Barnett v. Gomance

377 S.W.3d 317, 2010 Ark. App. 109, 2010 Ark. App. LEXIS 96
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 3, 2010
DocketNo. CA 09-847
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 377 S.W.3d 317 (Barnett v. Gomance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnett v. Gomance, 377 S.W.3d 317, 2010 Ark. App. 109, 2010 Ark. App. LEXIS 96 (Ark. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

COURTNEY HUDSON HENRY, Judge.

| Appellants Shelby and Linda Barnett appeal the trial court’s decision in favor of appellee Wanda Stafford on her complaint alleging trespass. For reversal, the Bar-netts contend that the trial court erred in finding that they had not proven their claims of adverse possession or a boundary by acquiescence. We affirm.

This case began with a complaint brought by Keith Gomance against the Barnetts to establish an easement by necessity to property owned by Gomance. The litigation evolved into a boundary-line dispute between the Barnetts and Wanda Stafford, Keith Gomance’s mother. Stafford and the Barnetts are adjacent landowners in Garland County, and Stafford’s property lies to the east of the Barnetts’ land. Stafford and her then-husband, Dale Gomance, acquired the property in 1968. In 1966, Stafford obtained title solely in her name. The Barnetts purchased their property in November of 1997 from Jerry and Barbara Bethurum. |2Prior to that, Hubert Sorrells owned the Barnetts’ land. Keith Gomance currently resides on Stafford’s property.

The focus of this case centers on a wire fence that has been in existence for many years. It is undisputed that the fence is not on the true boundary line separating Stafford’s and the Barnetts’ properties. Instead, it lies some thirty feet inside Stafford’s property. As her claim of trespass, Stafford alleged that the Barnetts had erected a new fence on the old fence line, which she claimed was entirely on her property. Appellants defended on the ground that they had acquired ownership of the property to the old-wire fence by adverse possession. In a post-trial brief, appellants also asserted that the fence had become the parties’ boundary by acquiescence.

At trial, Stafford testified that her land is part pasture and part timber. The south fork of the Saline River lies on the southern portion of the property. Stafford said that there was an old fence in the area that she had been aware of for about forty years. She testified that it was “just an old piece of a fence” that was “never taken care of.” Stafford stated that Hubert Sor-rells, appellants’ predecessor in title, had run cattle and had pastured his land up to the old fence.

Keith Gomance testified that he had lived on his mother’s property for forty-four years. He recalled that there was a fence on the boundary line when his father and Hubert Sorrells owned the respective properties. Gomance said that the fence fell down every time the Saline River flooded and that it completely washed away during one particularly heavy | sflood. He testified that both his father and Sor-rells had cattle and that, after this flood, his father gave Sorrells permission to nail wire to the trees to keep their cattle separated, rather than incur the cost of rebuilding a fence on the boundary line whenever the river flooded. Gomance said that the wire was not straight and that it extended from tree to tree for about one hundred feet and that they also relied on a “big wash” to contain their cattle the rest of the way. He stated that it was a courtesy fence and that everybody knew that the property line was where the original fence had stood. He added that the property had been surveyed three times in the intervening years. Gomance maintained that appellant Shelby Barnett also knew the location of the boundary line. He recounted a conversation he had with Barnett during which Barnett “pointed from north to south and told me he knew exactly where the line was.” Gomance said that the area Barnett indicated coincided with the location of the original fence that kept washing away.

Shelby Barnett testified that he and his wife bought the land to use as a cattle farm. He said that the fence was there when they purchased the property and that the wire was attached to a couple of large sycamore trees and a pine tree. He said that the wire was old and had grown into the trees six to eight inches. Barnett testified that he considered his eastern boundary to be the fence line. He said that he had maintained the old fence when it needed repair and that he had cut hay and grazed cattle to the fence since he bought the property. He also stated that he built the new fence to contain his cattle after the old one was destroyed when a debris pile that Keith Gomance stacked on the fence caught fire.

UBarnett further testified that there was a gap in the wire fence when he purchased the property, which he assumed was there to allow access between the properties. He also said that he requisitioned John Williams to perform a survey when he bought the property. Barnett testified that he was familiar with the boundary line shown by Williams on the survey, but he said that he disagreed with Williams’s conclusions.

In rebuttal, Stafford’s husband, Billy, testified that he had discussed the boundary with Mr. Barnett. Billy said that Barnett acknowledged that the wire fence was not the boundary line. John Williams also testified that he prepared surveys of the boundary line in 1997 for the Barnetts and in 2005 for Stafford. He stated that the old fence was not on the true boundary line.

At the conclusion of the testimony, the trial court asked the parties to submit simultaneous letter briefs. In a letter opinion, the trial court ruled in Stafford’s favor, finding “that the preponderance of the evidence shows that the [Barnetts] failed to comply with A.C.A. § 18-11-106 and failed to show that the use by the [Barnetts] was notorious, hostile, and exclusive or that the [Barnetts] had taken any action to put [Stafford] on notice that they were seeking to convert the permissive use into a claim of ownership.” The court subsequently entered an order reflecting its decision.

The Barnetts promptly filed a motion objecting to the entry of the order, arguing that the requirements of the statute cited by the trial court did not apply under the facts of this case. The trial court issued another letter opinion addressing this motion. The court adhered [ 5to its ruling with regard to the statute but stated that its emphasis was on the failure of the Barnetts to offer proof of notorious, hostile, and exclusive possession, as well as their failure to submit evidence of any attempt to convert a permissive use into a claim of ownership. The court also noted that the Barnetts presented no proof that any of the Barnetts’ predecessors in title considered the fence to be the boundary.

The Barnetts subsequently filed an additional motion requesting a new trial. They argued that the trial court’s decision was contrary to the law of adverse possession and the law pertaining to the establishment of a boundary by acquiescence. The trial court entered an order denying the Barnetts’ motion in its entirety, thereby rejecting the Barnetts’ arguments with regard to both adverse possession and boundary by acquiescence. The Barnetts then filed a notice of appeal.

In the appeal that followed, we dismissed for the lack of a final order because the trial court had not disposed of Stafford’s claim for damages. Barnett v. Gomance, 2009 Ark. App. 104, 2009 WL 401611 (unpublished). Following our dismissal, the trial court entered a final order from which the Barnetts bring the present appeal.

Boundary by acquiescence

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
377 S.W.3d 317, 2010 Ark. App. 109, 2010 Ark. App. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnett-v-gomance-arkctapp-2010.