OPINION
I. INTRODUCTION
This is an adverse possession case. In 1995, appellees Robert and Jane McGehee purchased a 566-acre ranch partially located in Hood County, Texas. In 1996, appellants Mike and Tawn Perkins purchased an adjoining tract of real property in Hood County located directly south of appellee’s property. Both parties properly recorded deeds in Hood County that accurately describe the metes and bounds of the property conveyed, and there is no overlap of the legal description of either tract of real property. This case involves the land between appellees’ southern legal boundary and a fence lying on the northern portion of appellants’ property that also divides the properties.
In October 2001, appellants sued appel-lees seeking injunctive relief and damages claiming appellees erected a fence in 2000 that encroached on appellants’ real property and, in the process, destroyed some of appellants’ trees. Appellees responded by filling a general denial and asserting the ten-year limitation period in section 16.026 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code as them affirmative defense based on their adverse possession. Tex. Civ. PRAC. & Rem.Code Ann. § 16.026 (Vernon 2002). Specifically, appellees claim title to the disputed tract through the adverse possession of their predecessor-in-interest Steven Pedro (“Pedro”), who allegedly grazed cattle, maintained and improved the existing fence in dispute, and cleared brush and removed trees exclusive to the rights of all others since at least 1982.
Following trial, the trial court rendered a take-nothing judgment against appellants and awarded appellees the disputed parcel based on their statute of limitation affirmative defense. The trial court also entered findings of fact and conclusions of law including the following: 1) the fence at issue had been in the same location since at least 1982; 2) the fence is not a casual fence; 3) appellees and their predecessors-in-interest used the disputed property for grazing cattle; 4) the ranch manager for the predecessor-in-interest had made repairs, cleared brush, and planted grass in the disputed area; 5) appellees and their predecessors-in-interest’s use had been adverse, hostile, and exclusive to anyone else *290 for a period of at least ten years; and 6) the fence line established by the evidence is the legal boundary between the parties’ real property. On appeal from the trial court’s judgment, appellants complain in one issue that appellees failed to produce legally and factually sufficient evidence to prove they acquired the real property by adverse possession. We affirm.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
A party seeking to establish title to land by adverse possession has the burden to prove every fact essential to that claim by a preponderance of the evidence.
Rhodes v. Cahill,
In determining a “no-evidence” issue, we are to consider only the evidence and inferences that tend to support the finding and disregard all evidence and inferences to the contrary.
Bradford v. Vento,
A “no-evidence” issue may only be sustained when the record discloses one of the following: (1) a complete absence of evidence of a vital fact; (2) the court is barred by rules of law or evidence from giving weight to the only evidence offered to prove a vital fact; (3) the evidence offered to prove a vital fact is no more than a mere scintilla of evidence; or (4) the evidence establishes conclusively the opposite of a vital fact.
Uniroyal Goodrich Tire Co. v. Martinez,
An assertion that the evidence is “insufficient” to support a fact finding means that the evidence supporting the finding is so weak or the evidence to the contrary is so overwhelming that the answer should be set aside and a new trial ordered.
Garza v. Alviar,
III. Adverse Possession
Under the ten-year limitation statute, the elements of adverse possession are an: (1) actual appropriation of land; (2) cultivation, use, or enjoyment of such land; (3) adverse or hostile claim; and (4) exclusive domination over the property and appropriation of it for the possessor’s own use and benefit for a period of at least ten
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years.
1
Tex. Civ. PRac. & Rem.Code Ann. §§ 16.021(1), 16.026(a);
Rhodes,
A. Description of the Property
The claimant must identify the land to establish its location and to show the extent of its interest in the land claimed.
Julien,
At trial, both appellants and appellees introduced copies of their deeds, which contain metes and bounds descriptions of their adjoining properties, into evidence. Appellants themselves offered into evidence a map depicting their property, which shows the fence line. An aerial photograph from the Hood County Appraisal District dated 1984 also admitted into evidence at trial shows the fence as well. The testimony at trial was that this fence has been in its present location since at least 1982. Moreover, while the trial court’s judgment fails to state any description of the property in dispute, the trial court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law states in pertinent part:
The Court concludes and declares that the fence line established by the evidence in this case is the legal boundary between [appellants’] real property and [appellees’] real property, and appellees have legal title to and are entitled to possession of the area of real property north of the fence line, which was the area of real property in dispute in this case.
