OPINION ON REHEARING
Mike Boulanger, as Trustee on behalf of the Westlum Trust, moved for rehearing of our December 15, 2011 opinion and judgment. We deny the motion for rehearing. To clarify the governing standards of deed interpretation and construction, however, we withdraw our prior opinion and judgment and issue the following opinion and judgment in their stead.
In this dispute regarding the interpretation and construction of a deed, Boulanger and Waste Management of Texas, Inc., Waste Management, Inc., and USA Waste Landfill Operations and Transfer, Inc. (collectively, Waste Management) claim competing title to an abandoned railroad right-of-way. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Waste Management. Boulanger appeals, contending that the summary judgment should be reversed because the trial court erred by looking beyond the four corners of the deed at issue, considering construction aids and extrinsic evidence in the absence of any pleading or finding of ambiguity, and failing to recognize the existence of a fact issue as to the ownership of the right-of-way. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Background
The Sam Houston Recycling Center sits at the southwest corner of Westview Drive and Lumpkin Road in Houston, Texas. The property consists of two tracts of land: (1) the “Main Tract” of approximately 3.6406 acres and (2) the “Panhandle Tract” of approximately 2.117 acres. Running in a north-south direction between the Main Tract and the Panhandle Tract is the forty-foot-wide railroad right-of-way that is the subject of this property dispute.
The Main Tract and the Panhandle Tract originally were part of a larger, 142-acre tract of land owned by C.P. Lumpkin. Lumpkin split the 142 acres into various parcels. The Main Tract and the Panhandle Tract were included in one parcel, which consisted of 14.177 acres. In 1955, Lumpkin conveyed 18.697 acres of the parcel, including the Main and Panhandle Tracts, by deed to Cramems Realty Company (the Cramems Deed). The Cramems Deed identified the property conveyed by metes and bounds description and stated that it was “LESS the following tract of land reserved for railroad right-of-way:”
BEGINNING at a point in the North line of Tract “F” above from which the Northwest comer of tract “F” bears N. 88 deg. 38' 23" W. 681.93 feet;
THENCE S. 88 deg. 38' 23" E., along the North line of Tract “F”, 40.01 feet to a point;
THENCE S. 88 deg. 38' 33: W. along the South line of Tract “F” 40.01 ft. to a point;
THENCE North 522.70 feet to the place of beginning, and containing 0.480 acres of land.
The parties dispute the legal effect of this language. Boulanger argues that the language excluded the right-of-way from the conveyance of the Main and Panhandle Tracts and that Lumpkin (and later his heirs) retained title to the right-of-way until Boulanger acquired it in 2005. In contrast, Waste Management argues that Lumpkin’s heirs had no interest to convey to Boulanger because the Cramems Deed passed fee title to the right-of-way along with the Main and Panhandle Tracts and, through a series of subsequent conveyances, Waste Management acquired the right-of-way in 1991. According to Waste Management, the language at issue served only to notify Cramerus that the land conveyed was burdened by the right-of-way. Waste Management asserts that, because there is no alternate route between the Main and Panhandle Tracts, “if [the right-of-way is not] utilized as part of the Sam Houston Recycling Center, [it] would be a useless, land-locked piece of real estate.”
Boulanger sued Waste Management, seeking to enjoin Waste Management’s use of the right-of-way and to recover actual and punitive damages for trespass and unjust enrichment. Waste Management generally denied the allegations in Boulanger’s petition and filed counterclaims for trespass to try title and suit to quiet title. Before the case proceeded to a jury trial, Waste Management filed a combined no-evidence and traditional motion for partial summary judgment, asserting that Boulan-ger had no evidence of the ownership element .of his trespass claim or, alternatively, that Waste Management had conclusively negated that element.
