Lead Opinion
OPINION
Appellants, Kyle and Beverly Greenwood, defendants and counterplaintiffs below, appeal the trial court’s summary judgment which declared the scope of an easement and respective rights of the Greenwoods as owners of the dominant estate and neighboring servient estate owner, Martha Lee (now known as Martha Clanton), plaintiff and counterdefendant below. The Greenwoods challenge the trial court’s narrow interpretation of the express easement and the limitations on their rights to use the easement. We will affirm in part and reverse and remand in part.
Factual and Procedural History
In rural Brazos County, Clanton owns a ten-acre tract of land which she uses for residential and ranching purposes, and the Greenwoods own a neighboring forty-acre tract they purchased in 2009.
The Greenwoods answered and filed a counterclaim seeking declaratory relief of their own on issues concerning widening and improvement of the road and obstruction of the easement by locking gates. The Greenwoods took and have maintained the position that the easement was more general in nature and permitted them three things in addition to a simple means of ingress and egress: (1) the right to construct and lay utility lines to their prop
Clanton moved for partial summary judgment that the easement was limited in purpose to a means of ingress and egress only from the Greenwoods’ property to Steep Hollow Road. The trial court granted partial summary judgment on this issue. More specifically, the trial court concluded that the 2009 deed to the Greenwoods granted them “the right to use the Easement for an access road for ingress and egress only and does not grant the right to place any utilities on, under, above[,] or in such Easement.”
Subsequently, Clanton moved for no-evidence summary judgment on the widening, improvement, and gate issues raised in the Greenwoods’ counterclaim for declaratory relief. The trial court granted Clanton’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment and, in pertinent part, concluded as follows:
1. The Easement allows ingress and egress from Steep Hollow Road across the 45-foot wide strip of land described more particularly in the Easement (the “45-Foot Easement Strip”) to access the dominant estate property currently owned by Defendants Kyle and Beverly Greenwood....
2. The Easement only allows as much use of the 45-Foot Easement Strip as is necessary for the full enjoyment of the Easement, which shall be limited to a roadway for ingress and egress that is no wider than twenty (20) feet. The Easement also allows use of the roadway for purposes of transporting loads in excess of twenty (20) feet as may be necessary during construction and development of the Greenwood Property, the Easement further allows the construction, maintenance, repair, and replacement of an all-weather road over the existing gravel roadway along the entire length of the 45-Foot Easement Strip, which road may be paved and include suitable drainage. All expense of construction, maintenance, repair, and replacement of the all-weather road shall be borne by the beneficiaries of the Easement, absent other agreement.
3.The Easement allowed the installation of a gate at the entrance to Plaintiffs property (the “Clanton Gate”) and at the entrance to the Greenwood Property (the “Greenwood Gate”).2 ....
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6. The Greenwoods and their heirs and assigns are permanently enjoined from the installation of utilities or communications lines running in, on, under, or over the Easement.
7. The easement described as Tract II in the [2009] cash warranty deed ... grants to Defendants the right to use such easement for an access road for ingress and egress only and does not grant the right to place any utilities on, under, above or in such easement.
The trial court also references the application of the provisions to the easement recorded in 1964.
It is in this posture that the Green-woods’ appeal comes to this Court. In three issues, the Greenwoods challenge the trial court’s granting of partial summary judgment limiting the scope and purpose of the easement over the Clanton property.
Summary of the parties’ positions on appeal
The Greenwoods maintain on appeal that, despite the very clear language in the 2009 cash warranty deed by which they came to own their forty-acre tract and the easement burdening the Clanton property, the language used in 1964 to create the easement — “[ejasement and right-of-way” — was not so limited and that the “[ejasement and right-of-way” grants them the right to install utility lines on, under, and above the easement to service their tract of land. The trial court, having before it the language creating the easement in 1964 through each conveyance up to the Greenwoods’ 2009 purchase of the property and the “access road,” disagreed, concluding that the easement permitted the Greenwoods a means of ingress and egress only and expressly concluded that it did not grant them the right to install, maintain, replace, or repair utility lines on, under, above, or in the easement as the Greenwoods had designed.
Clanton, servient estate owner, maintains that the easement is more restricted, that its scope is limited to an access road to be used only for ingress and egress to the landlocked Greenwood property such that the dominant estate may have access to Steep Hollow Road. Clanton has used her property for ranching purposes since she acquired the property in 1981, and, since 1981, there has been a gate at the entrance to her property. She has provided the Greenwoods the combination to the lock so that they may pass through whenever the gate is locked. She maintains that the gate is permitted and that the Greenwoods may not widen and pave the road to encompass the entire forty-five feet provided in the express terms of the easement. The Greenwoods challenge the trial court’s summary judgment on the scope of the easement and the trial court’s no-evidence summary judgment as to the width and gate issues.
