Temple v. Sanborn

91 S.W. 1095, 41 Tex. Civ. App. 65, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 13
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 2, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 91 S.W. 1095 (Temple v. Sanborn) 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
Temple v. Sanborn, 91 S.W. 1095, 41 Tex. Civ. App. 65, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 13 (Tex. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

SPBBB, Associate Justice.

Plaintiff instituted this suit against defendants to abate as a nuisance certain buildings erected in the vi'cinity of his property in violation of certain rights which he alleged to be appurtenant to his ownership of lot Ho. 1, block Ho. 2 of the Glidden and Sanborn addition to Amarillo, and to recover damages on account thereof. To be more specific, he alleged, among other things, in effect, that on and prior to December 15, 1890, Glidden and Sanborn were the owners of the-section of land now known as the Glidden and Sanborn Addition to Amarillo; that Sanborn, acting for himself and the other interested parties, cut up said section into streets, alleys, blocks and lots, and thereby induced the public to purchase said lots for the purpose of establishing a city or town, and made and caused to be executed and filed maps and plats of said addition; that said map and plat were filed for record and duly recorded in the deed records of Potter County, to which map reference was made for more particular and accurate description; that said maps and plats show the various streets, alleys, blocks, lots and railroad ground and reservations dedicated to and intended for use as such in the founding, building and maintaining of such proposed town; that they show running across said addition in an easterly and westerly direction in one continuous straight line the line of railroad owned and operated by the Fort Worth and Denver City Bailway Company, on each side of which is a wide space approximately two hundred feet, shown to have been intended and dedicated for use for railroad purposes and designated on each and both maps of said additions (the Glidden and San-born, and the adjoining addition in the name of one Holland) as “Beserved for Bailway Purposes;” that streets running in easterly and westerly direction and parallel with said line of railroad are numbered *67 north and south from such railway reservation, the one on the immediate south side thereof being designated as First Street; that immediately on the south side of said First Street and said railway reservation, near the east edge of the Glidden and Sanborn Addition and the west line of the Holland Addition, as shown by said maps and plats, is situated block Ho. 2 in said Glidden and Sanborn Addition to Amarillo, which block is composed of ten lots, each having a front of sixty feet and a depth of one hundred and forty feet; lot Ho. 1 being on the northeast corner of said block, immediately south of said First Street, extending one hundred and forty feet along the same and fronting-sixty feet east on Buchanan Street; that after such mapping and platting of lands and additions, said Glidden and Sanborn began to sell lots and blocks and land with reference thereto, and purchasers from them began to build thereon, so that since then a large and very important part of the residences in said town are located along the east edge of said addition, south of said line of railroad; and the passenger and freight depots of the Fort Worth & Denver City Bailway Company, the Pecos and Horthern Texas Bailway Company, the Southern Kansas Bailway Company of Texas, and the Chicago, Bock Island and Gulf Bailway Company, are located on and along said “Bailway Beservation” immediately east from the said intersection of Buchanan Street at the northeast corner of lot Ho. 1 in block Ho. 2 in said Glidden and San-born Addition and said railway reservation; that by reason of such relative locations of the business and residence portions of Amarillo and said railway reservation, and the location of said depots, said corner lot Ho. 1 in block Ho. 2 became a valuable corner lot on a popular corner, where a vastly greater part of the public travels and passes going to and from said depots, and were it not for the wrongful acts of defendants, would be the most public and valuable lot near said depots for hotel, restaurant and lodging house purposes; that by the said mapping and platting of additions and the dedication of said streets and alleys and the reservation and dedication of said railway reservation to railway purposes and the location of said depots, the right to have said railway reservation used for railway purposes only became and is a right appurtenant to and a permanent easement going with the title to said lot Ho. 1 in block Ho. 2, and is a valuable right the impairment of which causes great damage to plaintiff as the owner of said lot; that after putting said maps and plats of record, the defendant Sanborn sold divers lots in said addition to various parties prior to February 5, 1898, when by some arrangement between himself and one W. H. Bush, said Bush became the owner of the record title to all of Sanborn’s interest in the property; that while said Bush held said property and on about May 3, 1899, he conveyed by general warranty deed lots Hos. 1 and 2 in block Ho. 2 in the Glidden and Sanborn addition to one J. B. McAllister to have and to hold the said premises with all and singular, the rights and appurtenances thereto in anywise belonging unto said McAllister and his heirs and assigns forever; that afterward on about October 8, 1900, said McAllister likewise sold and conveyed said lots to W. L. Thompson; that Thompson in turn for a valuable consideration by a similar deed sold and conveyed lot Ho. 1 to plaintiff, whereupon he became the fee simple owner of said lot together with *68 all the rights thereto appertaining and belonging, including the right to have said lot front on said railway reservation and such reservation used for railway purposes only; that he so bought and acquired said lot and the house thereon situated with a view of its advantageous location, it being so situated as to make the same valuable and profitable as a location for hotel, lodging house, restaurant and the like, and expected to improve, use and enjoy the same for said purposes; that at the time he bought it there ivas, and ever since has been, on said lot a house being used as a boarding and lodging house; and that he and his said assignor bought the property with a view of improving and using the same as a location for a hotel and rooming and lodging house, but have been and are deterred therefrom by the wrongful acts of defendants; that after said Bush had conveyed to said McAllister, said Bush reconveyed to defendant Sanborn all interest in and to Glidden and Sanborn and Holland Additions which had not been previously sold by said Bush; and that about July 1, 1902, defendants Sanborn and one J. G. Riley with full notice and knowledge of plaintiff’s rights in the premises and with actual and constructive notice and knowledge of the dedication of said railway reservation to public "use for railway purposes only, entered into an agreement and a conspiracy to have that part of said reservation lying and being situated directly between plaintiff’s said lot and the said line of railroad and on the way between plaintiff’s house and said depot, used for restaurant and hotel purposes so as to intercept public travel and public patronage coming from such depots on their way to and along by plaintiff’s house, and in pursuance of such agreement and conspiracy, said Sanborn wrongfully and with the intent to injure plaintiff and depreciate the value of his said property, leased and rented to said Riley the right to place and maintain, and said Riley did about said time place and ever since has maintained, on said reservation what is known as the Riley Restaurant, to plaintiff’s great damage; that thereafter on about December 27, 1902, said Sanborn entered into a further conspiracy with F. W.

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Bluebook (online)
91 S.W. 1095, 41 Tex. Civ. App. 65, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/temple-v-sanborn-texapp-1905.