the following opinion is filed in lieu thereof.

This suit arose from a boundary line and easement rights dispute involving land in the vicinity of Lake Travis. Appellant Ronald Doll appeals from a judgment in favor of appellees Amor and Suzanne Forwood establishing a boundary line favorable to them, awarding them actual damages and attorney's fees, and granting them permanent injunctive relief. In eighteen points of error, Doll essentially complains that (1) the trial court erred in holding he was not entitled to damages for an illegal credit check that Mr. Forwood allegedly made; (2) the court improperly determined the scope of the easement; (3) the court improperly determined the boundary line between the Doll and Forwood tracts; and (4) the court erred by not awarding Doll attorney's fees. We will reform the trial court's judgment, affirm it in part, and reverse it in part.



BACKGROUND

The Forwoods own a tract of land by Lake Travis. Doll owns the strip of land between the Forwoods' tract and the lake. The Forwoods have an express easement of ingress and egress over the Doll tract to get to the lake. In 1991, Doll bulldozed a road along the lakefront. The parties began disputing the scope of the Forwoods' easement and the location of the boundary line between their two tracts. The Forwoods sued for a judicial determination as to the location of the property line, damages, injunctive relief, and attorney's fees. Trial was before the court, and the court rendered judgment that the 685 foot contour of elevation was the mutual boundary line, awarded the Forwoods actual damages and attorney's fees, and enjoined Doll from interfering with the Forwoods' attempts to restore the roadway to its natural state or from creating any other road that interferes with the Forwoods' easement. Doll appeals.



DISCUSSION

In points of error nine, twelve, thirteen, and fourteen, Doll attacks the trial court's conclusions of law relating to its determination of where the boundary is located between the Doll and Forwood tracts.

The trial court's conclusions of law are always reviewable. Middleton v. Kawasaki Steel Corp., 687 S.W.2d 42, 44 (Tex. App.--Houston [14th Dist.] 1985, writ ref'd n.r.e.). Erroneous conclusions of law are not binding on an appellate court. LaChance v. Hollenbeck, 695 S.W.2d 618, 622 (Tex. App.--Austin 1985, writ ref'd n.r.e.). Thus, conclusions of law will be upheld on appeal if the judgment can be sustained on any legal theory supported by the evidence. Simpson v. Simpson, 727 S.W.2d 662, 664 (Tex. App.--Dallas 1987, no writ).

This dispute arose because of an ambiguity in the legal description of the Forwood property. The deed reads, in part:



Beginning at the northeast corner of the tract conveyed to T.A. Bellamy and wife, Pauline F. Bellamy, at an iron pin in a rock mound;

Thence North 16 deg. 31' east following approximately contour 685 feet as established by the Lower Colorado River Authority, 62.5 feet to an iron pin in a rock mound; Thence North 49 deg. 51' east following the said contour 62.5 feet to an iron pin in a rock mound. . . .



The ambiguity arises because if the 685 foot contour was intended as the boundary, two of the calls for course and distance would actually be longer than described in the deed.

None of the four surveyors that examined the disputed property were able to locate "an iron pin in a rock mound" at the northeast corner of the Forwood tract, or any of the other pins in rock mounds along the 685 foot contour as described in the deed. (1) The court concluded that, since at least four of the artificial monuments in the original description of the Forwood property could not be located, and since the boundaries of the tract as asserted by both Doll and the Forwoods failed to coincide with the calls for course and distance in the deed, the court would apply the general rules applicable to such boundary disputes. The general rules are that the location of a boundary should be governed, first, by natural objects or boundaries; second, by artificial marks; and third, by calls for course and distance. Stafford v. King, 30 Tex. 257, 272 (1867). The court concluded that the 685 foot contour as it exists in the disputed area is a "natural object" as that term is defined in Stafford.

Doll does not dispute that the general rules apply; he apparently concedes that when an ambiguity exists in a deed, natural or artificial objects will control over calls for course and distance. Nevertheless, Doll argues in point of error number nine that "a bulldozer clearing line cannot be a `natural object' as that term is defined under Texas law, and therefore as a matter of law the 685 foot contour line cannot be the boundary" between the two tracts. We first note that, at least in one portion of Doll's argument under points of error nine through fifteen, Doll apparently argues that the 685 foot contour line and the "clearing line" are not the same thing. He speculates that the Lower Colorado River Authority ("LCRA") cleared more land than required to create the 685 foot contour, and, thus, the clearing line and the 685 foot contour are not located in the same spot. (2) However, this argument conflicts with his actual point of error which states "a bulldozer clearing line cannot be a `natural object' as that term is defined under Texas law, and therefore as a matter of law the 685 contour line cannot be the boundary." (Emphasis added.) We will assume, for purposes of this appeal, that Doll intends to assert the complaint presented in his actual point of error.

Thus, we reach Doll's assertion that a contour line cannot be a "natural object." In his argument under this point of error, Doll does not distinguish the contour line in the instant cause from any other; rather, he apparently asserts that contour lines can never be natural objects.

The Stafford court gave the following examples of natural objects: "mountains, lakes, rivers, creeks, rocks, and the like." Stafford, 30 Tex. at 271. Artificial objects are "marked lines, trees, stakes, etc." Id. In explaining the rationale behind the rule that natural and artificial objects shall control over course and distance, the Stafford court stated:



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