Chain of conveyances relating to the easement
In April 1964, Laura M. Hicks and J.L. Mims conveyed to J.E. Weedon Jr. the following:
An Easement and right-of-way over a certain tract or parcel of land situated in the R. Perry League in Brazos County, Texas, and being a part of a tract of 50 acres described as “First” tract in deed from J.L. Mims to M.P. Mims, et al., dated February 10, 1928, and recorded in Book 60, page 595, Deed Records of Brazos County, Texas, the portion of said tract over which the easement is hereby conveyed being a strip of land 45 feet in width off the extreme Northeast side of said tract, — containing 2.06 acres of land, more or less.
Months later, in November 1964, Weedon conveyed to the Veterans’ Land Board of the State of Texas “a 45 ft. wide strip, parcel or tract of land to be used as an access road.” Shortly thereafter, in December 1964, the Veterans’ Land Board conveyed to Everett R. Briggs “an easement and right-of-way ... to be used as an access road.”
Decades passed and, in 2009, Green-woods purchased from Briggs the forty-acre tract and “a forty-five foot (45’) access easement” by cash warranty deed which expressly incorporated field notes describing the easement as “a 45 ft. wide strip or tract of land to be used as an access road.” During the pendency of this suit, the
Scope of the Easement
Standard of review for traditional summary judgment
We review the trial court’s decision to grant summary judgment de novo. Valence Operating Co. v. Dorsett,
An easement confers upon one person the right to use the land of another for a specific purpose. Marcus Cable Assocs., L.P. v. Krohn,
Analysis
We begin by looking to the “plain, ordinary, and generally accepted meaning” of
So, the well-established rule is that actual language of the grant controls: “Where an easement is created by express grant or reservation, the extent of the right acquired depends not upon user, as in the case of easements created by prescription, ... but upon the terms of the grant or reservation properly construed.”
Case law reflects that the plain and ordinary meaning of the term “easement and right-of-way” has become generally accepted. When asked to determine the scope of an express easement, the Austin court concluded that the use of the word “right-of-way” in conjunction with “easement” delineated the scope and purpose of the grant. Lakeside Launches,
We conclude that the only reasonable reading of “easement and right-of-way” in this grant is one in which the term “right-of-way” is used to mean right-of-passage over and across all the land described in the instrument, without a conveyance of title from the Navigation District to the County.
Long Island Owner’s Ass’n v. Davidson,
According to the 2009 cash warranty deed, which refers to the servitude as an “access easement” and specifically incorporates for all purposes field notes which also refer to the easement as an “access easement” and describes it as “[a]ll that certain 45 ft. strip of land to be used
Based on the express terms of the “[e]asement and right-of-way” as it was created in 1964 and through its conveyance to the Greenwoods in 2009, the trial court properly concluded that, as a matter of law, the easement at issue was limited in scope to a means of ingress and egress only and that, contrary to the Greenwoods’ broader interpretation, the installation of utility lines on, under, above, or in the easement was outside the express purpose of the easement and therefore unauthorized. Simply because the Greenwoods have undertaken to develop the land into residential property does not mean the scope of the easement therefore adjusts to fit the changing nature of the dominant estate. See Kearney & Son,
Widening and Improvement of the Existing Road
In their counterpetition, the Greenwoods sought declaratory relief that they were entitled to widen and improve the existing road to include the entire forty-five feet as provided in the express language of the easement. Clanton moved for no-evidence summary judgment on the basis that the Greenwoods “do not have any evidence that there is any reasonable reason they need to use the entire 45-foot easement for an access road.”
