Gloria Follett, as Trustee for the Gloria Follett Revocable Trust UDT 11/92 v. Joseph Fitzsimmons and Patricia Fitzsimmons
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ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
DIVISION I
No. CA 08-275
GLORIA FOLLETT, AS TRUSTEE
FOR THE GLORIA FOLLETT
REVOCABLE TRUST UDT 11/92
APPELLANT
Opinion Delivered
[INSERT DATE]
APPEAL FROM THE CARROLL
COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT,
[NO. CV-2004-46-4]
V.
HONORABLE JOHN R. SCOTT,
JUDGE
JOSEPH FITZSIMMONS AND
PATRICIA FITZSIMMONS
APPELLEES
AFFIRMED
JOHN MAUZY PITTMAN, Chief Judge
1.
PROPERTY, REAL – ADVERSE POSSESSION – APPELLANT FAILED TO ESTABLISH A PRIMA
FACIE CASE.– In light of Coons v. Lawler, appellant’s placement of a lamp and shrubs
and the temporary location of benches on appellees’ property was clearly insufficient
to establish adverse possession, nor was the witness testimony sufficient to establish
title by adverse possession; furthermore, to ripen into title, adverse use must be
exclusive, and appellant candidly admitted that she did not interfere with
maintenance activities conducted by the church on its property.
2.
PROPERTY, REAL – BOUNDARY BY ACQUIESCENCE – APPELLANT FAILED TO SHOW A
PRIMA FACIE CASE.– When
adjoining landowners tacitly accept a fence line or other
monument as the visible evidence of their dividing line and apparently consent to that
line, it becomes a boundary by acquiescence; a boundary line by acquiescence is
inferred from the landowners’ conduct over many years so as to imply the existence
of an agreement about the location of the boundary line; here, however, there was
nothing upon which such an agreement could reasonably be implied; in the absence
of any alleged or apparent monument in the disputed area other than the drainage
ditch, the trial court did not err in ruling that appellant failed to show a prima facie
case of boundary by acquiescence.
Appeal from Carroll Circuit Court; John R. Scott, Judge; affirmed.
Gerald K. Crow, for appellant.
Susan K. Lourne, for appellees.
This case involves a dispute over a small tract of property between appellant’s residence
and appellees’ property on which they operate a bed-and-breakfast inn. The dispute arose in
the summer of 2002, approximately six months after appellees acquired title to their property,
formerly a church building, from the First Methodist Church of Eureka Springs. Appellant
filed a quiet-title petition in 2004 claiming title to the disputed property based on adverse
possession and acquiescence. A hearing was had and, after appellant presented her case-inchief, the trial judge ruled that she had failed to establish a prima facie case and dismissed
appellant’s case. On appeal, appellant argues that the trial court erred in dismissing her claims
because the evidence was in fact sufficient to present a prima facie case. We find no error, and
we affirm.
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When a party moves for a directed verdict in a jury trial or dismissal in a bench trial,
it is the duty of the trial court to consider whether the plaintiff's evidence, given its strongest
probative force, presents a prima facie case. Stephens v. Miller, 91 Ark. App. 253, 209 S.W.3d
452 (2005). It is not proper for the court to weigh the facts at the time the plaintiff completes
his case, and the motion should be denied if it is necessary to consider the weight of the
testimony before determining whether the motion should be granted. Id. On appeal, we
determine whether dismissal should have been granted by reviewing the evidence in the light
most favorable to the party against whom the dismissal was sought, giving it its highest
probative value and taking into account all reasonable inferences deducible from it. Id.
A party claiming title to land by adverse possession must prove all of the elements
thereof. The common-law elements have been succinctly set out by the Arkansas Supreme
Court as follows:
Title to land by adverse possession does not arise as a right
to the one in possession; it arises as a result of statutory
limitations on the rights of entry by the one out of possession.
Utley v. Ruff, 255 Ark. 824, 502 S.W.2d 629 (1973). Possession
alone does not ripen into ownership, but the possession must be
adverse to the true owner or record title holder before his title is
in any way affected by the possession. Id.; Coulson v. Hillmer,
271 Ark. 890, 612 S.W.2d 124 (1981). In order for a claimant
to establish ownership to property by adverse possession, that
party has the burden of proof to show, by a preponderance of the
evidence, possession for seven years. Potlatch Corp. v. Hannegan,
266 Ark. 847, 586 S.W.2d 256 (1979). In addition, the
possession must have been actual, open, notorious, continuous,
hostile, and exclusive, and it must be accompanied with an intent
to hold against the true owner. See Rowe v. Fisher, 239 Ark. 721,
393 S.W.2d 767 (1965); Boyette v. Vogelpohl, 92 Ark. App. 436,
214 S.W.3d 874 (2005).
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Thompson v. Fischer, 364 Ark. 380, 384, 220 S.W.3d 622, 625 (2005).
