Vinson v. Brown

80 S.W.3d 221, 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 4220, 2002 WL 1289871
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 13, 2002
Docket03-01-00486-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by71 cases

This text of 80 S.W.3d 221 (Vinson v. Brown) 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
Vinson v. Brown, 80 S.W.3d 221, 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 4220, 2002 WL 1289871 (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

MACK KIDD, Justice.

The dispute in this case involves various property owners’ easement rights to a park that fronts on Lake Travis. G.L. Vinson (“Vinson”), the owner of the ser-vient estate, appeals the trial court’s judgment declaring that Charles and Cora A. Brown (“the Browns”) have an express easement to use the park. In the court below, a number of other property owners identified as Charles M. Black, Jr., et al (“the Intervenors”) intervened in Vinson’s lawsuit. 1 The Intervenors’ appeal chal *225 lenges the trial court’s failure to grant them easements to use the park. We will affirm the trial court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND

In the 1940s, G.A. and Florence Butler Draper began to develop a subdivision on property they owned on the north shore of Lake Travis in rural Travis County. The Drapers divided the property into lots, named the subdivision Draper’s Cove, and began selling these lots in 1948. Luster B. Hobbs purchased lots nine and ten in the subdivision in 1948. Fifty of the lots in Draper’s Cove, including lots nine and ten, do not front on Lake Travis. The deed of conveyance for lots nine and ten (“the Hobbs deed”) includes the following language intended to create an easement:

[A] permanent [easement] of the use, together with the owners of other tracts out of said subdivision made by G.A. Draper in the Malinda Settle Survey, of a park located about five hundred (500) feet East of Block No. One (1) of a subdivision out of said survey made by Viggo Miller September 14, 1946 ... and which park extends to a cove on the Lake and the boundaries of which park to be marked and established by said G.A. Draper.

The park described in the Hobbs deed lies at the center of the dispute in this case. Although the Hobbs deed grants Hobbs use of the easement “together with the owners of other tracts out of said subdivision,” the deeds of others who purchased lots in the subdivision from the Drapers do not contain express grants of easement to the park area. 2 However, there is evidence that many, if not all, of the property owners in Draper’s Cove have historically used the park area for recreation and access to Lake Travis.

G.A. Draper, also known as “Pa Draper,” was pre-deceased by his wife. He died in 1973 without ever having explicitly marked and established the boundaries of the park as provided for in the Hobbs deed. Draper’s last will and testament (“the Will”) contains a number of provisions relevant to this dispute. The Will authorizes the executor to sell or dispose of any or all of Draper’s land. It also authorizes the executor to complete the Draper’s Cove subdivision, including setting aside park or community use areas for the benefit of property owners in the subdivision. The executor of Draper’s estate conveyed all land owned by Draper, including the park area in dispute, to appellant G.L. Vinson in 1976. Although Vinson did not mark and establish the boundaries of the park after this conveyance, the property owners in Draper’s Cove continued to use this area of the Vinson property for recreational and lake-access purposes. Charles and Cora A. Brown, appellees, are successors-in-interest to Hobbs, having purchased lots nine and ten in 1980.

In 1985, Vinson installed a locked gate at the road entrance to the park area and told the property owners in Draper’s Cove that they could only access the park by obtaining permission and a key from him. Many, if not all, of the property owners did so, and the use of the park by the property owners continued as before. However, in 1996, Vinson changed the lock on the gate *226 and informed the property owners that he was denying future access to the park to anyone who did not purchase an easement from him for $5,000. Three property owners purchased easements from Vinson, and he created a metes and bounds description of the park for these purchasers. The Browns, protesting that they already possessed an express easement as successors-in-interest to Hobbs, did not purchase an easement, and Vinson never issued them a key to the newly locked gate.

In 1998, Vinson sued the Browns for damages and injunctive relief, alleging that they had on several occasions damaged the gate, chain, and lock he had installed to control access to the park. The Browns counterclaimed, seeking a declaratory judgment that they had an express easement to use the park. A number of other property owners intervened in the lawsuit to establish that they too had easement rights to use the park, either by express grant, prescription, implication, or estop-pel.

The trial court determined certain issues as a matter of law and submitted other issues to the jury for determination. Among those issues decided by the trial court as a matter of law were the following: the Browns have an express easement appurtenant to lots nine and ten to use the park for recreational purposes; the Inter-venors do not have an express easement to use the park; the Will did not create or set aside park or community use areas for the benefit of Draper’s Cove property owners; the Will did not create any interest in real estate, and did not create or grant any property rights or easements; and the executor of Draper’s estate did not exercise any of the authority granted under the Will to set aside park or community use areas for the benefit of Draper’s Cove property owners. The trial court submitted the questions of whether the Interve-nors possess easement rights to the park by prescription, implication, or estoppel to the jury. The jury failed to find that the Intervenors have any easement rights to the park. The trial court rendered judgment accordingly.

Vinson appeals the trial court’s declaration of an express easement in favor of the Browns. The Intervenors also appeal, challenging the trial court’s findings concerning an express easement and the construction of the Will as well as the jury’s failure to find for them on the issues of easements by implication and estoppel.

DISCUSSION

Vinson’s Appeal

Vinson raises two points of error in his appeal. In his first point of error, Vinson argues that the Hobbs deed violates the Statute of Frauds because it does not contain a legally sufficient description of the location of the park. See Tex. Prop. Code Ann. § 5.021 (West 1984). In his second point of error, he argues that there is no evidence, or in the alternative, insufficient evidence, of a legally sufficient property description of the park.

As an interest in land, an express easement is subject to the Statute of Frauds. Anderson v. Tall Timbers Corp., 878 S.W.2d 16, 24 (Tex.1964). Although the Statute of Frauds provides that all contracts for the sale of real estate must be in writing, no requirements for the writing, other than that it be signed by the grantor, are provided. Kmiec v. Reagan, 556 S.W.2d 567, 569 (Tex.1977). It has been left to the courts to determine the substance and form a written instrument must satisfy before it is enforceable. Id.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 S.W.3d 221, 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 4220, 2002 WL 1289871, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vinson-v-brown-texapp-2002.