CYNTHIA N. WHITE, PAUL R. WHITE, JENNIFER L. BARBER, TYLER R. WHITE, ASHLEY D. HOUGH, AND CHELSEA R. WHITE v. SUSAN R. RANDOLPH; TIMOTHY L. RANDOLPH, SR.; AND HARLEIGH MCKEY

2025 Ark. App. 336
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedMay 28, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ark. App. 336 (CYNTHIA N. WHITE, PAUL R. WHITE, JENNIFER L. BARBER, TYLER R. WHITE, ASHLEY D. HOUGH, AND CHELSEA R. WHITE v. SUSAN R. RANDOLPH; TIMOTHY L. RANDOLPH, SR.; AND HARLEIGH MCKEY) 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
CYNTHIA N. WHITE, PAUL R. WHITE, JENNIFER L. BARBER, TYLER R. WHITE, ASHLEY D. HOUGH, AND CHELSEA R. WHITE v. SUSAN R. RANDOLPH; TIMOTHY L. RANDOLPH, SR.; AND HARLEIGH MCKEY, 2025 Ark. App. 336 (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 336 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION II No. CV-23-686

CYNTHIA N. WHITE, PAUL R. WHITE, Opinion Delivered May 28, 2025 JENNIFER L. BARBER, TYLER R. APPEAL FROM THE SEBASTIAN WHITE, ASHLEY D. HOUGH, AND COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, CHELSEA R. WHITE GREENWOOD DISTRICT APPELLANTS [NO. 66GCV-21-150]

V.

SUSAN R. RANDOLPH; TIMOTHY L. HONORABLE DIANNA HEWITT RANDOLPH, SR.; AND HARLEIGH LADD, JUDGE MCKEY APPELLEES AFFIRMED

CASEY R. TUCKER, Judge

Cynthia N. White, Paul R. White, Jennifer L. Barber, Tyler R. White, Ashley D.

Hough, and Chelsea R. White (collectively “Appellants”) appeal the July 17, 2023 order of

the Sebastian County Circuit Court that found in favor of Susan R. Randolph; Timothy L.

Randolph, Sr.; and Harleigh McKey (collectively “Appellees”) with respect to the following:

(1) the record ownership of certain property; (2) the determination that Appellants failed to

prove either ownership by adverse possession or boundary by acquisition; and (3) the award

of damages for trespass and ejectment to Appellees. We affirm. I. Facts and History Before Litigation

This is a boundary–line dispute in which both parties claim ownership of a strip of

land that is approximately twenty-five feet wide. It all began with Margaret and W.J. Oliver,

the deceased grandparents of appellee Susan Randolph and appellant Cynthia White, who

owned certain property in Sebastian County, Arkansas (the “Oliver Property”). In the late

1960s, the Olivers built a fence running east to west on their property. Twenty-four to twenty-

five feet north of the fence is the disputed property (the “Disputed Property”). In May 1978,

Margaret Oliver (W.J.’s surviving widow) deeded the southern part of the Oliver Property to

appellee Susan Randolph’s parents, W.L. Chronister and Ina Chronister (the “Randolph

Property”) and deeded the northern part of the Oliver Property to appellant Cynthia White’s

mother, Patsy Steele (the “White Property”). Appellees’ amended complaint against

Appellants asserted claims for trespass to, and ejectment from, the Disputed Property.

Appellee Susan Randolph (whose husband is Timothy Randolph) received a

fiduciary’s deed from the estate of her deceased father, W.L. Chronister, to two parcels of

the Randolph Property on June 19, 2020. Appellee Harleigh McKey, Susan Randolph’s

daughter, also received a fiduciary’s deed from the estate of Mr. Chronister to a parcel of the

Randolph Property on the same day.

Appellant Cynthia White received a warranty deed to the White Property from her

mother, Patsy Steele (who retained a life estate), on April 19, 2016. Ms. Steele died in June

2020; accordingly, appellant Cynthia White became the sole owner.