The disputed area lies directly between appellant’s house and appellees’ bed and
breakfast, the former church. Photographs show that this is a relatively narrow, rock-strewn
passageway between the two buildings, running from the front to the rear of both properties
and terminating where it encounters a vertical cliff face. A drainage channel running from the
front to the rear of the property lies immediately adjacent to the bed and breakfast and extends
approximately sixteen inches therefrom in the direction of appellant’s house. Appellant claims
the entire area from the drainage channel to her own house. Several utility boxes and an air
conditioning unit are mounted on the wall of the bed and breakfast.
Appellant’s claim for adverse possession was based on her own use of the property and
that of her predecessor in title. Appellant testified that she owned her house since 1966 and
believed that she owned the entire area between the two buildings. She stated that she
maintained and cleared the area of leaves and debris, placed benches on it, installed a gas lamp,
and planted some flowers and shrubs on it. She admitted, however, that she had never
objected when the owners of the church property entered the disputed area via her staircase
to access and maintain the utility boxes on the church building.
June Westphal testified that she had been a member of the church for more than fifty
years, was a church steward, and had written a history of the church in 1979-80. She testified
that appellant’s predecessor in title had kept the area raked and cleared. Finally, she stated that
she knew of no time when the church asserted ownership to the property and that she
believed the property belonged to appellant. She admitted, however, that the church building
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had been painted several times during this period, that the roof had been replaced, and utilities
had been accessed via the disputed area. She also admitted that she did not know if the
drainage ditch had ever been recognized as the boundary line, that she knew of no oral
statement by any responsible person representing that the boundary between the properties
was anything other than the lot line; that her duties as church steward were purely ministerial;
and that it was the church trustees who were responsible for maintaining the church
properties, making sure that insurance was obtained, and overseeing all legalities relating to
the property.
Mary Ellen Sheard testified that she had resided in Eureka Springs since 1977, that she
knew appellant, and that she assumed that the property between the buildings belonged to
appellant’s predecessor in title and appellant because she observed them in the disputed area
and they seemed to be taking care of all of it.
Janett Arnett testified that she was a member of the board of trustees of the church and
had served in that capacity for six years. She also testified that she had served on the church’s
administrative council for ten years and that the board of trustees reports to the administrative
council on major decisions. Finally, she stated that she had no basis whatsoever for suspecting
that any adverse claim had been made against the property and that she had executed a seller’s
affidavit to that effect when the church property was sold to appellees.
Appellant argues on appeal that the trial judge erroneously applied the law and erred
in finding that she failed to prove adverse possession of the tract. We do not agree. Although
there was evidence that appellant placed benches and a lamp on the disputed property and
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kept it clear of debris, the fact remains that her claim was in excess of the boundary established
by her deed. As such, appellant was in the position of a trespasser, and far greater trespasses
than appear in the evidence are required for a trespasser’s claim to ripen into title. The
Arkansas Supreme Court has held that the acts of an adjacent trespasser who planted a 200foot-long row of willow trees twenty feet over his property line, had a light pole installed on
the twenty-foot strip, and used the twenty-foot strip for a trailer park for more than seven
years were insufficient to show actual or pedal possession to the extent of the claimed
boundary. Coons v. Lawler, 237 Ark. 350, 372 S.W.2d 826 (1963). In light of this precedent,
the placement of a lamp and shrubs and the temporary location of benches on appellees’
property was clearly insufficient. Nor was the testimony of June Westaphal or Mary Ellen
Sheard sufficient to establish title by adverse possession. Both witnesses testified, in essence,
that they assumed and believed that the disputed area was owned by appellant and her
predecessor in title, but such an assumption based on temporary or intermittent use of
neighboring property is not evidence that the owner has been charged with actual or
constructive notice that his land is being claimed by another. Utley v. Ruff, 255 Ark. 824, 502
S.W.2d 629 (1973). Furthermore, to ripen into title, adverse use must be exclusive, and
appellant candidly admitted that she did not interfere with maintenance activities conducted
by the church on its property.
Finally, appellant argues that the trial court erred in finding that she failed to establish
a prima facie case of title by acquiescence. When adjoining landowners tacitly accept a fence
line or other monument as the visible evidence of their dividing line and apparently consent
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to that line, it becomes a boundary by acquiescence. Clark v. Casebier, 92 Ark. App. 472, 215
S.W.3d 684 (2005). A boundary line by acquiescence is inferred from the landowners'
conduct over many years so as to imply the existence of an agreement about the location of
the boundary line. Id. Here, however, there was nothing upon which such an agreement
could reasonably be implied. Clearly, the church did not recognize the drainage ditch as the
boundary line, but instead continued using portions of the disputed area beyond the ditch
whenever maintenance was required on that side of the building. Painting, re-roofing, and
access of utilities would have been a practical impossibility had the church agreed to be
confined to a property line only sixteen inches away from the wall of their building. In the
absence of any alleged or apparent monument in the disputed area other than the drainage
ditch, the trial court did not err in ruling that appellant failed to show a prima facie case of
boundary by acquiescence.
Affirmed.
G LADWIN and M ARSHALL, JJ., agree.
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