Burns v. Stewart

2011 Ark. App. 197, 382 S.W.3d 699, 2011 Ark. App. LEXIS 219
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 9, 2011
DocketNo. CA 10-678
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2011 Ark. App. 197 (Burns v. Stewart) 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
Burns v. Stewart, 2011 Ark. App. 197, 382 S.W.3d 699, 2011 Ark. App. LEXIS 219 (Ark. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinions

DAVID M. GLOVER, Judge.

1 ,This appeal involves approximately five-plus acres of rural lands. Appellant Keith Burns1 appeals from the order of the trial court quieting title in appellees Milton and Verna Stewart and the Stewart Trust, and denying Burns’s counterpetition to quiet title. Burns contends that he proved both a boundary by acquiescence and title by adverse possession to |2the lands and that the trial court’s rulings to the contrary are clearly erroneous. We disagree and affirm.

The facts and legal issues are straightforward. The parties own lands on either side of the section center line. The disputed lands, 5.9546 acres, lie west of the center line and are bounded by a fence on the western edge. By stipulation, four deeds among the parties, none of which contained metes and bounds descriptions of any lands conveyed, and two surveys— one of the lands on either side of the center line — were introduced.

The case, though, turns on the testimony of three witnesses: appellant Burns, appel-lee Stewart, and Jerry Jackson, Burns’s predecessor in interest.

Some facts are undisputed. Stewart first owned the lands east of the center line when he was nineteen but sold the lands to his distant uncle (Roy Mclnturff) the following year. Mclnturff “strung a fence down through the woods,” which is the fence involved in the dispute in this case. Photos of the fence attached to trees were introduced. Stewart later bought the lands west of the center line, which include the five-plus acres in dispute here. In 1972, Mclnturff deeded the lands east of the center line to Jerry Jackson. Then, in 2003, Jackson conveyed the same lands to Burns. Jackson testified that he thought he had his property surveyed right after he bought it but that he could not find the survey now. Jackson identified a 1987 survey he later had prepared, a copy of which Burns and he agreed was delivered to Burns at the time of sale of the lands to Burns in 2003. The survey stated that fences are generally meandering around the property line. The survey- or’s certificate on the plat stated that the plat was prepared from existing monuments, improvements are as above, |Rand there were no encroachments onto the surveyed tract. The remaining survey was prepared in 2007 at the request of Stewart before this litigation. It was of the 5.9546 acres and was prepared after words were exchanged between Stewart and Burns concerning the boundary line between their adjoining lands.

The use of the fence over the years and the parties’ intentions regarding the fence were developed by disputed testimony from the three principal witnesses. First, Stewart stated he owned the lands west of the center section line at the time his distant relative originally installed the fence in 1962 or 1963, as well as when the fence was later repaired. He did not give permission to build the fence but did not object either because it was his uncle. The fence helped him in keeping his cattle enclosed. He had a couple of conversations with Jackson after Jackson bought the lands from Mclnturff in which he explained that the fence line was not the boundary line. According to Stewart, Jackson agreed that the fence was not the line and the parties further agreed Stewart would put up a new fence, if any, which wasn’t done because of lack of money (for a survey to know where the boundary line was actually located). Jackson was Stewart’s neighbor for thirty-one years (1972-2003), during which time the fence was used as a restraining fence. In 2004, shortly after Burns bought the lands, Stewart told Burns the fence was not the boundary line; that it was not straight; and that a crooked fence cannot be a survey section line. When Stewart had the disputed lands surveyed in 2007 and found out where the quarter section line was, he told Burns he wanted to put a fence on the surveyed boundary line. Further, when the issue arose for Stewart concerning Burns’s claims to the disputed lands, he then asked for and obtained from Jackson a quitclaim Indeed (with a metes and bounds description of the 5.9546 acres enclosed by the old fence line) relinquishing any claims to it.

Next, Mr. Jackson acknowledged that he bought his lands in 1972 and sold them in 2003. Jackson said Mclnturff was elderly and did not show him the lands. He assumed the fence was the boundary line and labored under that misconception for about a year. Then, Stewart told him the fence was not the boundary line. Jackson confirmed in court the discussions between Stewart and him about the fence not being the boundary line. He recalled that Stewart came to him within a year of when he purchased his lands and told him that part of the lands on the east side of the fence were his (Stewart’s). Jackson said he told Stewart that was fine and if he wanted to move the fence he could go ahead and do that. According to Jackson, he did not worry about it because the land was not worth that much. Wherever the boundary line was, it was okay with him. Also, according to Jackson, neither he nor Stewart intended to move the property line. He used the land all the way up to where the fence was and let others do the same for the thirty-one years that he owned it. Jackson stated that, at the time Stewart first approached him, he had “either seen a survey of it or a map some place” that showed it as a straight line. Jackson identified his own 1987 survey of his lands and said he conveyed his lands by deed to Burns with the description being the lands lying east of the property line. Jackson testified that he made no adverse, notorious claims against Stewart for rights to the lands lying west of the center section line. Jackson remembered that he did not walk the lands when he sold to Burns but that they did drive over to the fence line. Responding to the court’s questions, he stated that he did not | ¡¡represent to Burns that everything east of the fence line was his; that what he told Burns was that the fence was not the property line; and that it belonged to Stewart.

In his testimony, Burns identified the eighty-three acres he acquired by deed from Jackson. In contrast to Jackson’s testimony, while stating that Jackson did not view the property with Burns and Peggy Carner, Burns said that Jackson did describe it as fenced. Burns also identified his realtor as telling him the lands were totally fenced. Burns recalled that he, Peggy, and his father and stepmother all walked the lands with Jackson on another occasion before his purchase, at which time they all heard Jackson tell them the lands being sold were totally fenced and included the fence. (None of these persons testified at the trial.) Burns confirmed that Jackson showed him the 1987 survey and that he (Burns) relied on the surveyor’s certification. Burns confirmed that when Stewart came to him within a month of his purchasing the lands and told him the fence was not on the line, he countered to Stewart that he bought the lands with the fence. Burns then took photos of the fence, which were introduced. Burns also stated that Jackson had never disclosed any dispute with Stewart over the property line or that the fence was not the property line, but had Jackson done so, the sale would have stopped right then.

After the parties rested, the trial court explained its decision. It stated that the first thing of importance in analyzing the case was determining what Jackson owned because he could only sell what he owned; although he could tell somebody that he was selling more than he actually owned, thereby defrauding them, Jackson could not actually sell more than he owned.

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Related

Brasfield v. Johnson
389 S.W.3d 17 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2012)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2011 Ark. App. 197, 382 S.W.3d 699, 2011 Ark. App. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burns-v-stewart-arkctapp-2011.