Bowman v. Blankenship
This text of 785 So. 2d 134 (Bowman v. Blankenship) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Elme BOWMAN, Sr. and Rosena Crump Bowman, Plaintiffs-Appellees
v.
Leon Fitzgerald BLANKENSHIP, Sr. and Mildred Johnson Blankenship, Defendants-Appellants.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*135 Daryl Blue, Pamela Blankenship, Counsel for Appellants.
Bobby L. Culpepper, Counsel for Appellees.
Before BROWN, GASKINS and PEATROSS, JJ.
GASKINS, J.
The defendants, Leon Fitzgerald Blankenship, Sr. and his wife, Mildred Johnson Blankenship, appeal from a trial court judgment rejecting their claim of 30 years acquisitive prescription and establishing the boundary line separating the Blankenships' *136 property and that of the plaintiffs, Elme Bowman, Sr. and his wife, Rosena Crump Bowman, according to their respective titles. We affirm the trial court judgment.
FACTS
The plaintiffs, Mr. and Mrs. Bowman, filed suit on July 17, 1998 to establish the boundary between their property and that of the defendants, Mr. and Mrs. Blankenship. The parties own land in the E½ of the NE¼, Sec. 31, T18N, R3W, in Lincoln Parish. The plaintiffs asserted that the boundary between the tracts had never been established by agreement or judicially, and should be set in accordance with a survey of the property.
The defendants filed an exception, claiming that they had acquired ownership of a disputed strip of land on the boundary between the tracts by virtue of 30 years acquisitive prescription. They claimed that they purchased one acre of land from Roy H. Timberlake on September 9, 1952. They asserted that the plaintiffs' property lies adjacent to their tract, on the east. According to the defendants, Mr. Timber-lake had already established a barbed-wire fence boundary between the properties now owned by the plaintiffs and the defendant. That fence line was not on the boundary line established in the parties' deeds, but was to the east of the boundary line. The defendants claimed that they maintained open and adverse possession of the property up to the fence line since purchasing the property in 1952, and therefore acquired ownership of the property through 30 years acquisitive prescription. The exception was referred to the merits of the boundary action.
At the trial of the matter on July 6, 2000, the parties stipulated that the plaintiffs' surveyor, William T. Lowe, if called to testify, would state that he prepared a survey of the property in question in December 1993. That survey reflects the boundary line in accordance with the deeds by which the parties acquired their respective tracts of land. He stated that he found no evidence of an old fence line. The parties further stipulated that the fence in place now is situated in line with the surveys of the property.
Mr. Blankenship testified at trial that he purchased the property in 1952. He worked in Alexandria, Louisiana from 1974 to 1983 and returned to the property on weekends. According to Mr. Blankenship, in 1952, there was a fence between his property and the tract now owned by the Bowmans. This fence was not on the boundary line expressed in the deed. There was no testimony as to when the fence was constructed. Mr. Blankenship claimed that he used the property and maintained it up to that fence line. He claimed that over the years, he mowed the disputed property, raised cows and gardens there, and parked cars on it. Mr. Blankenship testified that the disputed property measures 40 feet by 100 feet. He claimed that he retired in 1983, but did not permanently return to the area until 1992 or 1993.
According to Mr. Blankenship, Ray Hays owned the adjoining property at some point prior to its acquisition by the Bowmans. Mr. Blankenship testified that prior to 1983, Ray Hays bulldozed down the fence. Although Mr. Blankenship insisted that the fence was bulldozed prior to 1983, he could not supply a date or even a year in which this occurred. After Mr. Hays bulldozed the fence, Mr. Blankenship testified that he stopped keeping cows on the disputed property. Mr. Blankenship put up another fence, basically in line with Mr. Lowe's survey; however, he did not state when he installed the new fence.
*137 The defendants' surveyor, Albert D. Hulett, Jr. testified that he surveyed the exterior boundaries of the property in December 1991, at the request of Mr. Blankenship. He placed the boundary in accordance with the deeds of the Bowmans and the Blankenships and in the same location as Mr. Lowe. According to Mr. Hullet, there were no cows on the disputed property when he made his 1991 survey. When asked whether he observed any evidence of old fences on the property, Mr. Hullet stated that there was an "old fence along what's subsequently come to be east of the boundary line of his property that I established...." He stated that although in a bad state of repair, the old fence line was being maintained. He stated it was also grown up in "privet hedges." He was then asked, "In your field of expertise, what evidence or what finds did you see to determine that there was an old fence line there?" He stated, "There was a post with barbed wire in this particular case. I think it was 3 or 4 strand barbed wire nailed to the post, along with the privet hedges growing up in the fence row. There's a definite line of demarcation." However, Mr. Hullet did not survey the old fence line but dealt only with the boundaries according to the deeds. He stated that in 1991, "Mr. Blankenship was keeping the area up to the old fence between his deed line of record and the old fence approximately 40 feet to the east. He was keeping that mowed and had an old vehicle or two over the line." Mr. Hulett stated that Mr. Blankenship was "distraught" that he did not survey to the old fence line. Mr. Blankenship stated that he thought he owned the property up to the old fence line.
Mr. Hulett went back to the property in June 2000 before trial. No remnants of the old fence remained other than an old electric pole that had been in line with it.
Several people testified that they saw Mr. Blankenship keep cows and abandoned vehicles on the property. However, none of these witnesses could state when that occurred or for how long.
At the conclusion of the evidence, the trial court rejected the defendants' claim for ownership of the disputed property by virtue of 30 years acquisitive prescription. The court noted that there was no showing of how long prior to 1952 the fence had been in place. Therefore, Mr. Blankenship's possession was deemed to have commenced when he acquired the property in 1952. The court reasoned that the bulldozing of the fence was an act of adverse possession which occurred prior to 1983. However, there was no specific showing as to when that event took place. Accordingly, the court concluded that the defendants failed to carry their burden of proving 30 years acquisitive prescription of the disputed property. The court then set the boundaries between the tracts according to the deeds of the parties and the surveys by Mr. Lowe and Mr. Hulett. The defendants appealed the trial court judgment. They argued that the trial court erred in disregarding the testimony of the expert witness that the old barbed wire fence was present. They claimed that the trial court erred in arbitrarily ruling that the appellants did not have the requisite 30 years for acquisitive prescription and that the tearing down of the fence interrupted acquisitive prescription. They further urge that the trial court erred in determining that the boundary could not be fixed by the defendants' adverse possession.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
785 So. 2d 134, 2001 WL 322778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowman-v-blankenship-lactapp-2001.