LaFlore v. Huggins
Annotate this CaseThis appeal involved a boundary-line dispute between neighbors: Kathleen LaFlore sued her neighbors, Robert and Katherine Huggins, seeking to have the court establish the true boundary line between her property and the Hugginses' property. LaFlore alleged she had acquired legal title to the disputed property -- which consisted of a ravine ("the gully") and an adjoining strip of land -- through adverse possession. The trial court rejected LaFlore's claim and declared the true boundary to be the western survey line that existed when her family originally purchased their home in 1962. LaFlore filed a timely postjudgment motion, which the trial court denied. LaFlore appealed. Finding no reversible error, the Alabama Supreme Court affirmed.
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