Collier v. Gilmore

562 S.W.3d 895
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 14, 2018
DocketNo. CV-18-72
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 562 S.W.3d 895 (Collier v. Gilmore) 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
Collier v. Gilmore, 562 S.W.3d 895 (Ark. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

BRANDON J. HARRISON, Judge

Hostility. It's a term of art under Arkansas's adverse-possession law and is front and center in this appeal, which primarily asks: Can Garland Gilmore and Lesha Prater prevail on their adverse-possession claim against Sean and Kim Collier if Garland Gilmore believed he owned the disputed tract of land for some forty years, has possessed and farmed the disputed area for the same length of time, but was initially mistaken on where the relevant deed placed the true boundary line? This mistaken-boundary-line case "brings us to the most difficult, thoroughly maddening, question in all adverse possession, whether an adverse possessor's subjective state of mind, imprecisely often called 'intent,' can destroy hostility." William B. Stoebuck & Dale A. Whitman, The Law of Property § 11.7, at 857 (3d ed. 2000).

I.

In addition to the common-law element of hostility, the testimony elicited from Garland Gilmore during the bench trial on his adverse-possession claim-and the Colliers' stipulation that an additional five witnesses would have agreed with Garland's testimony regarding where the Lyn and Myrtle Holder/Gilmore boundary line was located-decide this case. The Holder/Gilmore boundary matters to the Colliers because they are the Holders' successors to that boundary line and can take no greater title than the Holders held.1

No one disputes that the parties in this case acquired title to their respective properties from the Holders. It is also agreed that, since 1972, Garland Gilmore has farmed either soybeans or rice on the disputed strip of land although the deed Gilmore received from the Holders did not include the disputed land. The disputed area that Gilmore claimed through adverse possession is an irregularly shaped strip to the east of the Collier homestead and a thin strip to the south of the Collier homestead. According to Gilmore's testimony *897during the bench trial, Mr. Holder told him that the 1972 purchase included all the land up to a then-existing fence that once enclosed the property where Mr. Holder lived. The Colliers seek to defeat Gilmore's adverse-possession claim and use the disputed area as a goat pasture.

Gilmore said at trial that, in 1980, he had leveled the field up to the fence line to facilitate rice farming. The fence was eventually removed; but according to Gilmore, since 1980, the land he had leveled that abutted the fence has remained significantly lower in elevation than the land inside the prior enclosed area. The prior fence-line/rice-levee intersection is the boundary line that Gilmore claimed in this case. The Colliers maintain that the description in their deed controls and that the boundary line should conform to the deeds, not to the prior neighbors' (Holder and Gilmore) understanding of where the boundary line is.

Here is the most important colloquy from Gilmore's testimony during the bench trial:

DEFENSE COUNSEL : ... And you said that at that time there was a fence line [around the two acres] that the Holders put up and-or there was a fence there, is that correct?
GILMORE : Yes.
DEFENSE COUNSEL : And you had a conversation with Mr. Holder about that: is that right?
GILMORE : When I bought the place, Mr. Holder, he said that now "Gilmore," he said, "what you are buying , this right here that's under fence don't go with what you are buying ," He said, "That goes with the house and the yard." And I said: "Mr. Holder, just farm up to where y'all have always farmed?" And he said, "That's correct." ... So that's what I did.
DEFENSE COUNSEL : So is it fair to say that regardless of where the survey lines were, you had permission from Mr. Holder to do that?
GILMORE : I did.
DEFENSE COUNSEL : Did he ever put it in writing or anything like that?
GILMORE : No.
DEFENSE COUNSEL : Just a conversation between the two of you?
GILMORE : Yes, sir.
DEFENSE COUNSEL : And this whole time, you believed that that was your property that you were farming: is that correct?
GILMORE : That was my understanding.
DEFENSE COUNSEL : Okay. So it wasn't your intention to take that property from anybody?
GILMORE : Didn't know there was any conflict there.
DEFENSE COUNSEL : Okay. So it wasn't a-you didn't have a hostile intent to take that property?
GILMORE : No. No.

There was no objection to Gilmore's reciting what Holder had said. And we reiterate that the parties stipulated during the bench trial, and the circuit accepted as fact, that an additional five witnesses would have agreed with the essentials of Gilmore's testimony.

The Colliers called no witnesses during their case-in-chief, so the case was submitted to the court for decision after Gilmore had presented his side. The circuit court took the case under advisement and, in due course, entered an order quieting title to the disputed property in Garland Gilmore and his sister, Lesha Prater. Here is some of the court's order granting Gilmore and Prater the relief they requested:

Both parties acquired their respective titles from a common predecessor, Holder. At the time of Plaintiffs' purchase, *898Holder reserved ownership of the property inside then-existing fence. This finding is supported not only by Gilmore's testimony of statements made at the time of the transaction, but also by the subsequent acts of Gilmore, Holder, and Holder's successors in interest for a period of 40 years. During that time, Gilmore actively farmed the disputed ground each year with all the associated activities of planting, cultivating, and harvesting of crops and general maintenance of the land. Additionally, he levelled the land up to the fence line, creating visible evidence of the fence's location that survived the later removal of the old fence.
....
The evidence clearly established that the parties to the original conveyance (Gilmore and Holder) intended the fence to be the boundary line. Their subsequent actions complied with their mutual establishment of the line, even if the land description did not.
....
[The Gilmores] have met their burden of proof and have established their title to the disputed property by adverse possession..... Plaintiffs' motion to amend the pleadings to conform to the proof is granted.
....
However, because the Plaintiffs have met the burden of proof as to their adverse possession claim, the Court makes no dispositive findings on the alternative theories.

II.

The Colliers appealed the October 4 judgment and urge two points: the Gilmores failed to sufficiently establish their adverse-possession claim; and the circuit court erred when it allowed the Gilmores to amend their complaint at trial to add additional claims for relief (boundary by acquiescence and boundary by estoppel).

The adverse-possession claim.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
562 S.W.3d 895, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collier-v-gilmore-arkctapp-2018.