CONLIFF v. Hudson

60 So. 3d 203, 2011 Miss. App. LEXIS 194, 2011 WL 1238816
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedApril 5, 2011
Docket2009-CA-01803-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 60 So. 3d 203 (CONLIFF v. Hudson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CONLIFF v. Hudson, 60 So. 3d 203, 2011 Miss. App. LEXIS 194, 2011 WL 1238816 (Mich. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

ROBERTS, J.,

for the Court:

¶ 1. This appeal stems from the Madison County Chancery Court’s award of property to Walter Hudson by adverse possession, as well as the award of $821 in damages for the destruction of plants on the property. Aggrieved by the chancellor’s award Of property and damages, Rebecca Conliff appeals.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 2. Therman Howard owned an eighty-acre tract of land located in Madison *205 County. On September 11, 1974, Conliff purchased a forty-acre tract of land from the eighty-acre tract owned by Howard. On October 11, 1977, Hudson purchased the remaining forty-acre tract of land from Howard. These tracts are adjacent, with Conliffs tract of land being on the west side of Hudson’s tract. Shortly after his purchase, Hudson had his residence constructed on his property. Apparently, neither property owner had their land surveyed until years later.

¶ 3. An old fence line between the parties’ property was thought by Hudson to be the property boundary. Believing the property all the way to the old fence to be his, Hudson planted shrubs, trees, flowers, and installed a water line on the property east of the old fence. The parties lived this way until Conliff had her property surveyed on August 29, 1996. The survey revealed that her actual boundary line was not the old fence line but was actually within eight feet of Hudson’s home. The actual boundary line now showed Conliff to be the owner of the property Hudson had previously developed east of the fence line. After a disagreement arose between Hudson and Conliff over ownership of the disputed piece of property lying between the old fence and survey line, Conliff prepared and Hudson executed a lease agreement for the disputed property spanning twenty-nine feet in width from the old fence line to what the survey indicated was the actual boundary of Conliffs property. Hudson testified that he only entered into the lease to keep the peace with Conliff. The first lease was executed on September 24, 1996, and was for a term of one year. In the lease, the property is described as:

Beginning at the first metal fence post past the southeast corner of the Tractor Barn go South 200 feet turn East to the surveyed line approx. 29 feet turn North 200 feet along surveyed line, turn West approx. 29 feet to the same metal fence post South of the Tractor Barn described as the beginning point.

¶ 4. A second lease was executed on November 5, 1997, with the same property description, but the lease was now for a term of sixty months. Approximately five years later and at the termination of this second lease, Conliff decided not to renew it. In 2003, Conliff sent Hudson a letter telling him to remove his belongings off the property because “he had trashed the property.” She also filed charges against Hudson in 2003 for violating the lease and malicious mischief. Then, in 2005, Conliff had a bulldozer tear down the existing old fence separating ■ the property and constructed a new barbed wire fence on the survey line which came within a few feet of Hudson’s back steps. She also destroyed the plants that Hudson had planted on the property prior to the 1996 survey.

¶ 5. On August 12, 2004, Hudson filed a complaint to confirm and quiet title to the twenty-nine feet of property he had previously occupied and was currently leasing from Conliff. Hudson then filed an amended complaint seeking to confirm and quiet title to the property, an adjudication that Hudson owned the disputed tract through adverse possession, and damages for Conliffs destruction of the plants on the disputed tract of land. Hudson also sought to have Conliff remove a video camera that was directed at his property.

¶ 6. The chancery court held that Hudson had sufficiently proven his ownership of the property through adverse possession, awarded him the disputed property plus damages in the amount of $821 for Conliffs destruction of the plants and shrubs on the property, and enjoined Con-liff from using the video camera to view Hudson’s property. The chancery court found that the lease’s description was invalid because it inadequately described the *206 property being leased, but even if the lease was valid, the only way Conliff could have reacquired title to the property was through adverse possession.

¶ 7. Conliff now appeals raising four issues:

I. Whether the chancery court applied a clearly erroneous legal standard by ruling that Hudson’s adverse-possession claim was “reactivated.”
II. Whether the chancery court erred in its findings of fact that Hudson had satisfied the adverse-possession element of claim of ownership.
III. Whether the chancery court committed manifest error by holding the lease between the parties invalid for insufficiency of the legal description.
IV. Whether the chancery court committed manifest error by incorrectly describing the boundary line between the parties’ property.

Finding no error, we affirm.

DISCUSSION

¶ 8. When reviewing a chancellor’s decision, our standard of review is limited. Nichols v. Funderburk, 883 So.2d 554, 556 (¶ 7) (Miss.2004). The chancellor’s determinations will only be reversed when they were manifestly wrong, clearly erroneous, or when the chancellor applied an incorrect legal standard. Id. Generally, a finding that the proof of adverse possession was insufficient is factual and requires the application of the substantial-evidence/manifest-error rule. Walker v. Murphree, 722 So.2d 1277, 1280 (¶ 15) (Miss.1998). However, this Court has stated “the analysis of this issue will deal with the chancellor’s holding that an adverse[-]possession claim can be reactivated, and since this is a finding of law we must engage in de novo review.” Gillespie v. Kelly, 809 So.2d 702, 706 (¶ 12) (Miss.Ct.App.2001).

I. Adverse Possession

¶ 9. Conliff first asserts that the chancellor erred in both allowing Hudson to “reactivate” his prior adverse possession and granting Hudson the property by adverse possession. She argues that even if Hudson satisfied all the elements of adverse possession prior to 1996, by voluntarily entering into the lease, Hudson abandoned his ownership of the property. Mississippi Code Annotated section 15 — 1— 13(1) (Rev.2003) governs adverse-possession claims and provides in part:

Ten (10) years’ actual adverse possession by any person claiming to be the owner for that time of any land, uninterruptedly continued for ten (10) years by occupancy, descent, conveyance, or otherwise, in whatever way such occupancy may have commenced or continued, shall vest in every actual occupant or possessor of such land a full, complete title ....

A six-element test is relied upon by the chancery court when assessing claims of adverse possession.

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Bluebook (online)
60 So. 3d 203, 2011 Miss. App. LEXIS 194, 2011 WL 1238816, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conliff-v-hudson-missctapp-2011.