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Implied Easement by Necessity Fails Without Landlocked Property | Fair v. Powell (2025)

New Texas Court of Appeals Opinion - Analyzed for Family Law Attorneys

Fair v. Powell, 03-24-00789-CV, May 08, 2026.

On appeal from 274th District Court of Comal County

Synopsis

No implied easement by necessity arises where the claimant’s tract is not landlocked and already has access to a public road. In Fair v. Powell, the Third Court of Appeals held that strict necessity, not preference, expense avoidance, or convenience, controls, and undisputed deed records plus existing access from a public road defeated the claimed easement across the adjoining tract.

Relevance to Family Law

Although Fair v. Powell is not a family-law case, its practical significance for Texas family litigators is substantial. Real-property access disputes routinely surface in divorce cases involving ranches, family compounds, inherited acreage, mixed-use homesteads, event venues, and informal intra-family land arrangements. The opinion is especially useful where one spouse, former spouse, parent, child, or related entity claims a continuing right to use a roadway, driveway, gate, or access corridor based on longstanding family practice rather than deeded rights.

The case also matters in post-divorce enforcement and property-division litigation. Family courts often confront arguments that a tract awarded in divorce is “effectively landlocked,” that historical use created a continuing right of access, or that a prior owner’s informal permission matured into a legal easement. Fair v. Powell reinforces that courts will look to the deed history, the moment of severance, and whether the property actually lacked access to a public road—not whether the disputed route is paved, shorter, safer, more marketable, or more desirable. That principle can be outcome-determinative when litigants seek injunctions, temporary orders, partition-related relief, valuation adjustments, or reimbursement theories tied to access.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The dispute arose from a family property conflict in Comal County involving adjacent tracts once held within a broader family ownership structure. Janis Fair and River Rock Event Center, Inc. claimed they possessed an implied easement by necessity across property later acquired by Gabriela Powell, Keith Powell, and Grove Operating, LLC. The route at issue was Saratoga Lane, including the Powells’ driveway. Fair contended that her guesthouse and event-center property were landlocked without that access.

The record, however, reflected a chain of recorded conveyances showing the parties’ respective ownership interests and, critically, showing no recorded easement burdening the Powell tract for Fair’s benefit. The summary-judgment evidence also included an affidavit from Fair’s former husband, who had owned the tract later sold to the Powells. He stated that Fair had access to her own property from Keeneland Drive by a dirt road on her own land and that her use of the asphalt road on his property had always been permissive and for convenience, not pursuant to any property right.

That access evidence mattered. Fair acknowledged longstanding use of the Keeneland Drive route by herself, tenants, and patrons of the event-center property. She had improved that road with gravel but preferred the Saratoga Lane route because paving or further improving her own access would be more expensive. When the Powells purchased their tract, they were initially willing to allow temporary access, but Fair insisted on a permanent easement. After the Powells later gated their driveway for safety and privacy reasons, Fair sued, sought emergency injunctive relief, and alleged an implied easement by necessity.

The factual backdrop became even more consequential when the Powells contracted to sell their property. Fair, through counsel, asserted to the prospective buyer’s side that she already possessed an easement by necessity and sought a perpetual easement agreement. The litigation thus expanded beyond the easement question into trespass, slander-of-title, and interference-type claims arising from the dispute and the failed sale context.

Issues Decided

The court addressed, at minimum, these core issues:

Rules Applied

Texas law recognizes an implied easement by necessity only in narrow circumstances. The court relied on established Supreme Court of Texas authority, particularly:

The governing rules can be distilled this way:

Application

The court’s analysis turned on the difference between true necessity and practical preference. Fair’s theory depended on characterizing her property as landlocked, but the record did not support that premise. The deed records and testimonial evidence showed an existing route from the Fair property to Keeneland Drive. That route may not have been as desirable as the paved Saratoga Lane access, but Texas law does not imply easements to spare a landowner from inconvenience or improvement costs.

The court treated the former owner’s affidavit and the deed history as powerful evidence that any use of the disputed roadway had been permissive rather than legally necessary. That distinction is vital. A permissive family arrangement, even one observed for many years, does not become an easement by necessity simply because later relations sour or a subsequent purchaser refuses to continue the courtesy. The existence of another means of ingress and egress to a public road defeated the claim as a matter of law.

Equally important, the court adhered to the temporal requirement that necessity be measured at severance. The claimant could not manufacture “necessity” years later by pointing to business preferences, event traffic patterns, concerns about paving expenses, or a superior route through neighboring property. The legal inquiry was whether, when the relevant tract was severed from the larger estate, the property lacked access absent the claimed easement. Because the evidence established access from Keeneland Drive, the strict-necessity element failed.

Holding

The court held that no implied easement by necessity existed across the Powells’ property. The claimant’s property was not landlocked because it had existing access to a public road by way of Keeneland Drive. Under Texas law, that fact is fatal to an easement-by-necessity theory.

The court further held that strict necessity must exist at the time of severance and that convenience, expense, or longstanding permissive use cannot substitute for that requirement. The existence of a nicer paved route across adjoining property did not justify implying a permanent property right.

Finally, the court recognized that the recorded deed history and other undisputed summary-judgment evidence defeated the claimed easement. Where the property records show no easement and the evidence establishes alternate access, courts will not rewrite the parties’ property rights through implication.

Practical Application

For family-law litigators, Fair v. Powell is a useful reminder that real-property claims embedded in divorce and SAPCR-adjacent litigation must be proven with real-property evidence, not family history. If a spouse claims that a separately owned tract, inherited parcel, or family business property requires continued use of a road crossing the other spouse’s awarded tract, the first question is not how the parties historically behaved. The first question is whether the allegedly dominant tract actually lacks legal and practical access to a public road.

This matters in several recurring settings:

After Fair v. Powell, counsel should force the analysis back to objective proof: the deed chain, surveys, plats, restrictions, roadway location, public-road connectivity, and evidence of access at severance. If another route exists—even an unimproved or less desirable one—the implied-easement-by-necessity claim may collapse. And when counsel is considering pre-suit letters, lis pendens strategy, temporary restraining orders, or direct communications touching an imminent sale, this case also illustrates the danger of overstating an unproven easement position in a way that clouds title or disrupts a transaction.

Checklists

Evaluating an Implied-Easement Claim in a Divorce or Property Case

Challenging a Claimed Family-Use Roadway

Protecting Your Client Before Sending Demand Letters or Seeking TRO Relief

Drafting and Settlement Strategy in Family Land Cases

Evidence to Gather Early

Citation

Fair v. Powell, No. 03-24-00789-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Austin May 8, 2026, no pet. h.) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

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