Ben Rush and Joanne Rush v. Lynne Davis Family Limited Partnership And Adannac Family Properties, LLC

2022 Ark. App. 441, 655 S.W.3d 86
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 2, 2022
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2022 Ark. App. 441 (Ben Rush and Joanne Rush v. Lynne Davis Family Limited Partnership And Adannac Family Properties, LLC) 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
Ben Rush and Joanne Rush v. Lynne Davis Family Limited Partnership And Adannac Family Properties, LLC, 2022 Ark. App. 441, 655 S.W.3d 86 (Ark. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Cite as 2022 Ark. App. 441 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION II No. CV-21-446

Opinion Delivered November 2, 2022 BEN RUSH AND JOANNE RUSH APPELLANTS APPEAL FROM THE JEFFERSON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 35CV-19-466]

LYNNE DAVIS FAMILY LIMITED HONORABLE ROBERT H. WYATT, PARTNERSHIP; AND ADANNAC JR., JUDGE FAMILY PROPERTIES, LLC APPELLEES AFFIRMED

LARRY D. VAUGHT, Judge

Joanne and Ben Rush (the Rushes) appeal the Jefferson County Circuit Court’s order

granting summary judgment in favor of the appellees, Lynne Davis Family Limited Partnership

and Adannac Family Properties, LLC (hereinafter referred to collectively as “the McNeill

family” or “the McNeills”).1 The order also quieted title to a disputed forty-seven-acre parcel

of land located on the McNeill family’s farm and dismissed the Rushes’ counterclaims for

promissory estoppel and for the establishment of an easement. We affirm.

1Petitioner Lynne Davis Family Limited Partnership is an Arkansas limited partnership with its principal place of business in Little Rock, Arkansas. The members of the Davis FLP are Lynne Davis and her children, William Davis and Isabelle Thrash. Petitioner Adannac Family Properties, LLC, is a Mississippi limited liability company with its principal place of business in Madison, Mississippi. The members of AFP, LLC, are Rachel Cannada and her children, Cecilia Rutledge and Christy Burrow. The appellees’ predecessors in interest are the McNeill Family Limited Partnership, Isabelle Earhart McNeill, and William McNeill. Together, these individuals and entities have owned and operated the McNeill family farm, which comprises approximately 1,500 acres in Jefferson County, Arkansas, since at least the 1940s. Therefore, we collectively refer to the appellees and their predecessors in interest as “the McNeill family.” The disputed tract of land is located in Jefferson County, Arkansas, and is bordered on

all sides by a lake and by property owned by the McNeill family. The McNeill family contends

that the disputed tract is part of a fifteen-hundred-acre farm that they have continuously

owned and operated for almost eighty years. The McNeill family submitted evidence that,

since the 1940s, they have behaved as if they own the now-disputed forty-seven-acre tract of

land: cutting and clearing the timber, raising cattle on it, fencing it, leasing it to others for

farming and hunting, commercially harvesting pecans from its trees, maintaining roads to it,

posting signs on it to deter trespassers, hunting on it, and paying property taxes on all the

contiguous land. Dating back to 1981, the McNeill family enrolled portions of the disputed

tract of land in the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) and Agricultural

Stabilization and Conservation Service (ASCS) farm programs. Most recently, the McNeill

Family placed portions of the family farm, including the disputed tract of land, in the Federal

Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) in 2015 and 2017, and they planted trees and performed

other conservation practices required by the program on the disputed property.

The McNeill family presented evidence that it holds a 1974 deed that conveyed “All

that part of Section 29, which lies North of Arkansas River” and that the contested forty-seven

acres lies squarely within that portion of section 29.

In 1975, Buckner Realty and Insurance Company, Inc. (owned by Mr. James Buckner),

bought the forty-seven-acre tract of land—along with four other lots—for $106.38 at a tax

sale. The McNeill family presented evidence that it was unaware of this sale at the time and

that, since the tax sale, Buckner has had no access to the land, and no one has ever seen him

2 on the property. The McNeill family notes that the Rushes did not present any evidence from

Buckner to the contrary.2

The McNeill family presented evidence that, in 1982, they put Buckner on notice that

they were making a claim to the property that was open and adverse to Buckner’s claim. In a

letter dated October 28, 1982, Buckner wrote the following:

Buckner Realty and Insurance Company, Inc., holds title to all of the Northeast ¼ South of the River in Section 29, T3S, R10W in Jefferson County. . . . I am requesting your approval to use the existing farm lanes on your adjoining property as an access to our property.

Dr. Ric Cannada (a son-in-law member of the McNeill family) responded to Buckner

on behalf of the family and informed him that the family was not willing to grant Buckner’s

request to use the existing farm lanes on the McNeill property as an access to the forty-seven-

acre tract. Further, Cannada asserted to Buckner that the McNeill family’s property includes

“all of the flooded timber at the west or north-west end of the lake” and that the McNeill

family “post[s] the property anew each year.” Buckner responded, stating, “I am afraid that

we have a serious title problem concerning the disputed property . . . .” Buckner further noted

that “[a]ccording to aerial photographs, the flooded timber at the west end of the lake is within

the aforementioned legal description.”

The McNeills presented affidavits stating that, despite being made aware of the “serious

title problem,” Buckner took no additional steps to assert his ownership of the property

against the McNeills following their 1982 correspondences. Buckner did, however, continue

2At the hearing, Ben conceded that Buckner had not been on the disputed property in forty years and that Ben understood that to be the case when he executed the contract to purchase the property.

3 to pay taxes on the property and granted a flowage easement to the United States government

in 2003.

The McNeills farmed the land, posted “no trespassing” markers annually, hunted on

the land, and—from 1992 until 2017—leased the forty-seven-acre tract to third parties for

farming operations. During this time the McNeill family continued to commercially harvest

pecans on portions of the disputed property annually.

The evidence presented to the circuit court showed that, in 2019, Ben was perusing the

Jefferson County Tax Assessor’s records and saw that Buckner Realty and Insurance

Company, Inc., owned the tract of land. He was interested in purchasing the land, so he

contacted Buckner about buying the property. Buckner informed him that the tract of land

was landlocked and that Buckner had no way to access it. Ben testified that he assumed that

Buckner had not been on the property since purchasing it and that it “certainly has not been

open to Mr. Buckner in the fact that he [was] not allow[ed] access to the property.”

Ben contracted with Buckner to purchase the property on January 4, 2019, despite

having never seen it. Buckner told Ben that adverse possession would have to be an exception

to his title warranty. The real estate contract set the closing date for April 19, 2019. The title-

insurance company also excepted any claims for adverse possession.

During the week of January 7, 2019, Ben tried to reach John Davis (son-in-law member

of the McNeill family). At Davis’s request, Cannada returned Ben’s call on January 16, 2019.

Cannada agreed to meet with the Rushes. On January 19, 2019, the Rushes and Cannada met

at the McNeill family farm, got into Cannada’s truck, and drove across the McNeill’s pecan

orchard to a place where they thought the corners to the disputed forty-seven-acre tract might

4 be located in the middle of a large field that, for decades, the McNeills had used for grazing

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2022 Ark. App. 441, 655 S.W.3d 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ben-rush-and-joanne-rush-v-lynne-davis-family-limited-partnership-and-arkctapp-2022.