Summary Judgment Standard of Review
We review summary judgments de novo and according to well-settled standards. Valence Operating Co. v. Dorsett,
Deed Construction
The resolution of this appeal turns on the construction of the Cramerus Deed. “As is often true in litigation involving the interpretation and construction of written instruments,” both Boulanger and Waste Management insist that the Cramerus Deed is “ ‘plain and unambiguous’ and admits of no reasonable meaning other than that for which they contend.” McMahon v. Christmann,
Boulanger argues in his second and fourth issues that neither the trial court nor this Court may apply rules of construction or consider extrinsic evidence in the absence of a pleading and finding that the Cramerus Deed is ambiguous. Absent ambiguity, according to Boulanger, courts are bound by the language used in the “four corners” of the deed in determining the property conveyed. Waste Management, however, argues that to construe the Cramerus Deed, the courts may consult construction aids to ascertain the parties’ intent and give legal effect to the language used in the conveyance. According to Waste Management, the existence of an ambiguity is a prerequisite only to the admission of extrinsic evidence. Thus in sum, Boulanger and Waste Management agree that courts should not consider extrinsic evidence before determining that a deed is ambiguous, but they disagree whether rules of construction may be considered before such determination.
The majority of the deed-construction cases cited by Boulanger do not support his position that a pleading and finding of ambiguity must precede the application of rules of construction. In both Neel v. Killam Oil Co., Ltd.,
What is clear is that intent is the benchmark for judicial interpretation of deeds. “Because ‘once a dispute arises over meaning, it can hardly be expected that the parties will agree on what meaning was intended,’ courts use canons of construction to help ascertain the parties’ intent.” French v. Chevron U.S.A., Inc.,
Nowhere in the cases cited by Boulanger do we find a directive that ambiguity must be found to exist before the
The decision of whether an ambiguity exists is a question of law. See J.M. Davidson,
Having concluded that Waste Management states the correct rule for the interpretation and construction of the Crame-rus Deed and that the trial court, like this Court, could consider rules of construction even absent a pleading or finding of ambiguity, we overrule Boulanger’s second and fourth issues.
The Cramerus Deed
Boulanger’s remaining issues address the merits of the trial court’s summary judgment. Boulanger contends that summary judgment was improper because the trial court misconstrued the plain language of the Cramerus Deed as conveying title to the railroad right-of-way or, alternatively, because of ambiguity in the deed or the existence of fact issues as to the ownership of the right-of-way. Because ownership is the dispositive issue in this case, we must determine whether Lump-kin granted Cramerus fee title to the right-of-way.
A single word gives rise to the parties’ differing opinion as to the legal effect of Lumpkin’s conveyance: “LESS.” The Cramerus Deed conveys a single parcel of property “LESS the [described] tract of land reserved for railroad right-of-way,”
Recognizing that “separate ownership of long narrow strips of land, distinct from the land adjoining on each side, is a fruitful source of litigation and disputes,” the Texas Supreme Court developed a rule with respect to the legal construction of conveyances like Lumpkin’s to Cramerus: “[I]t is presumed that a grantor has no intention of reserving a fee in a narrow strip of land adjoining the land conveyed when it ceases to be of use to him, unless such fee is clearly reserved.” Cantley v. Gulf Prod. Co.,
There is no disagreement that the right-of-way at issue is a forty-foot-wide strip of land that adjoins and separates the Main and Panhandle Tracts conveyed in the Cramerus Deed. And, we see no reason why “less” should have a different legal effect than “keeping” or “save and except,” as those terms have given rise to the presumption stated above in Cantley and Moore. See Cantley,
We overrule Boulanger’s first, third, and fifth issues.
Conclusion
Having found no error, we affirm the trial court’s summary judgment.
Notes
. Both of Boulanger’s theories of recovery were contingent upon a showing that he holds title to or lawful possession of the right-of-way. To recover damages on his trespass to real property claim, Boulanger must show that (1) he owns or has a lawful right to possess the disputed property, (2) Waste Management entered his land and the entry was physical, intentional, and voluntary, and (3) Waste Management’s trespass caused him injury. See Tex. Woman’s Univ. v. The Methodist Hosp.,
