OPINION
Opinion by
The dispositive issue in this appeal is whether the evidence is legally sufficient to support the jury’s findings that an easement south from the Brumleys’ Ranch across Sandra Crone’s Sycamore Ranch to Highway 2523 was “necessary” when the properties were severed in 1923 and at the time of trial. Because there is no evidence that a public road abutted the Sycamore Ranch on the south in 1923 and there is conclusive evidence of legal access to the Brumley Ranch from Highway 277/377 to the north, we hold the evidence is legally insufficient to support the jury’s findings and therefore reverse the trial court’s
Factual and Procedural Background
This appeal involves what was once one large tract of ranch land owned by Abb Rose. On July 5, 1920, Abb severed his tract of land, keeping for himself the northern portion and conveying the southern portion to his son, Pat. In 1923, Pat conveyed the northern portion of his tract to E.S. DeLoach. It is undisputed that since the 1923 severance DeLoach’s property has been “landlocked,” surrounded on all sides by land owned by either Abb, Pat, or third-parties and without immediate access to a public road. However, the northwest corner of Abb’s property bordered what is now Highway 277/377, a public road that runs from Sonora and Rockspr-ings in the north to Del Rio in the south. In 1924, Abb conveyed this corner of his land to H.I. North; and in 1931, Abb conveyed the land between the land he had conveyed to North and Pat’s land to his son, Therrell. As of the date of the trial in this case, Pat’s property was owned by his granddaughter Sandra Rose Crone; De-Loach’s property was owned by Acton Brumley with a life estate in his mother Mary; the North property was owned by T.S. Hickman, Trustee; and Therrell Rose’s property was divided between James and Anita Rollo and the Therrell Rose Pinon Ranch subdivision, all as shown on the map below:
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No recorded document expressly grants an easement to what we will refer to as the DeLoach/Brumley Ranch north through what was once Abb’s land to Highway 277/377 or south through what we will refer to as Crone’s Sycamore Ranch to what was once Hamilton and Standart Lanes and are now Farm-to-Market Road 2523.
After they acquired the DeLoach/Brum-ley Ranch and until 2002, the Brumleys, as well as the hunters to whom they leased, accessed their ranch from the south on a private road over Crone’s Sycamore Ranch by permission. However, after Crone noticed that water lines had been broken, household goods had been taken, a gate had been left open and livestock were missing, several head of livestock were found dead, and grasses had been torn up by the hunters’ four-wheelers, Crone locked the gate on the road leading from her ranch to the DeLoach/Brumley Ranch, ultimately permitting only the Brumleys access to their property for maintenance purposes. In response, the Brumleys filed
Applicable Law and Standard of Review
When a grantee seeks an easement by necessity over land once owned by a common grantor but conveyed to third parties, he seeks a way of necessity by implied grant.
See, e.g., Bickler v. Bickler,
Crone argues that the “[s]ufficiency of the evidence is guided by the ‘strict necessity’ test.”
See Mitchell v. Castellaw,
“There is legally sufficient evidence of a matter when the proof and inferences from the proof furnish a reasonable basis for reasonable minds to reach differing conclusions as to the existence of the matter.”
Dew v. Crown Derrick Erectors, Inc.,
49 Tex. Sup.Ct. J. 851,
Necessity
As evidenced by the questions submitted to the jury, the Brumleys argued at trial that their right to an easement by necessity south across Crone’s Sycamore Ranch arose out of Pat Rose’s sale of the northern half of his land to DeLoach in 1923. Crone, on the other hand, argued that an easement by necessity north across what was Abb’s land arose in 1920 when Abb sold the southern half of his land to Pat and continued through Pat’s sale to DeLoach and DeLoach’s sale to the Brum-leys. We agree with Crone that the analysis must start with the severance of Abb’s land in 1920.
As set forth above, a party seeking an easement by necessity must prove that he has no other legal access to his property.
See Duff,
Unity of title before Abb’s transfer to Pat is undisputed. What is disputed is whether Pat had access from his land to a public road other than north through Abb’s land to Highway 277/377. The Brumleys argue that he did — south to what was formerly Hamilton and Standart Lanes and is now Farm-to-Market Road 2523. In support of their argument, the Brumleys refer only to a 1936 Texas Highway Department map, a 1944 Corp. of Engineers map, and the testimony of Ray C. Hutto, who described Highway 2523 as a gravel, county-maintained road that “everybody used” traveling from Carta Valley to Del Rio in the 1920s when he was in school. However, maps dated 1936 and 1944 cannot establish the existence of a public road south of Pat’s land in 1920 or 1923; nor do they furnish a basis for inferring that a public road existed some six
From this evidence, we conclude, like Blackburn, that the 1920 severance created in Pat a way of necessity north over Abb’s land to Highway 277/377; and this way of necessity was impliedly transferred to DeLoach in 1923 and later to the Brum-leys upon their acquisition of the De-Loach/Brumley Ranch.
See, e.g., Rushin v. Humphrey,
Acton Brumley also testified that, since Crone locked her gate, the hunters to whom he leases his lands have used this northern route out of the De-Loach/Brumley Ranch without interference. In Brumley’s view, however, this northern route is not reasonable access because it is impassable without a four-wheel drive vehicle. However, “ ‘[t]hose circumstances show that he has a way, which needs repair, and that until repaired it is impassable. But the impassability of the road gives to a party no right to an easement.’ ”
Duff,
Conclusion
Because there is no competent evidence that a public road abutted Pat Rose’s land on the south in 1923 and there is conclusive evidence of a road out of the De-Loach/Brumley Ranch to the north in 1923 and today, we hold the evidence is legally insufficient to support the jury’s findings that an easement south across Crone’s Sycamore Ranch to Highway 2523 was “necessary” in 1923 and at the time of trial. We therefore reverse the trial court’s judgment and render a take-nothing judgment.
Notes
. Although the record reflects Crone requested jury questions and instructions regarding the doctrine of strict necessity, it does not reflect the trial court ruled on her requests.
