OPINION
This is an appeal from a verdict finding the existence of a prescriptive easement and failing to find abandonment of that easement. The owner of the land on which the easement lies, Marion Toal, challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury’s findings. We will affirm the judgment.
FACTS
Jim Smith built a home on a tract of land in Ellis County in 1901. From 1901 until 1981, Smith and his descendants (the Smiths) lived in this house and used a driveway [the easement] built on leased land to access the house. That land was leased from a railroad company under a “рasture lease” and includes land north of the Smith homestead. The Smiths used the easement until 1981, when the home was abandoned. 1
The lease with the railroad was for a term of 100 years, expected to expire in 2001. However, after the Smith homestead became unocсupied in 1981, Marion Toal approached the railroad and requested that it cancel the Smith lease. The railroad agreed, cancelled the Smith lease, and entered into a new lease with Toal. Toal leased the land until 1992, when he purchased it from the railroad. Paul Smith (Paul) visited the Smith property periodically during this time, but no one lived there. When Paul again visited the Smith homestead in 1995, Toal informed him that he now owned the entire tract of land in front of the Smith homestead, including the easement, and the Smiths had no right to use the land for access to the home. After some consideration, Paul offered to buy the land in front of the homestead, but Toal was unwilling to sell it. Paul brought suit on behalf of his parents, Earl and Bessie 2 , alleging easement by prescription, easement by estoppel, and misrepresentatiоn.
The court entered a directed verdict on the issues of easement by estoppel and fraud and submitted the issue of easement by prescription to the jury. The jury found that the Smiths had acquired an easement by prescription and that the easement had never been abandoned. Paul was awarded an ingress-egress easement plus attorney’s fees. Toal appeals, asserting that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support the jury’s findings.
NO-EVIDENCE POINT
When the complaining party raises a “no-evidence” point
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challenging
A no-evidence point can only be sustained when the record reveals one of the following: (1) a complete absence оf evidence of a vital fact; (2) rules of law or rales of evidence bar the appellate court 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 scintillа; or (4) the evidence conclusively establishes the opposite of a vital fact.
Juliette Fowler Homes, Inc. v. Welch
Assoc.,
Inc.,
If both “no-evidence” and “insufficient-evidence” points are asserted, an appellate court should rule on the no-evidence point first.
Marshall v. Ford Motor Co.,
If a “no evidence” point is sustаined and the proper procedural steps have been taken, the finding under attack may be disregarded entirely.
Garza v. Alviar,
FACTUALLY INSUFFICIENT EVIDENCE POINT
In reviewing an “insufficient-evidence” point
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challenging the factual sufficiency of the evidence to support a finding that favors the party who had the burden of proof on that finding, the reviewing court should overrule the challenge unless a review of all the evidence, both for and against the finding, demonstrates that the finding is clearly wrong and manifestly unjust.
Garza v. Alviar,
When reviewing a jury verdict to determine the factual sufficiency of the evidence, the court of appeals must considеr and weigh all the evidence, and should set aside the verdict only if it is so contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence as to be clearly wrong and unjust.
We have a duty to review the entire record.
See In re King’s Estate,
Factual insufficiency of the evidence does not, however, authorize an аppellate court to disregard a finding entirely or make a contrary finding in entering a final judgment for one of the parties.
Garza,
EASEMENT BY PRESCRIPTION
To burden a party’s land with an easement by prescription, the plaintiff must show that his use of the land was: (1) open and notorious; (2) adverse to the owner’s claim of right; (3) exclusive; (4) uninterrupted; and (5) continuous for a period of ten years.
Brooks v. Jones,
Toal challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support each of the required elements for easement by prescription. Toal only acknowledges the use of the land after 1981, when he acquired the lease from the railroad. His only reference to the time prior to 1981 is found in a footnote to his brief. He states:
Based on his assertion that the Smiths had a “Pasture Lease” with the railroad, [Paul] Smith has consistently asserted that their use of the driveway was inconsistent with and adverse to the railroad, despite the landlord-tenant relationship. No Smith lease was ever produced. Moreover, the imрlications and effects of that position on all of the leased agriculture land in Texas is mind boggling.
