Ann May Enterprises, Inc. v. Caples

724 So. 2d 1127, 1998 Miss. App. LEXIS 993, 1998 WL 881798
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedDecember 18, 1998
DocketNo. 96-CA-00939 COA
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 724 So. 2d 1127 (Ann May Enterprises, Inc. v. Caples) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ann May Enterprises, Inc. v. Caples, 724 So. 2d 1127, 1998 Miss. App. LEXIS 993, 1998 WL 881798 (Mich. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

McMILLIN, P. J., for the Court:

¶ 1. The matter before the Court is an appeal from a decision of the chancellor rendered in the Chancery Court of Calhoun County. The litigation involved a dispute over a property owner’s right of ingress and egress across an adjoining parcel of real property. The chancellor held that a private easement had been established by prescription, but ordered that the owner of the subservient estate could re-route the easement to better accommodate the use of his land. The party seeking access has appealed that decision, claiming that the access was a part of the county’s public road system and, thus, beyond the chancellor’s authority to move. We agree and, therefore, reverse and render judgment in favor of the appellant.

I.

Facts

¶2. The appellant, Ann May Enterprises, Inc. (hereafter “May Enterprises”) is the present owner of a tract of real property in Calhoun County that is not touched by either of two paved public roads that presently traverse the area. However, the property is crossed by an unpaved road commonly known in the area as Winters Road, which connects the two paved roads. There was evidence that Winters Road was formally proclaimed as a public road by the board of supervisors by a minute entry made in 1943. Winters Road had two timber bridges needed to cross low-lying areas, and the proof is uncontradieted that both bridges became unserviceable quite a few years ago and were not repaired or rebuilt by the county. As a result, Winters Road became unusable as a means to cross over from one of the more frequently traveled roads in the region to the other.

¶3. The property owned by May Enterprises has never been occupied on a permanent basis; however, the owners always used the Winters Road route to gain access to the [1129]*1129property when the need arose. There was evidence that the May Enterprises tract was, in the past, put to some agricultural use. For some time, the property has contained a recreational cabin used with some frequency by representatives of the corporate owner. The only access from the paved public road to the cabin and the remaining property is by Winters Road. This access is not hindered by the fact that the bridges are impassable since both bridges are located farther in on the road. The part of Winters Road used to access the May Enterprises property runs across a tract of land owned by the appellee, James Capíes.

¶4. In 1994, Capíes erected a barrier across Winters Road that prevented anyone gaining access to the May Enterprises tract. May Enterprises then commenced this litigation, claiming that Winters Road was a county road, thus making it unlawful for a private individual to bar use of the road. May Enterprises sought an injunction for the removal of the barrier. Capíes filed a counterclaim, alleging that representatives of May Enterprises had committed numerous trespasses by their prior use of Winters Road to gain access to the May Enterprises tract. Capíes sought an injunction prohibiting any further acts of trespass.

¶5. The chancellor found as a matter of fact that Winters Road had once been a public road. However, he concluded that, although there was no formal entry in the supervisors’ minutes closing the road, there had been a de facto abandonment through non-use by the public and a failure by the board of supervisors to keep the road in repair for a period well in excess of ten years. The chancellor nevertheless found as a matter of fact that agents of May Enterprises and the predecessors in title to May Enterprises had continued to use the roadway as access to the May Enterprises tract since the road had ceased to be a public way and that such private use had continued for the requisite number of years to establish a private easement for ingress and egress by prescription.

¶ 6. There was evidence that Capíes had established a residence on his property that was extremely close to the existing path of Winters Road and that the use of the road by those going on the May Enterprises tract was disturbing to Capíes in the quiet and peaceable enjoyment of his property. The chancellor concluded that, though May Enterprises was entitled to a prescriptive easement for ingress and egress over the Capíes property, he would, in the exercise of the inherent equitable powers of the chancellor, require that the route of the easement be redirected to better accommodate Capíes in the use of his residence. He, therefore, ordered that Capíes be permitted to decide on an alternate route for the easement. The chancellor directed that the new route, as laid out by Capíes, be surveyed at the expense of May Enterprises. The chancellor further held that May Enterprises would be liable for attorney’s fees in an amount to be subsequently determined, apparently based on the premise that May Enterprises had wrongfully sought to sue out a writ of injunction to enforce rights belonging to the public in general when those rights no longer existed.

¶ 7. It was at that point that May Enterprises filed its notice of appeal and the matter was brought before this Court for resolution.

II.

.A Preliminary Question of Appellate Jurisdiction

¶ 8. Capíes raises the issue that this Court lacks jurisdiction since the order appealed from is clearly interlocutory in nature. Capíes points out that the new route of the easement has not been determined, the survey has not been conducted, nor has the necessary inquiry been conducted to set attorney’s fees. While this point may have technical merit, we observe that the chancellor, in making his ruling at the conclusion of the hearing, stated as follows:

I believe I’ve covered everything. Anybody aggrieved with this opinion, has the right to perfect an appeal to the Mississippi Supreme Court by following the Appellate Court Rules and the statutes applicable thereto.

[1130]*1130¶ 9. This pronouncement does not fully conform to the provisions of Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 54(b) concerning certification of one or more issues as having been finally adjudicated. Neither did May Enterprises seek authority for an interlocutory appeal under Mississippi Rule of Appellate Procedure 5. Nevertheless, because (a) this case has been fully tried, (b) the fundamental issues upon which the case ought to turn have been decided at the trial level, and (c) the parties have fully briefed and argued the merits of the issues to this Court, we have decided to exercise our authority under Mississippi Rule of Appellate Procedure 2(c) to suspend the rules and reach the merits of this technically interlocutory appeal. See Keyes v. State, 708 So.2d 540, 542 (Miss. 1998).

III.

Abandonment of a Public Road

¶ 10. There has been no formal act by the Calhoun County Board of Supervisors to abandon the public’s interest in Winters Road as a public right of way. In 1986, the Mississippi Legislature adopted a statute setting out certain requirements necessary to close a road. Miss.Code Ann. § 65-7-121 (Supp.1998). May Enterprises argues that lack of evidence of compliance with this statute compels a finding that the road still maintains its public character. Capíes, on the other hand, argues that the public nature of the roadway ended long before 1986, so that this statute has no application.

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Bluebook (online)
724 So. 2d 1127, 1998 Miss. App. LEXIS 993, 1998 WL 881798, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ann-may-enterprises-inc-v-caples-missctapp-1998.