Cross v. Cross

2016 Ark. App. 224
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedApril 27, 2016
DocketCV-15-881
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2016 Ark. App. 224 (Cross v. Cross) 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
Cross v. Cross, 2016 Ark. App. 224 (Ark. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Cite as 2016 Ark. App. 224

ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION II No. CV-15-881

Opinion Delivered April 27, 2016

JOHN CROSS AND GLENDA APPEAL FROM THE MILLER CROSS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT APPELLANTS [NO. CV-14-160-3]

V. HONORABLE TED C. CAPEHEART, SPECIAL JUDGE BRENDA CROSS AND JAMES GARY CROSS APPELLEES AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART ON DIRECT APPEAL; REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS; AND AFFIRMED ON CROSS-APPEAL

RAYMOND R. ABRAMSON, Judge

This is a boundary dispute between two brothers and their wives. The Miller County

Circuit Court found that there was a boundary by acquiescence and that res judicata barred

the claims of appellants Glenda and John Cross, who were seeking to quiet title. Appellants

raise eight points on appeal. Appellees James Gary Cross (Gary) and Brenda Cross cross-

appeal and argue that the circuit court erred in refusing to award them attorney’s fees on

the basis that appellants’ claim lacked a justiciable issue. We affirm in part and reverse in part

on direct appeal. We affirm on cross-appeal. We also remand the case so that the circuit

1 Cite as 2016 Ark. App. 224

court can amend the decree to include a metes-and-bounds description showing the location

of the fence.

This is the latest in a series of lawsuits between John Cross and Gary Cross over the

boundaries of various properties located in Miller County. The parties own several thousand

acres between them in Miller County. This case involves the tract that appellants purchased

from Virginia and William Cox in February 2014. The legal description of the Cox property

calls for a rectangular half-of-a-half-of-a-quarter-section tract. It is bounded on the north

by another tract owned by appellants and on the east and south by appellees. The parties

each own forty-acre tracts that are adjacent to the west side of the Cox property. Of these

two forty-acre tracts, appellees own the southerly forty-acre tract that is separated from their

tract immediately to the south of the Cox property by a tract owned by appellants that meets

at the southwest corner of the Cox property.

The parties’ westerly forty-acre tracts are separated by a lake and were the subject of

litigation in 1999 and 2002. In 2005, the parties stipulated that the north-south line between

the parties was the line on a survey prepared by Kenneth Lynch. This line divided the lake.

The eastern line of the Cox property and appellants’ property to the north of the

Cox property was the subject of a suit brought by appellees against the Coxes and appellants

in 2008. In its decree filed in 2011, the court found that the parties and their predecessors

in title had recognized a fence to the east of the Coxes’ survey line to be the boundary

between the lands in question for more than forty years. This fence meanders inside the

survey line at the northeast corner of the Cox property. Title to the property lying east of

the fence was quieted in appellees. This resulted in a loss of a little more than two acres

2 Cite as 2016 Ark. App. 224

from the description of the Cox property. There is another fence on the western side of the

Cox property, estimated to be approximately sixty feet off the section line called for in the

deed from the Coxes to the appellants.

The present litigation started on July 7, 2014, when appellants filed their petition

seeking to quiet title to the Cox property. Appellants asserted that appellees were trespassing

over the southwest corner of the Cox property between the fence and the section line in

order to access their property that adjoined the western boundary of the Cox property.

Appellants also contended that appellees were claiming the western fence as an improper

boundary between the parties. They filed an amended petition to add the alternative theory

of adverse possession.

Appellees timely filed answers to both complaints. In both answers, appellees asserted

the affirmative defenses of collateral estoppel and/or res judicata. The affirmative defenses

were based on the 2008 litigation over the boundary line between the parties.

The case proceeded to a bench trial. The court took the matter under advisement

and requested proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law.

After the trial but before the court announced its decision, appellees filed a motion

seeking attorney’s fees pursuant to Ark. Code Ann. § 16-22-309 (Repl. 1999). They argued

that appellants lacked any justiciable issue because the issue had previously been resolved in

appellees’ favor in the prior litigation. Appellants responded, arguing that the claim for fees

had been waived because it was not addressed in appellees’ case-in-chief.

The circuit court entered its order on July 15, 2015, finding that appellants and their

Cox predecessors failed to meet their burden to prove their quiet-title claim. The court

3 Cite as 2016 Ark. App. 224

found no evidence that the Coxes or the appellants had occupied the area between the fence

and the line called for in appellants’ deed from the Coxes. The court further found that no

party disputed that there was a previous lawsuit concerning this same fence line, that the

same fence completely surrounded the Cox property, that the court ruled in favor of

appellees in that earlier case, and, therefore, res judicata prevented appellants from

relitigating the same claims, even if the earlier litigation did not involve the entire fence

line. The court also found that appellees had made it clear in their pleadings and

correspondence to opposing counsel that they contended that the fence was the true

boundary of the Cox property by arguing that the issue had already been litigated and

resolved in a previous lawsuit. The court noted that appellees made a motion to have the

pleadings conform to the evidence. As such, the court found that the evidence was

undisputed that the fence between the appellant/Cox property and appellees’ property to

the west was divided by a fence that had been present for over forty years and which had

been recognized as the true boundary by acquiescence between those tracts of property.

The court rejected appellants’ alternative argument of adverse possession as also barred by

res judicata. The court granted appellees costs of $2,500.

Appellants timely filed a motion for new trial and motion for additional findings. The

motion argued that the court improperly relied on the affirmative defense of boundary by

acquiescence that had not been pled and that the order was against the preponderance of

the evidence. The motion also challenged the award of costs as not supported by the

evidence.

4 Cite as 2016 Ark. App. 224

On July 22, 2015, the court entered its judgment dismissing the case with prejudice.

It incorporated the earlier July 15, 2015 order. It also denied the parties’ posttrial motions.

This appeal and cross-appeal timely followed.

In civil bench trials, the standard of review on appeal is whether the circuit court’s

findings were clearly erroneous or clearly against a preponderance of the evidence. Tadlock

v. Moncus, 2013 Ark. App. 363, 428 S.W.3d 526. A finding is clearly erroneous when,

although there is evidence to support it, the reviewing court, on the entire evidence, is left

with a firm conviction that a mistake has been committed. Id.

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Related

Cross v. Cross
2016 Ark. App. 327 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2016)

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