Djs Development, LLC v. Debra Brawley, Hope Bawcom, Stephanie Davis, and Freeman Davis
This text of 2022 Ark. App. 199 (Djs Development, LLC v. Debra Brawley, Hope Bawcom, Stephanie Davis, and Freeman Davis) 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.
Opinion
Cite as 2022 Ark. App. 199 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION III No. CV-20-657
Opinion Delivered May 4, 2022 DJS DEVELOPMENT, LLC APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE SHARP V. COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 68CV-18-256] DEBRA BRAWLEY, HOPE BAWCOM, STEPHANIE DAVIS, AND FREEMAN DAVIS HONORABLE ROB RATTON, JUDGE APPELLEES
REVERSED AND DISMISSED WITHOUT PREJUDICE
MIKE MURPHY, Judge
This case arises from a boundary-line dispute. The real property at issue is an
approximately seven-acre strip of land running north-south located in Sharp County. Appellees
Debra Brawley and Hope Bawcom filed this quiet-title action against Michelle Norris (as agent
of DJS Development, LLC) and Stephanie and Freeman Davis. The court quieted title in
Bawcom and Brawley on the basis of a finding of boundary by acquiescence. Appellant DJS
Development filed a posttrial motion to vacate the judgment and dismiss for lack of subject-
matter jurisdiction, which the court denied. We reverse and dismiss without prejudice.
On December 31, 2018, Bawcom and Brawley filed their petition to quiet title alleging
adverse possession and boundary by acquiescence; they also asserted a claim for damages. The
court conducted a hearing on March 9, 2020, to determine the ownership interest. At the hearing, DJS, Brawley, and Bawcom stipulated that they owned the adjoining
parcels on the disputed boundary line.1 Evidence established that appellees own land to the east
of the north-south fence line; the Brawleys owned the southern tract and Bawcom owned the
northern tract. Bawcom testified that the property had been in her family for a long time, and
it was deeded to her in 1991. Russell Brawley (Debra’s husband) testified that when they
purchased the property in 1991, Max Sams owned the adjoining parcel on the west side. Max
Sams was the predecessor in title to the Davises. Freeman Davis testified that he purchased the
property in 2000, and when he divorced his wife in 2003, she quitclaimed her interest in the
land to him. Freeman testified he sold the land to DJS in 2018. Dale Schamel testified on behalf
of DJS that the company had acquired record title to the 43.453 acres west of the fence line by
warranty deed and the 7.011 acres east of the fence line by quitclaim deed.
On July 13, the court entered an order finding that the fence line served as the boundary
by acquiescence between the adjoining parcels and quieting title to the 7.011 acres east of the
old fence line in Bawcom and Brawley. The court denied their request for damages. DJS timely
filed its notice of appeal on August 11.2
DJS obtained a new attorney, and on September 2, it moved to vacate the judgment and
to dismiss the action for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction in accordance with Arkansas Rule of
1 The parties introduced two joint exhibits and explained that DJS received title to part of its land from Freeman Davis by warranty deed and the seven acres at issue by quitclaim deed. One exhibit was a survey from 2000, and the other exhibit was a 2018 survey. When appellees’ attorney asked whether he should introduce the actual deeds, DJS’s attorney responded, “I’m fine on ownership. I think, Judge, instead of introducing copies of all their deeds, I just think we’re stipulating to where we marked on that survey is what the tracts are.” 2 Appellees filed a timely notice of cross-appeal but elected not to pursue it.
2 Civil Procedure 60. In its motion, DJS argued that it never actually had record title to the 7.011
acres east of the old fence line that adjoined appellees’ parcels. DJS contended that upon a review
of the relevant land records, the deed that transferred title from Anita and Mack Sams to the
Davises identified the old fence line as the eastern boundary of the parcel. Thus, the quitclaim
deed from Freeman Davis to DJS did not transfer title to the disputed 7.011 acres east of the
fence line because it was not Davis’s to transfer. DJS argued that the Samses, not DJS, still have
record title to the disputed 7.011 acres and therefore should have been put on proper notice
and made parties to the proceedings.
A hearing was held on October 6 that consisted only of arguments by counsel. DJS
expounded upon its argument that the Samses still have record title to that property, and they
should have been given proper notice in accordance with the quiet-title statutes. In response,
appellees generally claimed that this was inconsequential because there was never a dispute as to
legal title on this particular piece of property. The court took the issue under advisement, and
on October 9, it entered an order denying DJS’s motion. DJS amended its notice of appeal to
incorporate the court’s order denying the motion.
On appeal, DJS challenges both the circuit court’s subject-matter jurisdiction and its
finding of boundary by acquiescence. Because we agree that the order granting quiet title in
appellees must be vacated and dismissed, we do not reach DJS’s alternative argument.
Arkansas Rule of Civil Procedure 60(a) provides that “[t]o correct errors or mistakes or
to prevent the miscarriage of justice, the court may modify or vacate a judgment, order or decree
on motion of the court or any party, with prior notice to all parties, within ninety days of its
having been filed with the clerk.” Arkansas Code Annotated section 18-60-502(b)(2)(A) (Supp.
3 2021) provides, “The petitioner shall send notice by certified mail to the last known address in
duplicate, with one (1) copy addressed by name to the person entitled to notice and the other
copy addressed to ‘occupant’, and if the certified mail is returned undelivered, the petitioner
shall send a second notice by regular mail.” Arkansas Code Annotated section 18-60-502(b)(3)
additionally provides, “If the petitioner has knowledge of any other person who has, or claims
to have, interest in the lands, the petitioner shall so state, and the person or persons shall be
summoned as defendants in the case.” Further, Arkansas Code Annotated section 18-60-503
(Repl. 2015) states in part,
(a)(1) Upon the filing of the petition, the clerk of the court shall publish a notice of the filing of the petition on the same day of each week, for four (4) weeks in some newspaper published in the county, if there is one, and if not, then in some newspaper having a circulation in the county.
It has long been held that when there is no compliance with the statutory-notice
requirements, the circuit court lacks jurisdiction to adjudicate the rights to the land. See Koonce
v. Mitchell, 341 Ark. 716, 19 S.W.3d 603 (2000); see also XTO Energy, Inc. v. Thacker, 2015 Ark.
App. 203, 467 S.W.3d 161 (reversing a court’s order upholding a decree that failed to comply
with the notice requirement thirty years prior).
We find Koonce and its progeny persuasive despite classifying the notice requirement as
a jurisdictional issue. In Koonce, the issue of the missing party was not challenged, and the court
attempted to resolve the issue on its own without joining the record title owner. Here, we have
jurisdiction because DJS appeals from the denial of its Rule 60 motion. The circuit court’s denial
of a Rule 60 motion is an appealable decision.
4 Through DJS’s motion, the court was informed that not all necessary parties were
present. DJS presented evidence that, while Freeman Davis quieted title to it in the strip of land
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2022 Ark. App. 199, 645 S.W.3d 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/djs-development-llc-v-debra-brawley-hope-bawcom-stephanie-davis-and-arkctapp-2022.