Dodd v. Semmes Development Co., LLC, 2090308 (ala.civ.app. 6-10-2011)

73 So. 3d 725, 2011 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 140, 2011 WL 2279217
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedJune 10, 2011
Docket2090308
StatusPublished

This text of 73 So. 3d 725 (Dodd v. Semmes Development Co., LLC, 2090308 (ala.civ.app. 6-10-2011)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dodd v. Semmes Development Co., LLC, 2090308 (ala.civ.app. 6-10-2011), 73 So. 3d 725, 2011 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 140, 2011 WL 2279217 (Ala. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Elizabeth P. Dodd, the estate of Thomas H. Dodd, Jr., and Holly and Camellia, LLC (collectively referred to as “the Dodds”), appeal from a partial summary judgment, which the Mobile Circuit Court certified as final pursuant to Rule 54(b), Ala. R. Civ. P., in favor of Semmes Development Co., LLC (“SDC”), and Tom Dodd Nursery, Inc., a/k/a Tom Dodd Nurseries (“the nursery”). We hold that the trial court erred in certifying the partial summary judgment as final pursuant to Rule 54(b), and, therefore, we dismiss the appeal.

The pertinent facts are as follows. The nursery, purporting to have a fee-simple ownership interest in a 40-foot by 90-foot parcel of land in Section 22, Township 3 South, Range 3 West in Mobile County (“the easement parcel”), had granted an easement to SDC across that parcel. SDC thereafter obtained the right to acquire a parcel of land in Section 23, Township 3 South, Range 3 West in Mobile County, which parcel is adjacent to the easement *726 parcel, for development purposes (“the development parcel”). Section 22 is west of Section 23. A road known as Mill Street purportedly runs between the easement parcel and the developmental parcel. For reference purposes only, a map from the record depicting where SDC and the nursery assert the easement parcel, Mill Street, and the development parcel are in relation to each other is attached to this opinion as an appendix. The record indicates that SDC must be able to access the development parcel by way of Mill Street in order to develop or otherwise use the development parcel. At some point while SDC was preparing to purchase the development parcel, Elizabeth Dodd, Thomas Dodd, Jr., and Holly and Camellia, LLC, informed SDC that they owned the property that included the easement parcel and Mill Street and that they intended to restrict SDC’s access to the development parcel by way of the easement parcel and Mill Street.

On March 19, 2009, SDC and the nursery filed a declaratory-judgment action against Elizabeth Dodd; Thomas H. Dodd, Jr.; Holly and Camellia, LLC; and Mobile County seeking to quiet title, relief under a theory of ejectment, and injunctive relief. 1 After Elizabeth Dodd, Thomas Dodd, Jr., and Holly and Camellia, LLC, were served, Thomas Dodd, Jr., died; the court was properly notified of his death, and his estate was substituted as a party in the action. On June 3, 2009, the Dodds answered the complaint and filed a counterclaim seeking, essentially, a judgment declaring that the Dodds had an ownership interest in the easement parcel and Mill Street. However, in their answer, the Dodds stated that they made “no claim as to [‘]Mill Street[’]”; rather, they denied the existence of Mill Street as a public way. In their counterclaim, the Dodds asserted that, in November 2000, to facilitate the sale of the nursery, Elizabeth Dodd and Thomas Dodd, Jr., had entered into a land-swap transaction with the nursery. As a result of a surveying error, the Dodds asserted, the November 2000 deed from the nursery to Elizabeth Dodd and Thomas Dodd, Jr., had failed to include the easement parcel. Specifically, the Dodds alleged the following:

“In 2000, [the nursery] was to be sold. Plastic houses, utilized by the nursery, were located on property owned by Thomas H. Dodd, Jr. and Elizabeth P. Dodd. A land swap agreement was entered into between Thomas H. Dodd, Jr. and Elizabeth P. Dodd and the nursery. The understanding and agreement was that Thomas H. Dodd, Jr. and Elizabeth P. Dodd would swap the land on which the plastic houses were located in exchange for all that land to the [e]ast of the homeplace of Thomas H. Dodd, Jr. and Elizabeth P. Dodd, which was the land of [the nursery’s] business office, which ran to the section line between Section 22 and Section 23. In 2000, Polysurveying was hired by the nursery to provide descriptions of the lands to be swapped.
“The Polysurveying surveyor made an error by utilizing a starting point 40' west of the starting point that should have been utilized by erroneously ‘creating’ a 40' right-of-way and demarcating the erroneously ‘created’ 40' right-of-way as ‘Mill Street.’ The ‘Mill Street’ error allotted for 40' for ‘Mill Street’ to the west of the East line of Section 22. When, in fact, ‘Mill Street’ does not exist, but if it did exist, would only exist to the east of the West line of Section 23 and not west of the West line of Section 23.”

*727 In other words, the Dodds asserted that a survey prepared by an entity named Poly-surveying (“the Polysurveying survey”) had erroneously carved out a 40-foot public way for Mill Street located to the west of the section line separating section 22 and section 23 and averred that the Dodds were the rightful owners of that 40-foot strip, which includes the easement parcel. Based on those alleged facts, the Dodds sought a court-ordered correction of the November 2000 deed, which had been based on the purportedly erroneous Poly-surveying survey.

Before the Dodds filed their answer and counterclaim, on May 22, 2009, SDC and the nursery filed a motion for a partial summary judgment (“the summary-judgment motion”) on the issue whether Mill Street is a public way. In September 2009, SDC and the nursery supplemented the summary-judgment motion with a survey performed by an entity named Rowe Surveying and Engineering dated July 13, 2009 (“the first Rowe survey”). The first Rowe survey revealed that the section line separating section 22 and section 23 formed the western boundary of Mill Street; in other words, the first Rowe survey indicated that Mill Street is in section 23. A few days later, the Dodds filed a motion to continue the summary-judgment hearing. In their motion, the Dodds averred that the Mobile County Engineer had been “reviewing the [first Rowe] survey” and “[had] not yet reached an opinion as to the correctness of that survey.” The trial court granted a continuance and rescheduled that hearing for October 30, 2009.

On October 28, 2009, the Dodds and Mobile County moved for a court-ordered boundary survey of the properties at issue (“the survey motion”), pursuant to Ala. Code 1975, § 35-3-20 and § 35-3-21. The Dodds and Mobile County filed the survey motion because, they asserted, there is a discrepancy between the Polysurveying survey and the first Rowe survey as to the correct location of the section line separating section 22 and section 23. The trial court scheduled a hearing on the survey motion for November 2, 2009. The summary-judgment hearing previously scheduled for October 30, 2009, did not take place; however, at the hearing on November 2, 2009, the trial court heard arguments on both the summary-judgment motion and the survey motion. On November 3, 2009, SDC and the nursery again supplemented the summary-judgment motion with a revised survey of Mill Street prepared by Rowe (“the second Rowe survey”). 2 On November 12, 2009, the trial court entered a partial summary judgment in favor of SDC and the nursery, stating that “Mill Street, as depicted on [the second Rowe survey] ..., dated July 13, 2009,” correctly showed that the western boundary of Mill Street was located at the west line of section 23; the trial court’s order also stated that Mill Street was a public way. The trial court certified its order dated November 12, 2009, as a final judgment, pursuant to Rule 54(b), Ala. R. Civ. P.

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Bluebook (online)
73 So. 3d 725, 2011 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 140, 2011 WL 2279217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dodd-v-semmes-development-co-llc-2090308-alacivapp-6-10-2011-alacivapp-2011.