Charlton v. Crocker

665 S.W.2d 56, 1984 Mo. App. LEXIS 3486
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 13, 1984
DocketNo. 13147
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 665 S.W.2d 56 (Charlton v. Crocker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Charlton v. Crocker, 665 S.W.2d 56, 1984 Mo. App. LEXIS 3486 (Mo. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

TITUS, Judge.

This is a suit involving ownership and possessory rights to three contiguous lots in a platted subdivision situate in Camden County, Missouri. In those parts of their petition which spawned the issues germane to this appeal plaintiffs alleged a right to possession and sought recovery of the property in question (Count I) and prayed that title to said property be quieted in them (Count II). Defendants in answer denied that plaintiffs have any ownership or possessory interest in the disputed premises and asserted by way of counterclaim that they, defendants, are the fee owners of said premises by virtue of adverse possession. The case was tried to the court sitting without a jury and judgment was rendered for defendants. From this judgment, vesting title to the property in defendants, plaintiffs have appealed.

Plaintiffs, husband and wife, base their claim to the disputed land on three warranty deeds executed on July 31, 1981, each of which conveyed one of the three constituent lots.1 Defendants, husband and wife, base their claim upon title acquired by adverse possession of the land for the ten-year period prescribed by § 516.010.2

The land in question consists of lots 9, 10, and 11 in Revelation Subdivision, dedicated and developed by Frank and Bertha Heise. In April of 1971 defendants Tommie and Ruth Crocker purchased and moved onto adjacent lots 7 and 8, where they established their residence in a two-bedroom house. Within that month a number of fires broke out in the subdivision, posing a threat to but never actually harming the Crocker home.3 As their trial testimony reflects, defendants considered the brush-covered condition of lots 9, 10, and 11 a danger to their property and desired that the neighboring lots be cleared sufficiently to minimize the risk of fire.4

To that end they contacted Mrs. Heise as well as the attorney for the subdivision and the Camden County prosecutor. According to Mr. Crocker, both Mrs. Heise and the subdivision’s attorney acknowledged that the condition of lots 9,10, and 11 presented a fire hazard and opined that it would be all right if defendant cleared them himself. The prosecutor was said to have advised that defendant could not get into any trouble for clearing the lots and that, “if [the record owners] don’t pay you for your labor, after ten years you could claim [the property].” The prosecutor also informed [58]*58Mr. Crocker of the availability of the mechanic’s lien as a device to secure payment for labor done on the lots. Before commencing work on the property defendants again consulted Mrs. Heise, who reiterated her previous “authorization” to do so.

Defendants initiated clearing in April, 1971, with what Mr. Crocker described as “a chopping axe and a grubbing hoe.” Sometime later that year — the rather underdeveloped record does not indicate specifically when — Mr. Crocker began to remove vegetation with the aid of a “brush hog” and a tractor. He testified that his son, grandson, sister-in-law, and brother-in-law assisted in the clearing effort at various times (not subject to specific recollection by defendant) by removing brush, raking leaves, picking up rocks, etc. Further, defendant hired one Carl Coffee to “brush hog” the lots on a number of occasions. The record is not as complete as it might be with respect to this activity but it appears that brush-hogging was done “every year” over the six years next preceding trial.5 Mr. Crocker testified to having done some brush-hogging himself — “three or four times” — over the years. Additional acts of clearing by defendants included the extraction of tree stumps, the removal in 1972 of seven pick-up truckloads of trash, and the removal of what defendant estimated to be 35 to 40 tons of rock. Defendants also installed a water line across the property sometime in 1974 or 1975; seeded, fertilized, and limed the property in the fall of 1980; and constructed a fence along the north and south sides of the property in early 1981.

Aside from defendants’ clearing activity, their ostensible exercise of dominion over the property included the placement thereon of certain items of personalty. Among these were a flat-bed trailer, left on the property for approximately one year (the year immediately prior to trial); a bulldozer used to remove stumps, left for a time during 1981; axles and wheels, left somewhere on the lots for three months in 1981; and three 55-gallon drums used as trash barrels, placed on the property at the inception of defendants’ “occupancy” and still there as of the time of trial.

The foregoing catalog of acts performed on the property by defendants does not include such evidence as would indicate what defendants regarded to be the legal significance of those acts. Inasmuch as this issue is the focal point of our discussion, infra, testimony adduced in regard thereto is here presented at some length.

Mr. Crocker testified that since 1971 whenever he had been asked about ownership of the disputed lots and whether they were for sale he had responded by saying they were his and were not for sale. He did not, however, allude to any specific occasions on which such communications took place. He further testified to having once told Carl Coffee that plaintiff Mr. Charlton tried to buy the lots “out from under me” and to having told Mr. Charlton that he, defendant, was claiming the lots and would build a house on them someday.

As mentioned, supra, the record indicates that the sine qua non to defendants’ commencement of activity on the property was that it presented a fire hazard to their lots 7 and 8. On four disparate occasions during trial defendants testified to this effect, stating that their original purpose in clearing the disputed property was to protect their home from fire.

Also relevant to Mr. Crocker’s “attitude” toward his performance of work on the property is the following exchange, excerpted from his testimony on cross-examination:

Q: [by Mr. Foster]: And you expected to get paid for that [the work on lots 9-11], didn’t you? You mowed someone else—
A: To claim title to the land.
Q: Answer my question. — You expected to get paid for it?
[59]*59A: Paid for it by title to the land. * # * * * *
Q: And you expected to get paid for that, didn’t you? For the work that you did on that property?
A: From someone, or the title.

Mr. Crocker testified that he tried to get the Adamses, the record owners until July 31, 1981, to clean up the lots, to “let somebody else do it, hire them or let me do it or sell me the lots” and that he sent a letter to them — the record is silent as to whom specifically — requesting as much. Asked when he sent this letter defendant responded, “It started in April of ‘71.”

On or about April 19, 1982, Mr. Crocker filed a mechanic’s lien against lots 9-11 which stated as the basis for the $4275 “debt” secured the various items of labor performed by defendants on the property since 1971. The lien also recited the following:

This [i.e., the assertion of a lien] is the result of the advice of the prosecuting attorney’s office in April, 1971 when I could not get an answer from the Adams’s (sic) on the condition of the property or what they would do about cleaning it up.

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Bluebook (online)
665 S.W.2d 56, 1984 Mo. App. LEXIS 3486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charlton-v-crocker-moctapp-1984.