2 On January 20, 2021, appellant Cynthia White executed and filed a quitclaim deed

concerning the White Property to herself; her husband, Paul White; and other family

members who are also named Appellants in the lawsuit. Appellees and Appellants recorded

deeds that describe adjoining/abutting properties, but all properties mentioned herein were

previously owned in their entirety by the Olivers.

On August 12, 2020, Appellees directed their attorney Paul Post to send a letter to

Appellants demanding that they remove a storage building and fence from the Disputed

Property, or their failure to do so would result in litigation. The Whites did not comply with

the request, and accordingly, on August 9, 2021, Appellees filed suit against Appellants.

II. Litigation

A. Pretrial Pleadings and Hearing

As reflected in Appellees’ complaint,1 Appellees sued Appellants for trespass and

ejectment from the Disputed Property pursuant to Arkansas Code Annotated sections 18-

60-201 et seq. (Repl. 2015).2 In paragraph 7 of their amended answer, Appellants asserted

1 Attached to the complaint as exhibits were the fiduciary deed conveying two tracts of property to appellee Susan Randolph and a scrivener’s error affidavit; and the fiduciary deed to Harleigh McKey and a scrivener’s error affidavit. 2 Under Ark. Code Ann. § 18-60-201, “the action of ejectment may be maintained in all cases in which the plaintiff is legally entitled to the possession of the premises.” For a plaintiff to recover for ejectment, “it shall be sufficient for him or her to show that, at the time of the commencement of the action, the defendant was in possession of the premises and that the plaintiff had title thereto, or had the right to the possession thereof as is declared by §§ 18-60-201 and 18-60-202.” Ark. Code Ann. § 18-60-206.

3 that the purported property lines reflected in an August 30, 2021 survey done by Jim Higby

(“Higby”) of Cornerstone Surveying showed that they are the record legal owners of the

Disputed Property; that the survey is “based” on the legal description stated in the January

20, 2021 quitclaim deed executed by appellant Cynthia White; and that the property lines

shown in that survey are “consistent” with the property lines described in their 2021

quitclaim deed.3 In paragraph 8 of the amended answer, Appellants asserted that they have

legal title to the property as set out in the survey, which included the Disputed Property.4

However, Higby’s survey contains a disclaimer: “Title Research Note: In addition to the

initial documents received by the client, or their representative, only limited deed research was

performed by this company during this survey. Therefore, please have a reputable title company confirm

the surveyed property and the acreage shown.” (Emphasis added.)

Appellees filed a motion to strike portions of Appellants’ amended answer—

specifically, portions of paragraphs 7 and 8—as being, among other alleged inaccuracies, “an

assertion that the [Appellants] have conflicting or competing record legal title (i.e. prima

facie evidence of title) to all of the real property described in their survey (Exhibit “B”),

resting upon the blatantly false assertion that the survey (which is dated 21 days after the

filing of the lawsuit) is ‘based on legal description attached to the survey.’” In addition,

Appellees sought the assistance of Waco Title of Fort Smith and its lead title examiner, Opal

3 The quitclaim deed was attached as an exhibit to the Appellants’ answer. 4 The document titled “Survey for Cindy White” was attached as an exhibit.

4 Hilderbrand (“Hilderbrand”), to examine and compare the Higby survey and all the various

deeds involved in the lawsuit.

By letter dated January 4, 2022, Appellees’ attorney informed the circuit court and

opposing counsel that Hilderbrand would be called as a witness at the hearing on their

motion to strike. At the February 10 motion-to-strike hearing, Hilderbrand testified that she

had twenty-three years’ experience in the title industry. She reviewed each of the five legal

descriptions—including Appellees’ recorded deeds and scrivener’s error affidavit legal

descriptions; Appellants’ quitclaim deed; and the August 30, 2021 Higby “Survey for

Cynthia White” legal description. She input each of them into an industry-standard title

computer program called Deed Plotter, and it created a precise platting/drawing that

illustrated where each of the five legal descriptions are located. Hilderbrand found that there

is not any conflict or overlapping of Appellees’ and Appellants’ record legal descriptions. She

also found that the Higby survey legal description is not the same as, nor is it consistent with,

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