Castle v. McKnight

866 P.2d 323, 116 N.M. 595
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 7, 1993
Docket21045
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 866 P.2d 323 (Castle v. McKnight) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Castle v. McKnight, 866 P.2d 323, 116 N.M. 595 (N.M. 1993).

Opinion

OPINION

RANSOM, Chief Justice.

Plaintiffs-appellants John B. Castle, J. Bob Herell, and the Ellwade Corporation (collectively referred to in the singular as “Castle”) appeal from a declaratory judgment entered against them and in favor of defendantsappellees J.P. McKnight and Beulah M. McKnight (“McKnights”). The trial court decided that a consent clause in a boundary line agreement placed no limitation on the McKnights from withholding consent to allow Castle to move established internal fences and that, in the absence of consent, the clause thus prohibited Castle from construct ing a fence at a location consistent with the true boundaries of Castle’s property. Finding that the agreement implies that withholding of consent be reasonable, we reverse and remand to the trial court for determination of whether the McKnights acted reasonably in withholding consent to erect the fences.

Facts. The Upper McKnight Ranch was operated by two brothers as a single ranching unit until February 10, 1977, when Joe W. McKnight and J.P. McKnight, along with their wives and other interested parties, divided the ranch by a series of special warranty deeds. On March 18, 1985, Joe W. McKnight and his wife sold their part to Herell, the Ellwade Corporation, Thomas F. Thaggard, and James W. Johnson (collectively, “the Ellwade group”). Thaggard and Johnson later sold their interest to John B. Castle. As part of the transaction between Joe McKnight and the Ellwade group, the latter requested that the McKnight brothers execute a “standard” boundary line agreement, the purpose of which was to confirm ownership of their respective ranches based not upon the fences but upon the true boundaries. The agreement specified that “[t]he location of any fences elsewhere than on the legal boundary ... shall not change the ownership ... by prescription, adverse possession, waiver, acquiescence or otherwise.” The agreement also provided that “[t]he parties agree with one another that one party will not change the location of the boundary line fences between the Joe W. McKnight Ranch and the J.P. McKnight Ranch without the express written consent of the other party.” There were no discussions or negotiations regarding this second provision; the attorney who drafted the agreement testified that he left it in as a “good neighbor” provision and J.P. McKnight testified that he did not rely on the “no change” provision in determining whether to sign the boundary line agreement.

For over fifty years prior to the 1985 agreement there existed an “internal cross fence” on the Upper McKnight Ranch that served the purpose of funneling livestock from pastures above one section of the ranch (section thirteen) to pastures on the other side of a sizeable ridge. When the ranch was divided, the fenceline in section thirteen formed a dip at the base of the ridge that protruded inside the true boundaries of the property now owned by Castle. The McKnights had been given an express easement across Castle’s land in that section for roadway and pipeline purposes. Further over (in section eighteen), the internal cross fence again varied from the true boundaries of the Castle ranch. This fence served to funnel livestock to a well located on one acre that was deeded to the McKnights but is surrounded by land owned by Castle. The McKnights and Castle each own a one-half interest in the well. In 1992, Castle began erecting new fences along the true boundary in section eighteen so that he could take advantage of grazing his sheep on approximately forty-four acres of his unfeneed pasture. The McKnights intervened, preventing the construction, and later refused to grant consent after formal negotiations. This declaratory judgment action ensued.

The trial court found that the removal of the dip in the section thirteen boundary fence “would significantly impede the operation of the McKnight Ranch,” but also found that the relocation of the fence in section eighteen “would not have significant impact on the operation of the McKnight Ranch” if Castle provided reasonable access to the well (a condition to which Castle has agreed). Ultimately, however, the court decided that the boundary line agreement placed no limitation on the refusal to consent to relocation of the fence. “The tenor of the Boundary Line Agreement would be materially changed by adding a provision that consent to move the fence could not be unreasonably withheld.”

The McKnights waived their right to challenge the propriety of existing fences. In 1985, without objection from the McKnights, Castle erected a fence (conforming to the true boundaries) that removed a portion of the dip in section thirteen. The court found that the McKnights have abandoned any claim to use the land encompassed by the 1985 fence in section thirteen except as permitted by express easement. The McKnights have not challenged that finding and thus cannot challenge on appeal the propriety of the existing fence in section thirteen. See Springer Corp. v. Kirkeby-Natus, 80 N.M. 206, 208, 453 P.2d 376, 378 (1969) (stating that findings not attacked on appeal are binding on the Supreme Court). Therefore, we limit our discussion to the question of consent regarding the building of new fences along the true boundary line.

No evidence exists to support claim that for the unrestricted right of consent, the McKnights bargained away any possible ownership rights by acquiescence. The McKnights argue that they bargained for the benefit of using Castle’s land and should not lose the benefit of this bargain. They argue that under the doctrine of acquiescence established in Sachs v. Board of Trustees, 89 N.M. 712, 557 P.2d 209 (1976), they had a right to claim as their own the land up to the fence at the time of the sale to the Ellwade group, and that they bargained that right away in exchange for the agreement not to change the fenceline. In Sachs, this Court held that when “adjoining landowners acquiesce in a fence as a boundary for all of the purposes to which a property was placed during the period involved, as a matter of law the doctrine of acquiescence applies to make that fence the boundary for subsequent uses of the property.” 89 N.M. at 719, 557 P.2d at 216. The adjoining landowners had recognized the fence as the boundary for more than twenty years and the Court found that it was built for the purpose of establishing the boundary line between the two tracts of land. Id. at 720, 557 P.2d at 217. The length of time that the fence was recognized as the boundary was a primary factor in the Court’s determination that ownership changed by acquiescence. See id.

In Tresemer v. Albuquerque Public School District, 95 N.M. 143, 144, 619 P.2d 819

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Bluebook (online)
866 P.2d 323, 116 N.M. 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/castle-v-mcknight-nm-1993.