Standard of review for no-evidence summary judgment
A no-evidence summary judgment is essentially a pretrial directed verdict; thus, we apply the same legal sufficiency standard in reviewing a no-evidence summary judgment as we apply in reviewing a directed verdict. King Ranch, Inc. v. Chapman,
On a no-evidence motion for summary judgment, the movant does not bear the burden of establishing each element of its own claim or defense because the burden is on the nonmovant to present enough evidence to be entitled to a trial. See Gen. Mills Rests., Inc. v. Tex. Wings, Inc.,
The Greenwoods as the parties seeking an affirmative declaration that they are within their rights to widen and improve the road to forty-five feet had the burden to show that they were entitled to such relief. See Graff v. Whittle,
In determining the breadth of the Greenwoods’ easement, we remain mindful that their rights do not arise solely from necessity or convenience; rather, they arise from an express grant in a recorded instrument. See Williams v. Thompson,
“[T]he owner of a way, whose limits are defined in the grant, has not only the right of free passage over the traveled part but also over such portions of the way as he thinks proper or necessary.” Williams,
Limitations on the Greenwoods’ Rights
The Texas Supreme Court also explored the limitations on an easement holder’s right to use the full width of an express easement. Williams,
Analysis
Here, the express terms of the grant give the Greenwoods the unrestricted right to use the entire forty-five feet of a strip of land along the northeastern edge of the servient estate. No words in the grant specifically limit the Greenwoods’ use to a specific roadway then in use or to that part of the easement which may be necessary or convenient. Cf. Williams,
On appeal, Clanton takes the position that “[a]n easement holder does not have carte blanche to use an easement to the fullest extent of his theoretical rights; he is required to make reasonable use of the easement.” She relies on Lamar Cnty. Elec. Co-op. Ass’n v. Bryant,
Because the trial court’s no-evidence summary judgment held the Greenwoods to a burden they did not bear under the law applicable to the circumstances at hand, that summary judgment was improper. See Mott,
Proper construction of the express terms of the easement does not allow for an indefinite description of the width of the easement, nor can the terms be read to give the servient estate owner any right to determine when or whether the easement holder may exercise his rights to the fullest extent expressly granted. No terms specifically limit the Greenwoods’ rights with respect to the forty-five feet included in the easement. The Greenwoods hold the right to a forty-five-foot-wide easement over defined property and, on these facts, “there can be no controversy over what land is included and really conveyed.” See S. Pine Lumber Co. v. Hart,
So, based on the longstanding rule outlined in Williams, the Greenwoods are permitted to use the easement to the full extent of the express terms of the instrument by which it was created. Accordingly, we sustain the Greenwoods’ second point of error, reverse the trial court’s no-evidence summary judgment which limits the Greenwoods’ right to use only twenty feet of the easement, and remand the matter to the trial court for further proceed
Gate Issue
In the Greenwoods’ final issue on appeal, we are asked to return to the issue concerning the scope of the easement. That is to say, we must decide another matter relating to what can and cannot be done with respect to the use of the easement at issue. Here, the issue is whether Clanton is permitted to use a locking gate along the easement. The Greenwoods contend that she cannot, that they are entitled to unobstructed access along the easement. Clanton maintains that she can so long as the Greenwoods are given access through those gates and may still use the easement for access to and from Steep Hollow Road. The trial court rendered a very specific judgment on the matter, permitting two gates with very specific instructions:
3.The Easement allows the installation of a gate at the entrance to Plaintiffs property (the “Clanton Gate”). The Clanton Gate shall be aligned with the road so as to open onto the road, allowing vehicular ingress and egress so that vehicles need not leave the road to pass through the gate. The Clanton Gate, when opened, shall provide an opening of not less than 16 feet. At the discretion of Plaintiff, the Clanton Gate may be locked. The owners of the Greenwood property shall at all times be provided with a key or combination as applicable to allow access through the Clanton Gate. The key or combination shall not be changed by Plaintiff more often than annually, absent extraordinary circumstances. The owners of the Greenwood Property or the Clanton property may, at their respective sole expense, install a double-locking device on the Clanton Gate, which allows access by either party with such party’s own key or combination. The parties shall reasonably cooperate so that the locking, opening, and closing of the Clanton Gate shall be conducted by each party so as to not unreasonably disturb Plaintiffs use of her property or use of the 45-Foot Easement Strip by the owners of the Greenwood Property.
4. The owners of the Greenwood Property shall follow the “cowboy rule” of etiquette for the condition of the Clanton Gate, i.e., leave the gate in the same condition it was found; if it was open when encountered, then pass through and leave it open, and if it was closed, then open and pass through and close it.
5. The Greenwood Gate, which shall be within the sole control of the owners of the Greenwood property, shall be of such design and type as the owners of the Greenwood Property elect in theirsole discretion, and Plaintiff shall not be entitled to any key, combination, or other access through the Greenwood Gate. If the Greenwood Gate is left continuously or habitually open, removed, or is otherwise inadequate to keep Plaintiffs property and livestock safe or secure or from escaping onto the Greenwood Property, Plaintiff may install and have sole control over a gate to be located on Plaintiffs property at the entrance to the Greenwood Property; provided that the owners of the Greenwood Property shall be provided with a key or combination to allow free and continuous access through the gate to be installed by Plaintiff.
