Word v. Kuykendall

246 S.W. 757
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 6, 1922
DocketNo. 6840.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 246 S.W. 757 (Word v. Kuykendall) 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
Word v. Kuykendall, 246 S.W. 757 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

COBBS, J.

Appellant brought this suit against appellee to recover $2,500 damages or in the alternative for $1,000 as pasturage and $5,000 exemplary damages alleged to have been suffered by appellant by reason of the wrongful act or trespass of appellee in unlawfully turning his cattle in the Nay-lor and Jones pasture situated in Da Salle and McMullen counties, leased and occupied by appellant. Appellant also prayed flor possession of the pasture and for a permanent injunction, prohibiting appellee from running cattle in appellant’s said pasture.

Appellant alleged that he was the lessee of the Naylor and Jones estates and of the Fowler Bros. Land Company, of a pasture known as the Naylor and Jones pasture consisting of about 65,000 acres of land in La Salle and McMullen counties, Tex. He further alleged that this land had been subdivided into small tracts, and that about 33,-000 acres of it had been sold in accordance with a-plan of subdivision and sale which had been agreed on between the Naylor and Jones estates and Fowler Bros, or the Fowler Bros. Land Company. It was further alleged that 3,000 acres had been sold outright to the Fowler Bros. Land Company, and that, in all deeds made to purchasers of the subdivisions sold either by the Naylor and Jones estate or Fowler Bros. Land Company, it was provided that the possession and use of the tracts sold would remain in the ven *758 dors until the.same were fenced with a good and sufficient fence hy the purchaser or his heirs or assigns. It was further alleged that something over 80,000 acres of the land was sold, and of this amount about 16,000 acres had been fenced by the purchasers and 14,000 acres had remained unfenced. Plaintiff further alleged that he was the lessee under the Naylor and Jones estates and Fowler Bros. Company, of all unsold land in the Naylor and Jones pastures, and all land therein that had been sold, but that had not been fenced. A map of the subdivision of the pasture was referred to, showing a county road running through the same, and also showing a dedication of roads along the lines of the different sections of land. This map also showed two town sites located within the pasture, to wit, the town of Fowlerton and the settlement of Dull. Plaintiff further alleged that defendant had wrongfully driven and pastured about 400 head of cattle on ' said land.

The defendant claimed to have leases on several hundred acres of the unfenced land which had been sold by the Naylor and Jones estates, and claimed that the reservation in the deeds above referred to were invalid, and that therefore appellant had no right to the use and possession thereof, but the same belonged to appellee under his leases from the respective owners. Appellee also claimed the right to run cattle on the unfenced town-site of Fowlertoii as a citizen of that town.

The court held that the reservation was invalid, and that appellee had the right to the exclusive use and possession of the unfenced lands held by him under lease. The court, however, found that appellee had an excess number of cattle in the pasture, and rendered judgment against him in favor of appellant for the pasturage on the same, but denied appellant’s recovery of damages because of injury suffered by appellant’s cattle as a result of the overstocking of the pasture by appellee.

The facts found by the court were to the effect: That the pasture lands owned in 1910 by Naylor and Jones and inclosed by substantial fences amounted to 65,000 acres used by the owners for the pasturage of cattle. That Naylor died in 1910, and Jones in 1918. R. L. Ball was appointed under Naylor’s will his sole independent executor, and Mrs. Sue Willis Jones, Noa Spears, and R. D. Ball appointed the independent executors of the Jones’ estate. That said lands wore mapped and platted and sold in 10-acre tracts, except a deed for approximately 3,000 acres sold to Fowler Bros. Band Company in 1912, which contained the following clause:

“It being further provided and conditioned that the grantors reserve and retain the right to the use and possession of said acreage property for pasturage purposes until the said grantee, his heirs or assigns, shall inclose the same by a good and substantial fence.”

The contracts for the sale of the lands did not eofitain this reservation, but the deeds in pursuance therewith did. All the deeds of the 3,000 acres to Fowler Bros., made by them to purchasers, contain the reservation.

Fowler Bros. Land Company conducted a sales agency, and platted the land and divided each section into 10-acre tracts, designating roads through and around them, and laid out and platted the town of Fowlerton, consisting of about 1,200 acres in a solid body not fenced off separately, and the lots wére sold in the townsite of Fowlerton, and the deeds did not contain the said reservation which applied to the acreage property.

On the day of the trial approximately 33,-000 acres of the farm tracts in said pasture had been sold, and approximately 32,000 acres thereof remained unsold. Of the acreage sold, approximately 13,000 acres are now fenced by purchasers. Approximately 20,-000 acres of the acreage tracts sold have not been fenced by the purchasers, and that approximately 3,000 acres of the acreage tracts that have been sold have been fenced by the purchasers, but the fences are now down.

The .case was tried without a jury, and judgment was rendered that appellee had 171 head of cattle on the pasture in excess of what he was entitled to run therein, and that appellant was entitled to recover of appel-lee the sum of $256.50, with interest from date of judgment value of pasturage between January 15, 1922, to date of trial, and also to a judgment against appellee for. $235.12 pasturdge from date of trial to May 10, 1922, after which date appellee was enjoined from maintaining said excess of' cattle on said pasture.

Appellant’s first proposition is:

“The vendor of real property has the right to make in his deed any reservation as to possession of the property for a definite or indefinite length of time that does not substantially contradict the grant; and where a large tract of land has been subdivided and is being sold off in small tracts, a reservation by the vendor that the latter ‘reserves and retains’ the right to the use and possession of the tract so sold until the grantee, his heirs or assigns, shall enclose the same by a good and substantial fence, is a valid reservation, and will be enforced against such vendees, and parties claiming under them so long as such tracts are unfenced and said original tract unsold.”

There is nothing unusual or inconsistent in a grant that retains possession of land until the happening of a certain contingency. He may divide the fee into distinct estates if he sees fit to do so. He may convey one or more of his estates and retain one or more in himself, provided they do not contradict or are not repugnant to the grant in the deed.

In the grant under consideration there were no words of inheritance, and none were necessary, for it is apparent that the reservation was for the benefit of the land re *759 tained by the grantor, in which there was a reservation or easement of like duration with his estate in such land. For instance, here is an enormous body of pastural land being cut up in 10-acre tracts for the purpose of colonization.

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Bluebook (online)
246 S.W. 757, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/word-v-kuykendall-texapp-1922.