Sorrell v. Gengo

49 S.W.3d 627, 2001 Tex. App. LEXIS 5070, 2001 WL 844743
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 26, 2001
Docket09-00-361 CV
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 49 S.W.3d 627 (Sorrell v. Gengo) 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
Sorrell v. Gengo, 49 S.W.3d 627, 2001 Tex. App. LEXIS 5070, 2001 WL 844743 (Tex. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

WALKER, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment rendered by the trial court sitting as factfin-der in a non-jury trial. The judgment grants appellee, Kenneth D. Gengo, Jr., a permanent easement across property owned by appellants. The judgment also grants appellants, Bobby J. Sorrell and Shelby J. Sorrell, a drainage easement in order to maintain a drainage pipe located on property owned by appellee. Upon request by appellants, the trial court filed findings of fact and conclusions of law. Appellants complain of the legal and factual insufficiency of various findings of fact by the trial court. The two conclusions of law, upon which appellants also raise complaints of legal and factual insufficiency, are that (1) appellee is entitled to a permanent ingress-egress easement by implication across appellants’ property, and (2) appellee is entitled to a permanent ingress-egress easement by estoppel across appellants’ property.

“While findings of fact issued in a bench trial have the same force and dignity as a jury’s verdict, the trial judge’s findings of fact are not conclusive when there is a complete statement of facts in the record.” Pebble Beach Property Owners’ Ass’n v. Sherer, 2 S.W.3d 283, 287 (Tex.App.—San Antonio 1999, pet. denied). “Conclusions of law are reviewable when attacked as a matter of law, but not on grounds of sufficiency of the evidence, as if they were findings of fact.” City of Beaumont v. Spivey, 1 S.W.3d 385, 392 (Tex.App.—Beaumont 1999, pet. denied)(quoting Arthur M. Deck & Assocs. v. Crispin, 888 S.W.2d 56, 60 (Tex.App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1994, writ denied)). And although a trial court’s conclusions of law may not be challenged for factual insufficiency, the reviewing court may examine said conclusions independently and then examine the legal conclusions drawn fi*om the facts to determine their correctness. Id.

The record before us indicates that, at one time, appellee’s father, Kenneth Dean Gengo, Sr., purchased the one-acre tract of land subject to the instant litigation. This was in March of 1972. The record reflects that a “lane” for ingress and egress purposes existed prior to the time Gengo, Sr. purchased the one-acre tract, but said “lane” was improved by adding shell so as to create a “driveway” by Gengo, Sr. after he purchased the property in 1972. While there may have been an improved “driveway” in existence at that time, there was no easement because one who owns fee simple title needs no easement across his *630 own property since fee simple title gives him the right to use all of the property. Cecola v. Ruley, 12 S.W.3d 848, 852 (Tex.App.—Texarkana 2000, no pet.); see also Howell v. Estes, 71 Tex. 690, 12 S.W. 62 (1888).

Thereafter, Gengo, Sr. sold a portion of the one-acre tract to Sandra Nickens. It is this portion sold to Nickens that becomes the servient tract eventually purchased by appellants. While it appears that Gengo, Sr. had intended to explicitly reserve for himself a 30 foot portion of the property in the deed to Nickens as a driveway for his ingress and egress to other portions of his property, this was not done, and the deed to Nickens is completely silent as to any reservation or easement for Gengo, Sr.’s benefit. The evidence is not in dispute that at the time of the sale of the portion of the one-acre tract to Nickens, the remainder of Gengo, Sr.’s property was “land-locked” without access to the improved “driveway.”

It appears that the following is very well-settled law:

[W]here the owner of a single area of land conveys away part of it, the circumstances attending the conveyance may themselves, without aid of language in the deed, and indeed sometimes in spite of such language, cause an easement to arise as between the two parcels thus created — not only in favor of the parcel granted (“implied grant”) but also in favor of the one remaining in the ownership of the grantor (“implied reservation”). The basis of the doctrine is that the law reads into the instrument that which the circumstances show both grantor and grantee must have intended, had they given the obvious facts of the transaction proper consideration. And in the case of an implied reservation it is not necessarily a bar to its creation that the grantor’s deed, into which the law reads it, actually warrants the servient tract thereby conveyed to be free of incumbrance.

Mitchell v. Castellaw, 151 Tex. 56, 246 S.W.2d 163, 167 (1952) (and authority cited therein). Therefore, in the instant case, an easement by implied reservation was created by the fact that Gengo, Sr. conveyed a portion of his one-acre tract to Sandra Nickens without an explicit reservation set out in the deed, as well as by the fact that, by including the improved “driveway” as a portion conveyed to Nick-ens, Gengo, Sr. was effectively cut off from accessing the remainder of his property by any other route. This is also known as an “implied reservation of right of way by necessity over the land conveyed.” Bains v. Parker, 143 Tex. 57, 182 S.W.2d 397, 399 (1944).

The evidence before us is undisputed that the landlocked portion of Gengo, Sr.’s remaining property was eventually conveyed to his son, appellee. It is also undisputed that Sandra Nickens eventually conveyed her entire tract over to appellants. However, at trial, appellee testified that he was in the process of purchasing by contract for deed a separate parcel of land by which he could access his property with his motor vehicles. Appellee further testified that, despite his ability to access his property via this newly purchased separate parcel, without access to the implied easement he would have “considerable difficulty” in getting his van or his attached trailer into his covered carport. However, lack of convenience or ease of access has been held not to give a claimant a way of necessity when the claimant can get to his property by means of his own land. See Duff v. Matthews, 158 Tex. 333, 311 S.W.2d 637, 643 (1958). As was explained by the Court in Duff:

It may be true that Matthews and other lot owners, as a matter of convenience, *631 were not then using the upper road to reach their property and that the upper road had grown up in trees and underbrush and possibly washed out to the extent that it was no longer passable. These facts do not give Matthews a way of necessity across the property he conveyed to Duff by a “straight” general warranty deed. In Carey v. Rae, 58 Cal. 159 [1881 WL 1814] (a state following the strict necessity doctrine), it is said: “If the appellant has any right whatever to burden the respondent’s land, it originates only in the necessity of the circumstances in which he is placed, and not in grant.

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49 S.W.3d 627, 2001 Tex. App. LEXIS 5070, 2001 WL 844743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sorrell-v-gengo-texapp-2001.