Applicable Law and Analysis
In support of her alternative request for summary judgment, Clanton presented evidence that her property had been used as a ranch for livestock since at least 1981, that it continues to be used for ranching purposes, and that, since 1981, a gate has stood on the easement at the entrance to her property. She also presented evidence that she uses her land to tend horses, burros, goats, chickens, and other livestock. In her no-evidence motion for summary judgment, she contended that the Greenwoods could not produce evidence that they are entitled, by specific terms of the easement or by any other document or fact, to use the easement free of gates or other obstructions.
The express terms of the easement do not address the matter of gates. To show that they were entitled to passage over the easement unobstructed by gates when the easement’s terms do not address the issue, the Greenwoods were called on to show that their claim to gate-free passage over the easement is reasonably necessary and convenient and that their claimed right places the lightest possible burden on Clanton’s property. See Reaves v. Lindsay,
Again, the express terms of the easement remain silent on the issue of gates. We note that the easement was created to provide access to the landlocked forty-acre tract belonging to the Greenwoods. They are developing their land for residential purposes, and Clanton uses her land for residential and ranching purposes. Considering the nature of the properties at issue, gate-free passage does not appear reasonably necessary or convenient.
The Greenwoods presented evidence that (1) there was not a closed or locked gate at the time they inspected the property near the time of their purchase, (2) the gate was often left open, (3) for the nearly forty-five-year period when Briggs, their immediate predecessor in interest, owned — but did not reside on — the property, only on a few occasions was the gate locked such that he could not pass through the gate, and (4) during their ownership of the property, the Greenwoods have encountered the gate both opened and closed.
In fact, the Greenwoods’ own evidence in response to Clanton’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment indicates they are amenable to a closed, locked gate so long as they are given access to the gate without having to leave their vehicles, suggesting that gate-free access is not reasonably necessary. From Kyle Greenwood’s affidavit in response to Clanton’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment, it appears that the Greenwoods want easier access and would accept a locked gate so long as they need not get out of their vehicle in order to gain entrance through it:
My wife and I do not believe it is reasonable for Martha Clanton to block access to the 45-foot wide easement with a chained and locked gate at the entrance to her 10-acre tract. This requires getting in and out of a vehicle, regardless of the weather, to use the easement and right-of-way. There was no such chained and locked gate across the easement entrance to the Clanton property when we purchased our 40-acre tract. We would have no objection if she installed an electric gate at the entrance to her 10-acre tract that could be opened with a remote control device or by use of a mounted keypad that could be accessed from a vehicle window.
So, the Greenwoods’ position, more precisely worded, may be that they are entitled to access over the easement without having to get out of the car to pass through a gate.
Considering the purpose of the easement, the Greenwoods should have continuous access to their tract of land. Considering the nature and situation of the land, gates are reasonable; the Greenwoods presented no evidence that their passage free of gates is reasonably necessary or convenient to the Greenwoods’ use of the easement. So long as the Greenwoods are provided complete and continuous access through the gate at the boundary of the Clanton tract, the purpose of the easement is served and the needs of the respective parcels of land are served. The Green-woods have failed to present evidence that they are entitled to pass along the easement without gates. The trial court properly granted no-evidence summary judgment on this issue.
We reverse the trial court’s judgment that limits the Greenwoods’ rights in connection with the easement to a road not to exceed twenty feet in width. We remand to the trial court the matters concerning only the Greenwoods’ request for declaratory relief that they are entitled to use the entire forty-five-foot width of the easement. We affirm the trial court’s judgment in all other respects.
PIRTLE, J., concurring and dissenting.
Notes
. More precisely, Clanton and the Green-woods own tracts measuring, 10.62 acres and 40.5 acres, respectively.
. The emphasis our law places upon an ease-merit's express terms serves important public
. So, although certainly important to Clanton in terms of the integrity and purpose of her acreage, we need not consider in our resolution of this issue the potential damage to her property that would follow from the Green-woods' proposed reading of the scope of the easement. If the easement does not provide the Greenwoods this right then it is, regardless of the extent of any damage done to the servient estate, an unauthorized presence on the Clanton's land.
. Recognizing that the easement at issue has not been used in the manner in which they propose during the nearly fifty years of its existence, the Greenwoods seem to rely on a corollary of this rule: If the language of the easement clearly gives the grantee a right in excess of the one actually used, such right continues to exist notwithstanding the exercise of a lesser privilege. See Lower Colo. River Auth. v. Ashby,
. The trial court’s very specific instructions regarding the installation and operation of the gates will be recited in their entirety later in the opinion.
. And for that reason, they negotiated the aforementioned transfer from Weedon of any interest that remained vested in him from the 1964 creation of the easement.