Paul contends that the use of the leased land from 1901 and continuing until 1995, or any ten year time period between, met the requirements of use to obtain a prescriptive eаsement. He asserts that the Smith family acquired the easement long before Toal bought the property from the railroad. Thus, we are faced with two periods of time during which this prescriptive easement could have been acquired, 1901-1981 and 1981-1995. We first consider whether a рrescriptive easement was acquired during the period when the Smiths leased the land from the railroad, 1901 until 1981.
PRESCRIPTIVE EASEMENT ON LEASED LAND: 1901-1981
Initially, we consider whether a prescriptive easement may be acquired on leased land. Toal asserts that it cannot be and relies on
Sassman v. Collins
and
Boles v. Red
to support this assertion.
Sassman v. Collins,
In Sassman, the court cоnsidered whether the use of property for ingress and egress had been adverse to the owner of the land. The court stated:
Again, a continuity of the possession in this case, even if it could be conceded tohave been otherwise adverse, was broken, beсause during six or seven years of the time that appellees were exercising the right to pass thereover they were shown to have been tenants of the owner or owners of said tract of land over which the passway was claimed. The possession and user оf the tenant is the possession and user of the landlord, and therefore cannot be adverse. It is held that where the owner of the dominant estate has been the tenant of the owner of the servient estate, and had control over the servient estate as such tenant, the period of such tenancy must be excluded in computing the prescriptive period.
Sassman,
More recently, the Supreme Court has stated that a tenant
may
acquire an еasement by prescription once “the tenancy has been repudiated, and notice of such repudiation has been brought home to the titleholder.”
Tex-Wis Co. v. Johnson,
In
Dalo v. Laughlin,
a tenant asserted adverse possession through repudiation of his lease.
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Accordingly, by using land in a manner inconsistent with the purpose for which the land is leased, a leasee may acquire a рrescriptive easement, provided all of the elements for establishing the easement are met.
The Smith lease was not produced at trial, however Paul testified that it was a “pasture lease,” identical to that acquired by Toal in 1981. That lease was admitted into evidence. It is entitled “Pasturage Lease” and limits the authorized use of the land to “pasturage purposes.” Paul stated that Toal testified in a deposition that his lease was the same as the Smith lease and, thus, the language regarding using the land for “pasturage purpоses” was identical. There was no objection.
Paul testified that his family openly used the easement from 1901-1981 without interruption and never used the land as pasture. The Smiths also used the easement
ABANDONMENT OF THE EASEMENT
In his last issue, Toal asserts that, because the Smiths essentially abandoned their homestead in 1981 and rarely visited the property after that, they lost their right to access the land. Additionally, Toal asserts, his “consistent use and modification of the land, and undisputed ownership of the land further supports [abandonment].” His complaint is one of insufficient evidence. We note that Toal fails to cite any authority on abandonment, but merely states that the argument in the prior issues along with the record “fairly address and support his final point of error.”
The intent to abandon an easement “must be established by clear and satisfactory evidence.”
Milligan v. Niebuhr,
Because mere non-use is insufficient to show abandonment of an easement, and because Toal has not identified any evidence showing that the Smiths intended to abandon the easement, we cannot say thе verdict is so contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence as to be clearly wrong and unjust.
Cain,
CONCLUSION
Having overruled each issue presented, we affirm the judgment.
Notes
.The Smiths quarreled over the land which eventually ended in a suit to partition it. The descendant who was living in the house prior to 1981 apparently moved out because of the disagreement. Earl and Bessie Smith were awarded the homestead and their son, Paul, brought this suit on behalf of their estate.
. Paul Smith testified that his mother went by "Bessie."
. We use the terminology suggested in William Powers, Jr. & Jack Ratliff,
Another Look at "No Evidence” and "Insufficient Evidence,”
69 Tex. L.Rev. 515, 517-19 (1991);
see also Raw Hide Oil & Gas, Inc. v. Maxus Explora
. We use the terminology suggested in William Powers, Jr. & Jack Ratliff,
Another Look at "No Evidence" and “Insufficient Evidence,”
69 Tex. L.Rev. 515, 517-19 (1991);
see also Raw Hide Oil & Gas v. Maxus Exploration,
. The adverse nature of acquiring an easement by prescription is the same as establishing title by аdverse possession.
See Othen
v.
Rosier,
. In issue one, Toal alleges that there is "no evidence to support submission of issue to jury.” Issue two asserts that there is "no evidence to support jury response.” Both issues complain about the legal-insufficiency of the evidence and have been addressed simultaneously.
