Susan Mead, Amy Cole and Don Cole, Trustees of the MT Cole Trust No. 4 v. RLMC, Inc., Ronald L. McCutchin Family Partnership, Ltd. A/K/A Ronald McCutchin Family Partnership, Ltd.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 12, 2007
Docket02-06-00092-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Susan Mead, Amy Cole and Don Cole, Trustees of the MT Cole Trust No. 4 v. RLMC, Inc., Ronald L. McCutchin Family Partnership, Ltd. A/K/A Ronald McCutchin Family Partnership, Ltd. (Susan Mead, Amy Cole and Don Cole, Trustees of the MT Cole Trust No. 4 v. RLMC, Inc., Ronald L. McCutchin Family Partnership, Ltd. A/K/A Ronald McCutchin Family Partnership, Ltd.) 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.

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Susan Mead, Amy Cole and Don Cole, Trustees of the MT Cole Trust No. 4 v. RLMC, Inc., Ronald L. McCutchin Family Partnership, Ltd. A/K/A Ronald McCutchin Family Partnership, Ltd., (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

[COMMENT1] 

                                      COURT OF APPEALS

                                       SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                                                   FORT WORTH

                                        NO. 2-06-092-CV

SUSAN MEAD, AMY COLE,                                                 APPELLANTS

AND DON COLE TRUSTEES                                                                  

OF THE MT COLE TRUST NO. 4

                                                   V.

RLMC, INC., RONALD L. McCUTCHIN                                      APPELLEES

FAMILY PARTNERSHIP, LTD.

A/K/A RONALD McCUTCHIN

FAMILY PARTNERSHIP, LTD.                                                                

                                              ------------

            FROM THE 393RD DISTRICT COURT OF DENTON COUNTY

                                             OPINION


Appellants Susan Mead, Amy Cole, and Don Cole, trustees of the MT Cole Trust No. 4, (ATrustees@) appeal the trial court=s denial of their motion for summary judgment and grant of summary judgment in favor of Appellees RLMC, Inc. and Ronald L. McCutchin Family Partnership, Ltd. (collectively Athe McCutchins@).  In two issues on appeal, the Trustees argue that (1) the trial court did not implicitly rule on the McCutchins= objections to the Trustees= summary judgment evidence, but rather expressly did not rule on the objections, and therefore all of the Trustees= evidence should be considered by this court on appeal; and (2) the trial court erred by granting summary judgment to the McCutchins on the issue of adverse possession and by denying the Trustees= motion for summary judgment on the same issue.  Because we hold that the trial court did not impliedly rule on the McCutchins= objections and that a genuine issue of material fact exists, we reverse the trial court=s judgment.

Facts and Procedural History

The MT Cole Trust No. 4 owns several thousand acres in Denton County, Texas.  In 1981, Ronald Lee McCutchin bought a tract of land (the AMcCutchin property@) bordering the Trust=s property to the north, and in 1998, McCutchin conveyed the property to Appellee Ronald McCutchin Family Partnership, Ltd.  Appellee RLMC, Inc. is the general partner of that partnership.


In 2001, RLMC, acting as the general partner of the partnership, entered into an oil and gas lease with Western Chief Oil and Gas Co., and in 2003, Western drilled two wells on property covered by the lease.  The acreage on which the wells are located was separated by a fence line from what is undisputedly McCutchin property.  This fence has significance to the Trustees= arguments.

The Trustees brought suit against the McCutchins on a claim of trespass to try title and sought declaratory judgment, claiming title to the property on which the wells were drilled.  The Trustees contend that the Trust has acquired title to the property by adverse possession, specifically the land north of what is undisputedly Trust property and south of the fence line and what is undisputedly McCutchin property (the Adisputed acreage@).

The Trustees alleged in their First Amended Petition and in their motion for summary judgment that, for at least ten years, they have leased the disputed acreage to tenants who have used the land to graze cattle, that the tenants have maintained and worked on the fence separating the disputed acreage from the McCutchin property to prevent cattle from escaping, and that cattle owned by the Trust=s tenants have continuously grazed on the property immediately south of the fence from before 1950 to the present.  They further claimed that although a fence has separated the disputed acreage from the McCutchin property, no fence separated the disputed acreage from the Trust=s property until McCutchin had one built during the pendency of this lawsuit.  They also claim that the Trust=s property and the disputed acreage form one contiguous unit.


In their own motion for summary judgment, the McCutchins claimed that the disputed acreage has never been enclosed and that any grazing by the livestock of the Trust=s tenants has been sporadic.  The trial court granted the McCutchins= summary judgment motion, and the Trustees appealed.

Standard of Review


The function of summary judgment practice is to eliminate patently unmeritorious claims and untenable defenses.[1]  The purpose of the summary judgment rule is to A

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Susan Mead, Amy Cole and Don Cole, Trustees of the MT Cole Trust No. 4 v. RLMC, Inc., Ronald L. McCutchin Family Partnership, Ltd. A/K/A Ronald McCutchin Family Partnership, Ltd., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/susan-mead-amy-cole-and-don-cole-trustees-of-the-mt-cole-trust-no-4-v-texapp-2007.