Therefore, we hold that the legal description of the parties’ adjoining properties, the maps and aerial photo of the existing fence, and the court’s ruling, provide sufficient evidence to identify the disputed property with reasonable certainty so that it may be located upon the ground.
See Id.,
B. Actual Appropriation of the Property
The element of actual appropriation requires the claimants to visibly appropriate the property as to give notice
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to any other person that they claim a right to the property.
Parker v. McGinnes,
In this case, appellees relied on their and their predecessor’s (1) use of the property to graze cattle, (2) repair and improvement of the existing fence, and (3) removal of trees and brush from the property to establish adverse possession. At trial, Jerry McReynolds, who managed the ranch for Pedro from 1982 until Pedro sold the ranch to appellees in 1995, testified on appellees’ behalf. McReynolds said that the fence was present when he began working for Pedro in 1982 and that he worked on the fence several times a year from 1982 until 1995 when appellees purchased Pedro’s land. He also repaired the water gaps in three gullies along the fence line, as frequently as two or three times a year. He repaired the fence because he ran cattle in the pastures that fronted the fence line. He also cleared an area of trees to the north of the fence line and planted and fertilized coastal Bermuda grass there for grazing. In 1995, McRey-nolds represented to appellees that the fence line was the southern boundary of Pedro’s ranch. In regard to disputed property, appellees testified that since acquiring the ranch in 1995, they ran cattle on it, mowed it with a brush hog, sprayed it for briers and weeds, stacked and burned logs on it, and fertilized it once or twice.
We conclude that the above provides sufficient evidence of actual and visible use of the property in dispute.
See Butler v. Hanson,
The facts in the instant case can also be distinguished from
Orsbom
by the same elements mentioned by the court in
Butler:
(1) the disputed tract has been constantly used for grazing; (2) the disputed tract is contiguous to appellees’ record title land, and fenced within it, and both tracts are operated as a unit; (3) Pedro’s ranch manager had rebuilt and replaced water-gapped portions of the fence, modified portions of the fence, and always maintained the fence on behalf of Pedro; and (4) the general reputation in the community has always been that the disputed property is part of appellees’ ranch and that the fence is the boundary between appellants’ and appellees’ land.
See Fish v. Bannister,
C. Exclusive Use of the Property for Ten. Years
To establish title through adverse possession, the possession must unmistakably assert a claim of exclusive ownership in the occupant.
Rick v. Grubbs,
Appellee, Robert McGehee, testified that he had two separate conversations with appellant Mike Perkins, specifically telling Perkins that he was not permitted to erect a fence north of the existing fence line. McGehee also testified that when asked by Perkins, he granted permission to Perkins’ son, who was not the record owner of appellants’ land, to explore north of the existing fence line, but only so long as his son did not let the cows out or hurt anything. Additionally, McReynolds testified that Pedro has used the property to the exclusion of all others from 1982 to 1995 when appellees purchased the property. Therefore, appellees provided sufficient evidence to prove exclusive use.
IV. Conclusion
Having established that appellees offered some evidence to prove a description of the property, actual appropriation, and exclusive use, there is more than a scintilla of evidence to support the trial court’s conclusion. Likewise, we cannot say that the trial courts’ findings were so weak or that the evidence to the contrary is so overwhelming that we should set aside the finding of adverse possession. Therefore, because we conclude the evidence is legally *294 and factually sufficient to support the verdict, we overrule appellants’ sole issue and affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Notes
. To satisfy the ten-year requirement in the fourth element, section 16.023 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code permits taking of successive interests upon a showing of privity of estate between each holder and his successor.
McAnally v. Tex. Co.,
. Mike Perkins testified that he also used the disputed property for hunting and general exploration; however, the record does not support this assertion.
