William A. Jentsch, Jr. v. Lake Road Welding Co.

450 S.W.3d 597, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 12485, 2014 WL 6481632
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 19, 2014
Docket08-12-00287-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 450 S.W.3d 597 (William A. Jentsch, Jr. v. Lake Road Welding Co.) 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
William A. Jentsch, Jr. v. Lake Road Welding Co., 450 S.W.3d 597, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 12485, 2014 WL 6481632 (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

YVONNE T. RODRIGUEZ, Justice.

Appellant, William A. Jentsch, Jr. (“Jentsch”), appeals the trial court’s denial of his declaratory action for an easement by necessity. We reverse and remand. 1

BACKGROUND

At one time, Oswald Jentsch (“Oswald”), owned approximately 500 acres of land in Archer County, Texas, some of which he later sold to multiple buyers. Most of these conveyances involved the selling of parcels to the east of Oswald’s acreage which is hereafter denoted as Tract 3. In 2002, Oswald executed a power of attorney in favor of his stepson, Michael Benedict. Utilizing his power of attorney, Benedict sold additional portions of Oswald’s properties between 2002 and 2004. After these sales, Oswald retained three tracts of land. Tract 1 fronted State Highway 79, Farm-to-Market Road 1954, and Parker Road, and the southern portion of the tract bordered the northern portion of Oswald’s Tract 2. Tract 2 abutted State Highway 79 and Parker Road. The northern property line of Tract 3 abutted the southern property line of Tract 2, but was otherwise surrounded by properties that Oswald or Benedict had sold prior to Oswald’s death. Only a few of those sales are relevant to our consideration of this appeal.

On July 9, 2004, Don, Barbara, Jerry, and Pamela Morgan purchased two of those properties from Oswald, which consisted of a 19.23-acre tract and a 220-acre tract. The smaller tract completely bordered the southern end of Oswald’s Tract 3, and the 220-acre tract bordered a significant portion of the western portion of Tract 3.

Don McClendon initially purchased a 7.5-acre parcel from Oswald in 1996, and later purchased two additional parcels on July 13, 2004. One of the parcels purchased in 2004 consisted of a 5-acre tract. The eastern portion of the 5-acre parcel abutted a portion of the westernmost border of Tract 3, and the western portion of the parcel bordered State Highway 79.

The other parcel conveyed in 2004 consisted of a 2.41-acre parcel which had no highway frontage access but bridged McClendon’s other two parcels bordering State Highway 79 to the west and Parker Road to the east. The northern portion of the 2.41-acre parcel abutted the southern edge of Tract 2, and the southern edge bordered the northern portion of Tract 3. 2

Prior to the conveyance of the 2.41-acre “bridging” parcel, Oswald had been able to travel from Tract 3 to Tract 2, from which he could access a roadway, but McClen- *599 don’s purchase of the “bridging” parcel had the effect of terminating Oswald’s access between his Tract 2 and Tract 3 properties. On July 13, 2004, Oswald executed a “correction cash deed” effective October 3, 2003, for the purpose of correcting the legal description of Tract 1 in the prior cash deed between the parties, by which Oswald sold to McClendon the State Highway 79 and “bridging” parcels. After this conveyance, Oswald still had access to Tract 3 through two other parcels he owned, which fronted Highway 79 and abutted Tract 3.

On July 30, 2004, McClendon also executed a written “easement agreement” which granted Oswald a 16-foot wide “ingress/egress easement” along the east boundary line of McClendon’s 5-acre tract for the purpose of providing Oswald ingress and egress to his property, “which is adjacent to the ... described 5 acre tract of land.” 3 McClendon’s easement agreement restricted use of the easement to Oswald and his invitees and barred use by the general public. The agreement also specified that the duration of the easement was to “continue only so long as [Oswald] continues to own land adjacent to said 5 acre tract of land.” McClendon made this easement agreement effective October 3, 2003.

On August 20, 2004, Appellee Lake Road Welding Co. (Lake Road Welding), owned by Don and his son, Jerry Morgan, purchased from Oswald the two remaining parcels that provided access between Tract 3 and Highway 79, and were bordered on the north by McClendon’s 5-acre parcel and to the south by the Morgans’ 220-acre parcel. As a result of Lake Road Weld-mg’s purchase of the two 'tracts between Highway 79 and Tract 3, Oswald no longer had any road access to Tract 3 through properties that he owned.

Jentsch served as guardian of his Uncle Oswald from 2005 until Oswald’s death in 2008. On August 18, 2010, Jentsch purchased Oswald’s Tracts 1, 2, and 3. Thinking that McClendon’s purchase was the “last purchase” resulting in Tract 3’s landlocked status, Jentsch initially made demand on McClendon to reopen the easement previously granted to Oswald for the purpose of re-gaining access between Tracts 2 and 3.

Jentsch later determined that Lake Road Welding had purchased the last of Oswald’s parcels surrounding Tract 3 and filed suit against Lake Road Welding seeking a declaratory judgment and an easement by necessity. During trial, Jentsch testified that after Lake Road Welding had made its land purchases from Oswald, Tract 3 could not be accessed without trespassing on another’s land, and was without any road access except through Lake Road Welding’s parcels. Jentsch testified that Lake Road Welding’s attorney had advised that in order to develop Tract 3, local regulations dictated that Jentsch would need a 60-foot easement. Jentsch twice testified that he knew Tract 3 was landlocked at the time he purchased it, and upon further inquiry by the trial court, Jentsch explained that despite knowing that Tract 3 was landlocked, he understood that “there was the right of an easement however I needed to get that.”

At trial, Don Morgan testified that the McClendon easement had allowed Oswald to travel from Tract 3 to Tract 2, and had *600 nothing to do with gaining access to State Highway 79. Morgan informed the trial court that he was familiar with Oswald’s use of the easement to access Tracts 1 and 2, and stated that no one ever traveled from Tract 3 over Lake Road Welding’s property to reach Tract 2. He asked the trial court to reject Jentsch’s request to grant an easement across Lake Road Welding’s property.

The trial court subsequently denied Jentsch’s request for an easement by necessity across the Lake Road Welding property. In its findings of fact and conclusions of law, the trial court found “[t]he subject tract was landlocked when it was purchased” and remains landlocked, and that “[tjhere are multiple tracts which border on the east and west side of the subject tract which also border on a roadway.” The trial court concluded that Jentsch is not entitled to an easement over Lake Road Welding’s property.

DISCUSSION

Jentsch raises four issues for our review. In Issue One, Jentsch alleges the trial court erred in holding that he was not entitled to an easement by necessity after it found that Tract 3 “was, is, and will remain landlocked.”

Standard of Review

Whether a party is entitled to an easement by necessity is a question of law which we review de novo. Benedictine Sisters of the Good Shepherd v. Ellison, 956 S.W.2d 629, 631 (Tex.App.-San Antonio 1997, pet. denied) (citations omitted).

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450 S.W.3d 597, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 12485, 2014 WL 6481632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-a-jentsch-jr-v-lake-road-welding-co-texapp-2014.