Schultz v. Shatto

237 S.W.2d 609, 150 Tex. 130, 1951 Tex. LEXIS 468
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 7, 1951
DocketA-2885
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 237 S.W.2d 609 (Schultz v. Shatto) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schultz v. Shatto, 237 S.W.2d 609, 150 Tex. 130, 1951 Tex. LEXIS 468 (Tex. 1951).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Griffin

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Petitioners were plaintiffs and interveners in the trial court, who sought an injunction against the respondent, Preston K. Shatto, preventing him from erecting obstructions across a tract of land, described by metes and bounds and also designated as “New Street.” Petitioners further sought a judgment enjoining respondent from interfering with their use of said disputed tract of land as a street; and sought a judgment of the court establishing and designating the land as a public street in the town of Columbus, Texas. They alleged facts in their pleadings seeking relief upon three grounds as follows: (1) that Robert Robson, in 1869, was the owner of this land and dedicated same as a public street; (2) that Robert Robson had dedicated a private easement in favor of petitioners to use the land as a public street, either impliedly or directly, by virtue of the making of a map or plat by Robson and a sale of the lots shown on the map by reference to the map or plat, and also by reference to the land in controversy as “New Street”, and (3) that by use and enjoyment of said land as a street for more than 65 years the land had become a street by prescription and both petitioners and the public generally had a right to use the same as a street.

Trial was to the court without a jury, and at the conclusion of the testimony, judgment was rendered for petitioners as prayed for, declaring the land to be a public street, establishing said “New Street” as a public street, and enjoining respondent from interfering with the use of such property as a public street, and ordering him to remove the obstructions which he had erected thereon. No findings of fact or conclusions of law were filed nor requested. On appeal, the Court of Civil Appeals sustained Shatto’s assignments that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the judgment and held “that the evidence so adduced by appellees (petitioners here) failed to establish any such easement, either by dedication or prescription.” Also, “upon the contrary, the body of the evidence, as a whole, not only sustains the other points-of-error so presented here by the appellant, (respondent here) but especially his quoted seventh one, that the use of this property, either by the individual appellees, the Town of Columbus, or the public generally, had ever been more than such casual and promiscuous use thereof as had been made of adjacent vacant lots elsewhere in the town generally.”

*133 The Court of Appeals further held “our authorities have long held that, to constitute a dedication of a street, or of a private way, it must be shown that the owner made and exhibited a map or plat of the ground designated as a street, or alley, and that lots were sold with clear reference to it.” 232 S.W. 2d 266. The Court of Civil Appeals reversed and remanded the cause.

Petitioners sought to show a dedication by introducing an execution, dated May 16, 1868, showing that on March 6, 1868, one William Harberts, Administrator, recovered a judgment for $3,369.20 against Robert Robson. Also introduced was an agreement signed by Robert Robson whereby the execution issued was stayed to June 1, 1869, upon promise of Robson not to appeal or contest the justness of the claim and to pay the judgment within such time. Next introduced was another execution, dated June 2, 1869, and the levy and return of the sheriff of Colorado County thereon. In his return the sheriff recites the receipt of the execution and the levy upon other property belonging to defendant Robson; then he says “also (levied upon) twenty-nine lots (29) in the town of Columbus, Colorado County, Texas, said lots being portions of (certain part of West 1/2 of Blk. 8 of said town) and said lots particularly marked out on a certain map or plan, furnished me by said Robson subdividing said half block and said original lots and numbered upon said map, as follows: (here he sets out Numbers 1 through 32, each in parentheses, omitting 3, 4 and 10).” Then he recites a levy on other property, and that in July, 1869, the parties agreed to postpone the sale under the execution until the first Tuesday in August, 1869. Next he makes the necessary recitations as to the advertisement and lists the sale of each of the 29 lots, together with the amount brought by each, and the names of the purchasers. Included is a report of a sale of a certain vacancy, which does not affect the land included within the alleged street. The return is duly signed, returned and filed. Pursuant to said sale the sheriff makes deeds to the lots to the various purchasers of same. The three deeds set out in the testimony each contain, among other things, a recitation to the effect that the lots sold under the execution and so deeded were “numbered as follows on the map or plan made by Robert Robson subdividing said half block and said original lots in said half block.” The deed to Robert L. Foard and E. M. Glenn, dated August 9, 1869, in describing Lot No. 11 says: “Lot Number Eleven beginning at the SW corner of the New Street as laid out on Robson sub-divisional map or plan; thence South, etc., thence East, etc., thence North 24 ft. to a point in said New Street, thence West *134 sixty-six feet along said New Street to the place of beginning. Lot Number Seventy-eight (but later described as “28”, showing “78” was a clerical error) fronting on Said New Street as laid down on Robson’s subdivisional map, etc.” The description of Lot No. 15, also calls for a “point on Milam Street 74 ft. from the NW corner of the New Street as laid on Robson’s sub-divisional map.” Lot No. 25 is described as fronting twenty-two feet on the north side of “the New Street as laid down on Robson’s subdivisional map.” In the sheriff’s deed of same date, conveying certain other lots to the purchaser at the execution sale, reference is made to “the New Street laid off by said Robson on his map” in two or more instances. In describing the lots sold and conveyed to the purchaser and grantee in the deed, John T. Harcourt, it is recited more than once that Robson had a map or plan subdividing the original lots in the west half of Block 8. Similar language is used in the sheriff’s deed to Mrs. S. M. Claiborne in describing the lots which she bought at the execution sale, and which reads as follows: “* * * the same (W 1/2 Blk. 8) having been subdivided by the said Robson into small building lots and sold accordingly as his request and numbered on a subdivided plan or map presented by him to said Robson on the day of sale * * This deed calls for “New Street”, as shown on the new plan, “* * * and conveys to Mrs. S. M. Claiborne the property purchased by her together with the privilege of said New Street laid out as aforesaid which the said Robson had, etc. * *

All of the above deeds were recorded in Deed Records of Colorado County, Texas, on August 16 and 17, 1869. On December 10, 1869, the sheriff conveyed certain lots to one Phila W. Johnson, reciting they were sold on the first Tuesday in December, 1869, under an execution on a judgment rendered against Robert Robson in favor of Simon Thulemeyer. This deed states “* * * the same (property) having been subdivided by said Robson into small fractional lots as shown on a plan or map which was exhibited by said Robson on the day of sale, etc. * * No map or plat prepared by Robson was ever placed of record, and no one, who testified, ever saw such map or plat.

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Bluebook (online)
237 S.W.2d 609, 150 Tex. 130, 1951 Tex. LEXIS 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schultz-v-shatto-tex-1951.