. She also asserted a number of other elements of which she claimed the Greenwoods had no evidence: "(1) there is a [justiciable] controversy or anything more for the Court to declare in this regard; (2) that the declaration sought is anything other than an impermissible advisory opinion; (3) there is any reasonable need to use the entire 45-foot wide easement for an access road; (4) that the easement at issue grants more right than reasonably necessary for Defendants to use the easement for an access road.” In response, the Greenwoods point out that there are several, and, we think, obvious "unresolved disputes” regarding the width of the easement and gating issues.
. So, it would appear that the limits on the Greenwoods’ exercise of their rights granted by the easement come in the form of a cause of action in negligence, not an issue before the trial court or before this Court at this time. We expressly decline to be read as making any comment or conclusion that would bear on any future action concerning any issue raised relating to allegations of negligent injury to land in connection with use of the easement at its fullest or widest extent.
. Likewise, the case on which Lamar County Electric relies is distinguishable from the instant case. See Simpson v. Phillips Pipe Line Co.,
. No one contends that the language used in 1964 — "45 feet in width” — is ambiguous; rather, it seems, they disagree over its implementation. When, after applying established rules of contract construction, an easement is open to only a single, reasonable and definite interpretation, we must construe it as a matter of law even though the parties offer different interpretations of the easement's terms. See Marcus Cable,
. In her affidavit, Clanton maintained that she most often keeps the gate closed but occa
. "[W]e tend to think that it is necessary for us to do everything from our automobiles. I maintain, however, that it is not unreasonable to exit from an automobile and open a gate.” See Ferrara,
. As for the details of the trial court’s judgment concerning the specification and operation of the gates to be used, the Greenwoods have not specifically challenged the judgment on those terms. We limit our review solely to the trial court’s conclusion that the easement permitted installation of gates and its logical corollary that the Greenwoods were not entitled to passage over the easement free of any gates.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring and dissenting.
Appellants, Kyle and Beverly Greenwood, defendants and counterplaintiffs below, appeal the trial court’s entry of two separate orders: (1) the Order Granting Plaintiff’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment, signed January 13, 2010, and (2) the Final Summary Judgment, signed August 8, 2011. In part, the Greenwoods contend the trial court improperly construed three conveyances: (1) a Cash Warranty Deed, dated July 8, 2009, from Everett R. and Shirley Briggs to them, conveying “a forty-five foot (45’) access easement,” and (2) a Deed, dated August 23, 2010, from J.E. Weedon, Jr. to them, conveying “any rights, titles, and interests of [Weedon] not previously conveyed, if any, in and to that certain easement and right-of-way granted in that certain Deed dated April 2, 1964, executed by Mrs. Laura M. Hicks, ... and J.L. Mims, as grantors, to J.E. Weedon, Jr., as grantee, and recorded on April 17, 1964, in Volume 235, at page 603, of the Deed Records of Brazos County, Texas,” and (3) the 1964 warranty deed referenced in the 2010 conveyance, conveying “an Easement and right-of-way over a certain tract or parcel of land .... ” Specifically, here and in the trial court, the Greenwoods contend that these conveyances, when construed together, granted them: (1) ingress and egress to their adjacent landlocked property, (2) the right to construct utility lines to their property, (3) access unobstructed by locked gates, and (4) the right to improve and widen the existing roadway to encompass the entire forty-five foot conveyance. The trial court agreed the Greenwoods had the right of ingress and egress, but also determined that they did not have the right to construct utility lines, or to unobstructed access, or to widen the existing roadway beyond twenty feet. The majority reverses the trial court’s judgment to the extent that it limits the Greenwoods’ right to widen the existing roadway, and affirms the judgment in all other respects. I concur in part and dissent in part.
I concur with the majority’s disposition of the Greenwoods’ rights of ingress and egress, as those rights are derived from the 2009 Cash Warranty Deed. I also concur with the majority’s opinion as to the Greenwoods’ right (or more correctly the absence of a right) to access unobstructed by locks, and to use and enjoyment of the full forty-five foot easement and right-of-way. I disagree with the majority to the extent, if any, that they construe the trial court as construing the Greenwoods’ right to construct utility lines, as arising from the 1964 warranty deed and the 2010 deed. To the extent that I disagree, I have two issues, one procedural and one substantive.
As to the procedural issue, I believe the trial court exceeded its authority in granting affirmative relief based upon Clanton’s No-Evidence Motion for Summary Judg
. Because summary judgment serves as a directed verdict, ending the litigation, we strictly construe a party's entitlement in both procedural and substantive matters. Hock v. Salaices,
