Brown v. Jacobsen Land & Cattle Co.

302 Neb. 538
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 2019
DocketS-18-803
StatusPublished

This text of 302 Neb. 538 (Brown v. Jacobsen Land & Cattle Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Jacobsen Land & Cattle Co., 302 Neb. 538 (Neb. 2019).

Opinion

Nebraska Supreme Court Online Library www.nebraska.gov/apps-courts-epub/ 06/07/2019 09:08 AM CDT

- 538 - Nebraska Supreme Court A dvance Sheets 302 Nebraska R eports BROWN v. JACOBSEN LAND & CATTLE CO. Cite as 302 Neb. 538

Terry P. Brown and Linda S. Brown, husband and wife, appellees, v. Jacobsen Land and Cattle Company, a Nebraska corporation, et al., appellees, and State of Nebraska ex rel. Game and Parks Commission, intervenor-appellant. ___ N.W.2d ___

Filed March 15, 2019. No. S-18-803.

1. Equity: Quiet Title. A quiet title action sounds in equity. 2. Equity: Appeal and Error. On appeal from an equity action, an appel- late court decides factual questions de novo on the record and, as to questions of both fact and law, is obligated to reach a conclusion inde- pendent of the trial court’s determination. 3. Adverse Possession: Proof: Time. A party claiming title through adverse possession must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the adverse possessor has been in (1) actual, (2) continuous, (3) exclu- sive, (4) notorious, and (5) adverse possession under a claim of owner- ship for the statutory period of 10 years. 4. Adverse Possession: Words and Phrases. A possession that is adverse is under a claim of ownership. Claim of ownership or claim of right means “hostile,” and these terms describe the same element of adverse possession. The word “hostile,” when applied to the possession of an occupant of real estate holding adversely, is not to be construed as showing ill will, or that the occupant is an enemy of the person holding the legal title, but means an occupant who holds and is in possession as owner and therefore against all other claimants of the land. 5. Adverse Possession: Notice. The purpose of prescribing the manner in which an adverse holding will be manifested is to give notice to the real owner that his or her title or ownership is in danger so that he or she may, within the period of limitations, take action to protect his or her interest. It is the nature of the hostile possession that con- stitutes the warning, not the intent of the claimant when he or she takes possession. - 539 - Nebraska Supreme Court A dvance Sheets 302 Nebraska R eports BROWN v. JACOBSEN LAND & CATTLE CO. Cite as 302 Neb. 538

6. Adverse Possession: Title. Possession of property by permission can never ripen into title by adverse possession unless there is a change in the nature of possession which is brought to the attention of the owner in some plain and unequivocal manner that the person in possession is claiming adversely thereby. 7. Adverse Possession: Leases: Intent. Entering real property as part of a lease agreement is entering it with permission and with acknowledgment of the owner’s superior title and is not entering the land with hostile or adverse intent. 8. Adverse Possession: Landlord and Tenant: Notice: Intent. A tenant cannot assert ownership by adverse possession unless he or she first sur- renders possession or, by some unequivocal act, notifies the landlord he or she no longer holds under the lease agreement. 9. Adverse Possession. A permissive use remains permissive where an original owner permitted the use and devised the land to another who simply continued to permit the use. 10. Adverse Possession: Presumptions. As between parties sustaining parental and filial relations, the possession of land of the one by the other is presumed to be permissive. 11. Landlord and Tenant: Words and Phrases. In the common law, a tenant or other lawful occupant who holds over without right is a tenant at sufferance. 12. Landlord and Tenant: Contracts. A tenancy at sufferance does not require privity of contract or estate between the holdover occupant and the property’s record owner. 13. Adverse Possession: Landlord and Tenant. A tenancy at sufferance is a permissive interest; it is not an adverse possession and cannot be the basis for adverse possession.

Appeal from the District Court for Banner County: Derek C. Weimer, Judge. Reversed. Douglas J. Peterson, Attorney General, and Charles E. Chamberlin for intervenor-appellant. Andrew W. Snyder, of Chaloupka, Holyoke, Snyder, Chaloupka & Longoria, P.C., L.L.O., for appellees Terry P. Brown and Linda S. Brown. Heavican, C.J., Miller-Lerman, Cassel, Stacy, Funke, Papik, and Freudenberg JJ. - 540 - Nebraska Supreme Court A dvance Sheets 302 Nebraska R eports BROWN v. JACOBSEN LAND & CATTLE CO. Cite as 302 Neb. 538

Miller-Lerman, J. NATURE OF CASE Terry P. Brown (Brown) and Linda S. Brown, husband and wife (collectively the Browns), filed an adverse posses- sion action in the district court for Banner County against the adjacent record property owner, Jacobsen Land and Cattle Company (Jacobsen), to quiet title in disputed agricultural land to the north of the Browns’ property. The Nebraska Game and Parks Commission (the State) intervened due to a purported purchase agreement with Jacobsen by which the State was to acquire the disputed land and other land. The State was permit- ted to present evidence. See Brown v. Jacobsen Land & Cattle Co., 297 Neb. 541, 900 N.W.2d 765 (2017). The State opposed the Browns’ claim and also asserted that it was entitled to relief under various equitable doctrines, because the State alleged that it had relied on Brown’s purported misrepresenta- tions regarding the Browns’ interest in the disputed land. After trial, the district court quieted title to the disputed land in the Browns, and the State appealed. Because the Browns’ interest in the disputed land began with permission and did not ripen into adverse possession, we reverse.

STATEMENT OF FACTS Jacobsen is the record owner of agricultural land in Banner County, Nebraska. Brown is a longtime farmer and rancher in Banner County and owns land adjacent to and south of Jacobsen’s property. The disputed land claimed by the Browns consists of approximately 77 acres and is located in an area within Jacobsen’s recorded land. For many years, the disputed land has been fenced in and, as a practical matter, enclosed with the Browns’ land used for grazing cattle to the south. This fence essentially forms the perimeter of the disputed land. The disputed land has been adequately described as follows: Beginning at the west corner of the boundary line between the Jessup/Jacobson and Bud Jessup/Brown properties, the fence is on the true boundary line until it encounters - 541 - Nebraska Supreme Court A dvance Sheets 302 Nebraska R eports BROWN v. JACOBSEN LAND & CATTLE CO. Cite as 302 Neb. 538

hardpan. . . . The fence then turns north following a ridge- line that eventually turns east and then south back to the true property boundary encompassing approximately 77 acres of the Jessup/Jacobson property. Brief for appellant at 10. The evidence indicates, and the district court found, that Stanley Jessup, Sr., who owned the land to the south, built the fence and used the land to the north, which was owned by his brother, Frank Jessup, and under principles recited in our analysis, Stanley’s use was permissive. After transfers within Frank’s family, John Jessup and Alan Jessup sold the land, including the disputed land, to Jacobsen in 2014. The Browns’ property was formerly owned by Stanley and, later, by Stanley “Bud” Jessup, Jr. (Bud). Brown helped Bud with his ranching operation on the land, including the disputed land, prior to the 1980’s. In the 1980’s, Brown began to lease property, including the disputed property, from Bud. Brown testified that it was at this point, with permission from Bud, that he began grazing cattle on the disputed property. The oral lease continued until 1992, when Brown purchased the Browns’ property and other real property from Bud. The 1992 sale did not include the disputed land, but Brown continued to use the disputed land as he had under the lease.

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Bluebook (online)
302 Neb. 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-jacobsen-land-cattle-co-neb-2019.