Sutor v. International & Great Northern Railroad

125 S.W. 943, 59 Tex. Civ. App. 73, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 310
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 2, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 125 S.W. 943 (Sutor v. International & Great Northern Railroad) 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
Sutor v. International & Great Northern Railroad, 125 S.W. 943, 59 Tex. Civ. App. 73, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 310 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

FISHER, Chief Justice.

This suit was instituted' February 19, 1908, by W. J. Sutor, as lessee, and Mrs. E. H. Sutor, as owner, of lot No. 2 in block 29 of the city of Austin, against the International & Great Northern Railroad Company, owner, and Otto Wahrmund, lessee, of lot No. 1 in said block. On April 10, 1908, there was filed an intervention by the city of Austin, and on the same day the parties filed an amended original petition, in which the Sutors and the City of Austin appeared as plaintiffs and Thomas J. Freeman, as receiver of the International & Great Northern Railroad Company was named as additional party defendant.

*75 The cause of action asserted in the pleadings of the appellants was to establish an easement or right of way over lot Ho. 1, in block 29, owned by the defendant railroad company and held by defendant Wahrmund under a lease from the company, and for an injunction requiring the defendants to remove the obstruction from the lot, and for a decree declaring the property an open street-way and sidewalk, and divesting out of the defendants all right and title to the property, and for general relief. The grounds upon which this relief was sought were, first, prescription; second, dedication on the part of the railroad company, and third, what the appellants term in their brief an estoppel.

The defendants answered by general denial of all the allegations contained in plaintiff’s petition, except that on October 3, 1876, the plaintiff, Mrs. Emily Sutor, and her deceased husband, sold and conveyed the lot in controversy to the International & Great Horthern Bailroad Company, under a general warranty deed for a consideration of $3,000, that being the full value of the same; that it owned and held and claimed the same ever since, and still so owned the same by fee simple title. The defendants pleaded also the statutes of limitation of three, five and ten years. The defendants also specially excepted to paragraph 6 of the petition, which exception was sustained and the paragraph stricken out.

The case was tried in October, 1908, and at the close of the evidence the court peremptorily instructed the jury to return a verdict in favor of the defendant, which was done, and judgment entered accordingly.

The principal assignments of error question the action of the trial court in peremptorily instructing a verdict, for the reason, as insisted by appellants, that the evidence was sufficient to require each of the issues—that is, prescription, dedication and estoppel—-to be submitted to the jury. The principal facts, as we view the evidence, are as follows :

The International & Great Horthern Bailroad Company entered the city of Austin either in 1876 or 1877. In 1876 the railroad company obtained from the city of Austin the right to use Third Street, among other streets, for its tracks, and in 1876 the railroad company purchased from the plaintiff Mrs. Sutor and her husband, who was then living, lot Ho. 1 in block 29. This lot is bounded on the north by lot Ho. 2, which is owned by Mrs. Sutor and now used and occupied by a building known as the Sutor Hotel; it is bounded on the west by an alley that runs north and south through block Ho. 29 from Fourth Street to Third Street. Its south boundary is Third Street, with an east frontage on Congress Avenue. The alley mentioned has been used for public travel for many years. This lot is known as lot Ho. 1, the southeast lot of block 29. The railroad company, on entering the city of Austin, established its depot across Third Street from lot Ho. 1, fronting on Third Street and Congress Avenue. A short time—the exact time is difficult to determine—from the time of the establishment of its depot, the railroad company occupied with one of its tracks about sixteen feet of the south side of lot Ho. 1. Since the railroad has been built, and possibly prior to that time, up *76 to a few years ago, at the time when Congress Avenue was paved, the front of lot Ho. 1, facing on Congress Avenue, was not accessible to vehicles and horsemen on account of an open gutter or ditch on Congress Avenue in front of the lot; but the lot was open, and not enclosed, except the railroad company erected posts on the lot, from which extended chains, but the time this was done is not definite, and there is some evidence tending to show that these chains were at times removed from the posts. In 1891 or 1892 the Sutors caused to be erected on the adjoining lot Ho. 2 the building known as the Sutor Hotel. A door or opening was left in the south side of this building which opened on to lot Ho. 1. In 1897 appellee Wahrmund, under a lease executed by the railway company to him, erected upon lot Ho. 1, fronting on Congress Avenue, a building used and occupied as a saloon. This building closed up the Congress Avenue entrance to the lot, and it has been continuously occupied and used by him since that date under the lease from the railroad company. In 1903 the railroad company executed a lease to the Sutors, granting to them the privilege of extending galleries to be attached to the Sutor Hotel on the south, over and above lot Ho. 1. In that instrument the Sutors admitted the ownership in the International &. Great Horthern Railroad Company of the lot in question. From the time the railroad company purchased the lot in question from the Sutors up to the time that the Sutor Hotel was erected in 1891 or 1892, the only use of the lot by the public was by pedestrians, who made it convenient in going from one point to another to walk across the lot. It was never used by horsemen or by vehicles. During the progress of the erection of the Sutor building, in 1891 or 1892, the contractor, for his convenience, constructed across the gutter or ditch, in front of the lot on Congress Avenue, a bridge, in order that he could haul upon the lot the material to be used in the building. This continued only for a few months during the progress of the work. After the building was completed the Sutors used the south entrance of the building for the purpose of receiving their goods, etc., used in operating the hotel, and for this purpose ivagons drove up to this south entrance, evidently entering the lot from the west end, either through the alley or Colorado Street, the street immediately west, but did not enter from Congress Avenue. After the Wahrmund building was erected in 1897 such use was discontinued. It does not appear that during this period the city or the Sutors asserted any prescriptive right in the property, nor was there ever established any highway across the .lot, such as a street, alley or sidewalk; nor does it appear that the railroad company was ever informed that any such right would be asserted by the appellants. It is true that the evidence would justify the assumption that the railroad company knew of the use of the lot by pedestrians, and possibly the additional use to which it was put by the Sutors for the six or seven years’ occupancy prior to the time that the appellees took actual possession by building and erecting the structure used as a saloon. The use hy the pedestrians, which we regard as merely permissive by the railroad company, could be considered as nothing more than wliat is termed “cutting across lots.” It is a use frequently made of vacant lots in cities, where pedestrians going to and from cer *77

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Bluebook (online)
125 S.W. 943, 59 Tex. Civ. App. 73, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sutor-v-international-great-northern-railroad-texapp-1910.