Clanton v. Hathorn
This text of 600 So. 2d 963 (Clanton v. Hathorn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Larry J. CLANTON & Sylvia Clanton
v.
Frances M. HATHORN.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
*964 James A. Becker, Jr., Watkins & Eager, Jackson, for appellant.
James Robert Gilfoy, IV, Lexington, for appellee.
Before HAWKINS, P.J., and PRATHER and ROBERTSON, JJ.
ROBERTSON, Justice, for the court:
I.
This rural real property dispute pits a landlady against her former tenant. In happier times, the landlady conveyed to the tenant several acres as a home site. The tenant proceeded to encroach modestly beyond his boundaries. The landlady sued to confirm and remove clouds, and the former tenant has claimed permissive use, laches, estoppel and most every other equitable defense one might imagine.
The Chancery Court saw the parties' common boundary line undisputed and found no reason why it should not be enforced. We agree.
II.
Frances M. Hathorn, age 58 at trial, lives in Memphis, Tennessee, and owns approximately 2300 acres of rural farm land in Holmes County, Mississippi. Apparently Hathorn's family has been in the area since at least 1869, and she maintains a second residence in nearby Tchula.
In 1975, Hathorn leased to Larry J. Clanton, a farmer, two tracts of land, the McCarty Place, with which we are concerned today, and a larger tract known as Pine Grove Place. Relations between landlady and tenant were quite cordial in the early years, and the evidence shows Clanton producing yields profitable to all.
The McCarty Place comprises some 125 acres or so. On March 27, 1978, Hathorn conveyed to Clanton a "most irregular shape[d]" 3.63 acre parcel with some 120 feet of front footage on Mississippi State Highway 12. A surveyor's drawing, oriented northward, reveals a shape not unlike the hull of an unimaginatively designed vessel, bathtub variety, with its bow point blunted, kissing Highway 12. All understood that Clanton, who had recently married, would build his home here.
The three bones of contention soon appeared. Clanton lay down a 500 foot driveway meandering from his home east northeasterly to Highway 12, and at a cost of some $8,000.00. Right before it enters the highway right-of-way, this driveway curves northward and follows an old roadbed across land Hathorn had kept. The encroachment is described as "about the size of a pickup truck."
The lands on the southern and southwestern sides of Clanton's property are very low, "not suitable for anything but what it was that being a wet slough." As a part of his home construction, Clanton began digging a pond on this "back" portion of his land, using the dirt to build up the home site. The pond, when completed, served as a barrier protecting the home from snakes, insects and others unwelcome. This pond encroaches onto Hathorn land.
At an unidentified time, but apparently shortly thereafter, Clanton ran a four inch sewer pipe from his home in a northerly to northwesterly direction out to the drainage area near Highway 12, and again encroached upon Hathorn property. In addition, it appears Clanton built an equipment shed on the eastern edge of his property and from time to time parked his equipment over on Hathorn-retained lands.
No written permission was extended Clanton for any of these encroachments. Hathorn insists no permission of any sort was given. Clanton says he had permission sometimes "verbal," sometimes "implied" to dig the pond and use the dirt.
It is not clear when Hathorn first knew of the encroachments. We do know that in 1982, she sought the advice of counsel and had prepared a lease agreement concerning the McCarty Place and which provided
Lessee[s] [Clantons] and their heirs and assigns specifically waive any and all *965 legal and equitable claims of ownership to said leased premises, including ownership through adverse possession, and agrees not to institute any action, legal or equitable, for the purpose of claiming ownership to the parcel hereby leased.
Clanton and his wife signed this agreement on Christmas day, 1982.
In 1983, the Hathorn-Clanton relationship began to sour. Hathorn charges Clanton arbitrarily plowed up certain lands required by government agricultural regulations to be left fallow and that this placed Hathorn at risk of a severe penalty. At this time, Hathorn terminated Clanton's lease on the Pine Grove Place. Notwithstanding, Clanton's lease on the McCarty Place continued through 1987.
Soon after the Pine Grove brouhaha, Hathorn engaged the services of a surveyor who, with all deliberate speed, proceeded to survey, mark and plat the lines on all Hathorn lands. Matters came to a head when surveyor Charles H. James delivered a plat confirming the three encroachments: the pond, the driveway, and the sewer pipe. The encroachments in the aggregate appear to cover less than an eighth of an acre.
On September 30, 1987, Hathorn commenced this civil action by filing her complaint in the Chancery Court of Holmes County, Mississippi. She sought to confirm her title and to remove clouds arising from Clanton's various encroachments. The Chancery Court found the dispute "to be a conflict of a personal nature more than that of a legal question" and lamented that "this court case has caused friction that will last a lifetime." Nevertheless, the Court upheld Hathorn's claims, rejected Clanton's equitable defenses, and vindicated Hathorn's "right to possession of those areas of encroachment, to be effected by this Court at defendant's expense."
Clanton now appeals.
III.
In legal as well as surveying theory, a boundary enjoys exactness and may be so fixed. When theory translates into fact, right becomes entitlement to exclude, which is as great on the periphery as at the core. Each landowner is entitled to exclude all others from the square inch most near the edge, as from the home place or fertile fields near the center. And so the Chancery Court held, although in a sense the case appears much ado about not very much: the worthlessness of the slough where Clanton dredged dirt and built his pond, the small value of the pickup trucksized driveway encroachment, and the ground occupied by the four inch sewer line notwithstanding, these are property in which Hathorn has undisputed rights, reminding us:
Property, a creation of law, does not arise from value, although exchangeable, a matter of fact.... Property depends upon exclusion by law of interference... .
International News Service v. Associated Press, 248 U.S. 215, 146, 39 S.Ct. 68, 75, 63 L.Ed. 211, 223 (1918) (Holmes, J., concurring).
Clanton does not deny Hathorn holds record title to the disputed lands, nor that her boundaries have been accurately surveyed and fixed on the ground. Nor does Clanton claim adverse possession, for the obvious reasons that this suit was brought within nine years after Clanton began his encroachments, not to mention that the Christmas, 1982, lease agreement bound him that he would never claim by adverse possession.
Clanton does claim the Chancery Court erred when it rejected his equitable defenses, principal of which are laches[1] and equitable estoppel.[2] The factual predicate of Clanton's appeal is the same on all points. He argues he made the improvements at some $16,000.00 expense and that Hathorn, *966 who was well aware of what he had done, did nothing for nine years, thus equity should stay her hand.
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600 So. 2d 963, 1992 WL 109938, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clanton-v-hathorn-miss-1992.