Sentell v. Williamson County

801 S.W.2d 220, 1990 Tex. App. LEXIS 2937, 1990 WL 197732
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 5, 1990
Docket3-89-209-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 801 S.W.2d 220 (Sentell v. Williamson County) 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
Sentell v. Williamson County, 801 S.W.2d 220, 1990 Tex. App. LEXIS 2937, 1990 WL 197732 (Tex. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

ON MOTION FOR REHEARING

SHANNON, Chief Justice.

The opinion handed down by this Court on October 31, 1990, is withdrawn, and the following is substituted in its place.

This appeal is from a take-nothing judgment rendered by the district court of Williamson County.

Appellants 1 (the Sentells) sought a declaratory judgment that an easement across their land had terminated. The Sen-tells had expressly granted the easement to appellee Williamson County pursuant to a land swap. The Sentells claimed that the easement terminated due to the occurrence of one of the conditions placed on the easement. After a bench trial, the district court rendered judgment declaring that the Sentells failed to meet their burden of proof concerning the occurrence of the condition and that, accordingly, the easement across the Sentells’ property had not terminated. We will reverse and here render judgment that the easement terminated.

The controlling facts are not in dispute. 2 Williamson County (the County), as trustee for its schools, has long owned sections of ranch land in Sutton County. Before 1973, the sections here involved comprised approximately 3,200 contiguous acres connected diagonally and cutting through ranches owned by several families, including the Sentells. Historically, the land owned by the County had been “landlocked” because no public roadways bordered or ran through the property and no easements had been granted in the deeds from the State to the County. The nearest public access to this land, before the events forming the basis of this lawsuit, was old Highway 290, now Interstate 10. (This is illustrated by Map No. 1.)

The relationship between the County and adjacent landowners was amicable enough before 1967. The County merely leased its lands to the surrounding landowners who used it for their farming and ranching operations. In 1967, however, the County began negotiating, as a condition to renew *222 ing the leases, for permanent access to its land. Nevertheless, no agreements were formed and the leasing arrangements continued as before, until August 1973.

In August 1973, the County notified all of the surrounding landowners that their leases would not be renewed until the County acquired permanent access to its lands. At that time, the Sentells undertook negotiations with the County and an agreement was eventually reached in November 1973 (the Agreement).

The Agreement involved swapping a part of the County’s land for an equal portion of the Sentells’ land. The result of this land trade was that the County lands no longer ran diagonally through the Sentells’ property. The swap did not, however, solve the problem of access for the County. Therefore, incident to the Agreement, the Sen-tells also granted the County an easement across their land (the “Sentell easement”). (See Map No. 2 illustrating the property after the Agreement.)

The Agreement expressly conditioned the granting of the easement. The fifth, and last, of these conditions provides as follows:

It is understood that if Grantee should ever obtain a better and more direct route so as to have a means of ingress to and egress from its said property, this easement shall become null and void and of no further force and effect and Grantee shall execute a release or reconvey such easement. 3

Although the Agreement was signed on November 12, 1973, the warranty deeds and the nonexclusive roadway easement were not executed until October 1974. In this period, between the signing of the Agreement and the execution of the documents, the County obtained an easement across the adjacent Foster ranch (the Foster Road easement which connects with Hwy. 20 (now Interstate 10)). (See Map No. 3 for an illustration of the location of the Foster Road easement.)

The County and the Fosters disagreed as to whether the Foster Road easement was a permanent or temporary easement. This disagreement resulted in the filing of two separate lawsuits in 1983, one each in Sutton and Williamson Counties. The parties settled both suits and signed a compromise agreement on July 1, 1985 (the Compromise Agreement). The Compromise Agreement provided for a land exchange between the Fosters and the County and for each party to own one-half of the Foster Road easement and have a permanent easement to use the other one-half. (Map No. 4 illustrates the property ownership after the Compromise Agreement.) As a result of the Compromise Agreement, the County obtained land on both sides of Interstate 10.

The Sentells filed the declaratory judgment suit to terminate the easement across their property after they learned of the County’s land swap with the Fosters. The basis for the Sentells’ contention was that, by obtaining direct access to its land by Interstate 10 and fee simple ownership of the Foster Road easement, the County had obtained a “better and more direct route” to their property, thus triggering the express condition to the easement granted across the Sentell property. In response, the County asserted that the easement across the Sentells’ property was a “better” route because of the superior physical condition of the road and a “more direct” route because it accessed County land in closer proximity to that part of the land obtained in the trade with the Sentells. 4 Accordingly, the County contends, the condition was never satisfied.

*223 The district court agreed with the County and apparently based its holding on the purported superior physical condition of the Sentell easement and/or its proximity to the property obtained by the County in the Sentell agreement. 5 We do not agree.

Because the controlling facts are not in dispute, the question of whether the Sentell easement had terminated is one of law. Adams v. Rowles, 228 S.W.2d 849, 852 (Tex.1950). Because the relevant terms of the condition placed on the easement are not ambiguous, the construction of this instrument is likewise a question of law. Wall v. Colorado River Authority, 536 S.W.2d 688, 691 (Tex.App.1976, writ ref’d n.r.e.).

The Sentells and the County expressly agreed that if the County obtained a “better and more direct route so as to have a means of ingress to and egress from its said property,” then the Sentell easement would terminate. By use of the terms “ingress to” and “egress from,” the parties plainly expressed their understanding that if the County should ever obtain another means of access to their property, then the Sentell easement would terminate. Rushin v. Humphrey, 778 S.W.2d 95 (Tex.App. 1989, writ denied). That the intention of the parties was for the County to have a means of access to its property is evident, not only from the clear meaning of the terms “ingress’ and “egress,” but also from the proof.

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Bluebook (online)
801 S.W.2d 220, 1990 Tex. App. LEXIS 2937, 1990 WL 197732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sentell-v-williamson-county-texapp-1990.