Disney v. Kendrick

458 S.W.2d 731, 249 Ark. 248, 1970 Ark. LEXIS 1088
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 19, 1970
Docket5-5323
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 458 S.W.2d 731 (Disney v. Kendrick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Disney v. Kendrick, 458 S.W.2d 731, 249 Ark. 248, 1970 Ark. LEXIS 1088 (Ark. 1970).

Opinion

Conley Byrd, Justice.

This is a boundary dispute between appellants Gerald and Alta Disney and ap-pellees Carl Ray Kendrick and Margie Kendrick, his wife. The only point for reversal is that the trial court erred in finding for the appellees on the issue of title.

At the close of the evidence the trial court made the following comprehensive remarks:

“This boils down to ownership of the triangular shaped piece of land on two bases: One by adverse possession, and the other by agreed boundary or acquiescence. Mr. and Mrs. Disney purchased their lot in 1958; have occupied it since then. Mr. and Mrs. Kendrick bought their property immediately east of the Disney property in 1962, and have occupied it continuously since then.
“The pie-shaped strip of land has its point at the south or Old Wire Road side of the two respective properties, and then it fans out running north and its widest point on the north, according to the evidence, is about 30 feet. It is this 30 foot wide, pie-shaped piece, that is, 30 feet at its widest end, approximately, that is the subject of the contr overs ary here.
‘The evidence makes it clear that the legal description of the Disney property sustains the claim of title to this piece of land. The evidence makes it equally clear that this piece of land belongs to the Kendricks by acquiescence and agreed boundary. It is undisputed that a common originator of title, one Fink, owned all of the land which is now owned by the Kendricks and Disneys, respectively. He sold, by mesne conveyances, to somebody named Jaro who then sold to the Dis-neys. That left the Disneys owning their present property lying immediately west of the property then owned by Fink, which, later on some 3% or 4 years later was sold to the Kendricks by this same Fink.
“The evidence, I think, is preponderantly to the effect that during all of the time that Mr. and Mrs. Disney owned the land and occupied it, and Mr. Fink owned and occupied his land, which he later sold to the Kendricks, there was no specific, visible, permanent monument or marker, fence, dividing line, call it what you will, that clearly and obviously and plainly marked the boundary line between the Disney and the Fink properties. But the evidence is equally clear that at some time or times not specifically designated as to date, but in both instances before Fink, sold to Kendricks, two concrete stobs, posts, chunks, however they may be referred to in the testimony, were installed at the southeast and northeast corners, respectively, of the Disney land. That Mr. Disney assisted in the installation of these concrete chunks, and at that time did so with the understanding and belief, which ' was shared by Mr. Fink, that these marked the two corners of thé Disney land. That is, the southeast corner of the Disney land being identical with the southwest corner of the then Fink land, gnd the northeast corner of the Disney land being identical with the northwest corner of the Fink land.
“Sometime thereafter and the testimony is in dispute, that is to say, it is unclear, but sometime after these two concrete posts or stobs were sunk into the ground, Mr. Fink sold his remaining portion of what once was a large single tract to the Kendricks. From that time on, I think the evidence makes it preponderantly clear that there was no open, active dispute or disagreement between, the Kendricks and the Disneys as to where the boundary line between the properties was, but makes it equally clear that, by apparent tacit agreement and by apparent common understanding, the line was that line between the two concrete chunks that had been put in by Fink and Mr. Disney, sanetime before the Kendricks bought the property.
“Subsequent events and particularly, or at least initially, a survey that had to do with some ad-joiniftg lands to the north, and having to do with the outlining of the borders of an industrial park, caused both the Disneys and the Kendricks to wonder whether their lands, respectively, were really bounded the way they thought they were. And a still láter survey, specifically, a survey that is in the evidence in this case, showed that the boundary line was out of whack, it wasn’t where it legally should have been, where the legal calls would put it to be. But notwithstanding that, from 1963 clear on up until sometime in 1968, with this knowledge and belief on the part of both the Disneys and the Kendricks that, somehow, their boundary line was awry, it was not where it really ought to be; but not knowing for sure just where it was, still, they continued to treat their respective properties as if the line was where they had formerly treated it to be. Beginning with the Disneys and the Finks, to start off with, and later the Disneys and the Kendricks, so that the two concrete markers apparently were the starting points and the base points for that north-south dividing line between the Disney and the Kendrick properties.
‘The evidence shows this: That a partial fence, partial in the sense that it didn’t run all the way from the north of the property down to the south on the Old Wire Road, but according to Mr. Carl Ray, about a third of the way from the north line down. This fence was almost exactly on the line between these two concrete stobs. It was there for approximately three years and then it was taken down along its north portion by Mr. Disney, and this apparently precipitated the unfortunate situation that resulted in the law suit. During all of this same time, the mowings of yards by the Kendricks and the Disneys approximated the imaginary line extending between the two concrete stobs.
‘The testimony of Mr. McFerrin, who has lived across the street and a little dab east of the Ken-dricks and the Disneys since back in the forties, is that he clearly recalls a partial fence and it was on the same line as the line of mowing. He remembers, while Mr. Fink still had what is now the Kendrick property, the line of demarcation or separation between the two mowings of the Fink unimproved lot on the east and the Disney improved, residential lot on the west, that is, the dividing line between the smooth, close-clipped mowing of the Disney yard and the rougher, longer, field cutting on the Fink land to the east. As he now recalls it over the period of several years, that line was about the same as the line between the two concrete stobs and the line where the partial fence line ran.
“All of these things simply go to complete the picture that, for whatever reason or combination of reasons, and wholly aside from what the actual line location was, Mr. and Mrs. Disney and Mr. Fink, initially, and thereafter the Disneys and the Kendricks, clear up until 1968, treated that line as if it were the sure-enough line. Now it is true that, beginning sometime in 1963, both the Ken-dricks and the Disneys had serious doubts about whether this was the line, actually. They speculated to themselves and each other that it may well be some other place over here; might even be where a corner of the Kendrick house would be cut off if the actual line were really fixed. Notwithstanding that they continued to treat it as if the theretofore established line continued to be the line. The only explanation, and it is not unreasonable at all, offered for this continued treating of the established line as the line, is the proposition advanced by Mr. and Mrs.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Durham v. McCone
555 S.W.3d 907 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2018)
Clark v. Casebier
215 S.W.3d 684 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2005)
Cummings v. Shults
207 S.W.3d 572 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2005)
Hedger Bros. Cement & Materials, Inc. v. Stump
10 S.W.3d 926 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2000)
Lammey v. Eckel
970 S.W.2d 307 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 1998)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
458 S.W.2d 731, 249 Ark. 248, 1970 Ark. LEXIS 1088, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/disney-v-kendrick-ark-1970.