Bivens v. Mobley

724 So. 2d 458, 1998 WL 850080
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedDecember 8, 1998
Docket97-CA-00225COA
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 724 So. 2d 458 (Bivens v. Mobley) 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
Bivens v. Mobley, 724 So. 2d 458, 1998 WL 850080 (Mich. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

724 So.2d 458 (1998)

Volley BIVENS, Jr., Appellant,
v.
Kenneth and Paulette MOBLEY, Appellees.

No. 97-CA-00225COA.

Court of Appeals of Mississippi.

December 8, 1998.

*459 Gregory D. Keenum, Booneville, for Appellant.

Nicholas B. Phillips, Iuka, for Appellee.

Before THOMAS, P.J., DIAZ and SOUTHWICK, JJ.

SOUTHWICK, J., for the Court:

¶ 1. This is an appeal in an easement dispute decided by the Tishomingo County Chancery Court. The dominant estate owner argues that he should be granted more extensive rights under the easement and that additional compensation besides $1,500 in attorney's fees should be awarded. The servient estate owners argue, though without a cross-appeal, that the easement was abandoned and that attorneys' fees were improper. We reverse as to the finding that the easement did not include the right to lay a waterline, but affirm in all other respects.

FACTS

¶ 2. Kenneth Mobley owned a tract of land north of a tract owned by Volley Bivens in Tishomingo County. In 1978, Mobley and Bivens exchanged these properties; the Mobley tract later was owned both by Kenneth and Paulette Mobley. The deed from Bivens to Mobley reserved an easement, fifteen feet wide, along the east side of what *460 became Mobley's property, using this language:

There is also conveyed an easement to run with the above described land for ingress and egress to and from the Patrick Road [on the south] to the above described land....

¶ 3. Despite the retained east side easement burdening Mobley's land for Bivens's benefit, Bivens actually accessed his property through the west side of Mobley's tract on a driveway beneath an electric company's overhead power lines. That power line was constructed near the time of the exchange of property. Apparently no grant of easement rights has ever been made for the power line driveway. After the new access began to be used, Mobley constructed a house a few feet from the essentially unused east side easement and incorporated part of the easement into his yard. Bivens testified that he told Mobley not to build the house actually on the easement, but he did give Mobley shrubs for the easement. Bivens himself fertilized the shrubs for eighteen years in an effort to make the shrubs grow enough to create a visual barrier. Content to use the west side driveway, neither neighbor complained of what was occurring with the east side easement for fifteen years. During that time relations between the two parties were good.

¶ 4. The latent threat to the neighborliness was the fact that the parties shared a common waterline which ran along the west driveway. The only water meter was in Mobley's name, and Bivens would pay his share of the bill to Mobley. Mobley was informed in 1993 by the water association that only one dwelling was allowed per water meter. Bivens testified that he was told by Paulette Mobley that he needed to get his own water meter on the line. Bivens preferred to run a water line through the unused east side easement, but the Mobleys did not wish this to happen. The chancellor found that Bivens could have continued to get water without the use of the contested, east side easement. The water service to Bivens's property was disconnected in September of 1993, and a tenant he had in a trailer on the property unsurprisingly left at that time.

¶ 5. After Bivens stated that he was going to install a line through the east side easement, Mobley got a temporary restraining order in December of 1993. The Mobleys filed a complaint on February 24, 1994. They sought to have the easement declared the result of a mistaken description, as the west side access was the easement intended. Alternatively, the Mobleys sought to have the easement declared abandoned or lost through adverse possession. A cross-complaint was then filed by Bivens to enjoin the Mobleys from interfering with use of the east side easement. After an evidentiary hearing, the chancellor found that the east side easement across the Mobley property had not been abandoned. It was an meaningless victory for Bivens, though, since the chancellor found that the easement was solely for access and could not also be burdened by a water line. Attorneys' fees of $1500 were awarded to Bivens, though other expenses were denied. After each party filed motions for extensions of time in which to file a notice of appeal, only Bivens actually filed a notice.

DISCUSSION

¶ 6. The appellees Kenneth and Paulette Mobley defend the refusal of the chancellor to grant a right to construct a water line. However, they seek reversal of the chancellor's finding that the easement still existed and had not been abandoned. They would also have us determine that the chancellor erred in awarding the attorneys' fees. To make such arguments regarding a trial court's errors, an appellee must file a crossappeal. To file a cross-appeal, notice must be given within fourteen days from an appellant's filing an appeal. M.R.A.P. 4(c). Though the trial court granted the Mobleys a thirty-day extension to file a notice of appeal, they never filed one, perhaps relying on the fact that Bivens filed an appeal.

¶ 7. Failure to file a notice of crossappeal is usually considered fatal to a crossappellant's issues. Lindsey v. Lindsey, 612 So.2d 376, 378 (Miss.1992). However, the supreme court at least once held that the failure to file a cross-appeal invokes the discretion of the appellate court. Morrow v. Morrow, 591 So.2d 829, 832 (Miss.1991) ("[I]t *461 is within this Court's discretion to either address or ignore the issue"). Were we to use that discretion and give full consideration to the "cross-appeal," we would not find error in the ruling regarding abandonment, but we would as to fees. We examine both sides' issues in logical order.

1. Easement had been abandoned (crossappeal).

¶ 8. The Mobleys argue that the east side easement was abandoned. The chancellor addressed the issue of adverse possession in his opinion, but did not explicitly discuss abandonment. The Mobleys were found not to have carried their burden of showing by clear and convincing evidence that they had possessed the servient estate in a manner adverse to the dominant estate's continued enjoyment of an easement. The complaint filed by the Mobleys under notice pleading rules just states that "at no time has [Bivens] ever utilized the easement for any purpose." Instead, the Mobleys "possessed and used exclusively that portion of their property described as the easement for a continuous and uninterrupted period of fifteen (15) years in an open, notorious, and hostile manner." The complaint definitely alleged adverse possession with its words of legal art such as "open, notorious, and hostile," and inferentially also raised abandonment.

¶ 9. No detailed findings on adverse possession were made, and no findings on abandonment appear at all. As with any such absence, we will assume that the court made the fact findings necessary to support its judgment. Pace v. Owens, 511 So.2d 489, 492 (Miss.1987).

¶ 10. The facts relied upon by the chancellor regarding possession were that Bivens himself provided the shrubs that were planted on part of the easement, and that he walked along the easement to get to the road that lay south of the Mobley property. Also in the record was that Bivens fertilized the shrubs every year. What was not shown by clear evidence was equally important. For adverse possession several elements of possession must be proven: hostile, open, continuous for ten years, exclusive, and peaceful under a claim of ownership. Thornhill v.

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Bluebook (online)
724 So. 2d 458, 1998 WL 850080, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bivens-v-mobley-missctapp-1998.