Double J Farmlands, Inc. v. Paradise Baptist Church

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 5, 2007
Docket2007-CA-01537-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Double J Farmlands, Inc. v. Paradise Baptist Church (Double J Farmlands, Inc. v. Paradise Baptist Church) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Double J Farmlands, Inc. v. Paradise Baptist Church, (Mich. 2007).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2007-CA-01537-SCT

DOUBLE J FARMLANDS, INC.

v.

PARADISE BAPTIST CHURCH, ET AL. AND BETTY DOWNS TYLER

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/05/2007 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. PERCY L. LYNCHARD, JR. COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: TATE COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: PARKER HAYS STILL REBECCA S. THOMPSON ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: MILDRED J. LESURE NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - REAL PROPERTY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 12/04/2008 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

EN BANC.

DICKINSON, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Petitioner’s adverse-possession claim to approximately six-and-a-half acres (the “6.5-

Acre Tract”) was denied by the Tate County Chancery Court, which held that the plaintiffs

failed to meet their burden of proving their possession was “hostile.” We affirm.

BACKGROUND FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

¶2. In 1961, Mrs. Omega Thomas conveyed fifty acres of property 1 (the “50-Acre Tract”)

to Harvey E. Tyler and his wife, Betty Downs Tyler. In 2005, after Mr. Tyler’s death, Mrs.

1 The disputed 6.5-Acre Tract in dispute is part of this fifty-acre tract of land. Tyler conveyed by warranty deed the 50-Acre Tract to the Paradise Baptist Church (“Paradise”).

¶3. In 1995, Joyce Roseborough White conveyed a large tract of property (the “Double

J Property”) to Appellant Double J Farmlands. A portion of the Double J Property abutted

the 50-Acre Tract. Although the deed conveying the Double J Property specifically excluded

the 50-Acre Tract,2 a fence around the Double J Property included the part of the 50-Acre

Tract which is in dispute, that is, the 6.5-Acre Tract.

¶4. In 2005, as part of its acquisition of the 50-Acre Tract from Mrs. Tyler, Paradise

ordered a survey. The survey, which was completed in September 2005, revealed that six-

and-a-half acres of its property (the 6.5-Acre Tract) was inside Double J’s fence. Double J

was aware of both the survey and Paradise’s application for a change in zoning of the 6.5-

Acre Tract. However, it took no action against Paradise or the surveyor until February 2006,

when it filed suit against Paradise to quiet and confirm title to the 6.5-Acre Tract by adverse

possession. Paradise answered and filed a third-party complaint against Betty Tyler for

breach of the Warranty Deed.

2 The Warranty Deed of Exchange stated in pertinent part:

FOR AND IN CONSIDERATION of the sum of Ten Dollars ($10.00), cash in hand paid and in further consideration of a certain exchange of stock of the Grantee to me, the receipt and sufficiency of all of which are hereby acknowledged, I, JOYCE ROSEBOROUGH WHITE, do hereby sell, convey, warrant, swap, exchange and deliver unto DOUBLE J. FARMLANDS, INC., an Arkansas corporation, the following described real property located and situated in Tate County, Mississippi, and more particularly described as follows, to-wit:

TRACT I

All, less the South 50 acres of the East Half of the Northeast Quarter, and less 27 acres in the NE corner of the Northeast Quarter of the Section 35, Township 5, Range B West, Tate County, Mississippi.

2 ¶5. Double J moved for summary judgment on its adverse possession claim to the 6.5-

Acre Tract. In response, Paradise submitted an affidavit by Betty Tyler, which stated in

relevant part:

4. My husband Harvey Tyler, deceased, maintained and leased the property and at other times farmed the land. It has always been my understanding the subject property belonged to me and my husband.

5. Sometimes, I accompanied him to check on the property which included the 6.5 acres.

6. I nor my husband ever recognized or acquiesced that the fence represented a boundary line separating our property from the adjacent landowners. Nor did we know that Double J Farms claimed this 6.5 acres as their own over and against us.

¶6. Based, in part, on Mrs. Tyler’s affidavit, the chancellor denied Double J’s motion for

summary judgement. After deposing Mrs. Tyler, Double J – claiming the affidavit was

fraudulent and submitted in bad faith – filed a motion seeking reconsideration of its summary

judgment motion. The chancellor denied the motion and proceeded with a bench trial.

¶7. Johnny H. White, vice-president and stockholder of Double J, testified that he

believed the property deeded to Double J in 1995 included the six-and-a-half acres and, even

if the belief was erroneous, because the six-and-a-half acres was within their fence, Double

J owned it and it was, in fact, Double J’s property. He further testified that the property had

been used by his company or its predecessors in title for more than fifty years, and that he

believed Double J had paid taxes on the six-and-a-half acres for many years. He admitted

that Double J did not maintain the fence, but claimed that Double J depended on its lessee,

Herbert Whalen, to maintain it. He further testified he was aware the fence had been

replaced and maintained by the Tyler family.

3 ¶8. Herbert Whalen, Double J’s lessee for more than twenty years, testified he believed

the 6.5-Acre Tract had always been a part of his lease and he had been raising his cattle on

that tract. Moreover, he treated the fence as a boundary line and, until the survey began in

2005, he was under the impression that Double J or its predecessors in title owned the 6.5-

Acre Tract. He also testified that he maintained the fence on his side.

¶9. Walter McKellar, a long-time neighbor, testified it was his general understanding that

all of the property behind the fence belonged to Double J or its predecessors in title. He

admitted, however, that he was not familiar with the particular 6.5-Acre Tract in

controversy.

¶10. Double J called two adverse witnesses – Mrs. Tyler, the counter-defendant, and her

son, Jody Tyler. However, the chancellor discounted both their testimonies, finding that Mrs.

Tyler was “an elderly lady, who was experiencing mental problems as her testimony was

wrought with contradictions and was unreliable”; and that Jody Tyler’s “relationship with

his mother has impaired his judgment,” and that his testimony was indicative of his obvious

bias to act against his mother’s interests.3

¶11. At the conclusion of Double J’s case-in-chief, Paradise moved for dismissal pursuant

to Rule 41(b) of the Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure. The chancellor granted the

motion, finding that the property deeded to Double J specifically excluded the 50-Acre Tract

of land owned by the Tylers which, in turn, included the 6.5-Acre Tract. The chancellor gave

weight to the fact that the fence had been maintained by the Tylers. He also found it

3 Jody Tyler had been enjoined by Justice Court Judge Embry from “having any contact” with Betty Tyler. Moreover, he admittedly sought out Mr. White in order to help him obtain title to the property.

4 significant that Double J did nothing to eject or evict Paradise or its surveyors. Accordingly,

the chancellor held that Double J had failed to prove that its possession of the 6.5-Acre Tract

was hostile – a necessary element of an adverse possession claim – and that Paradise’s

motion to dismiss should be granted. Aggrieved, Double J timely perfected its appeal.

ANALYSIS

¶12. A motion for directed verdict granted by the court, sitting without a jury, is

procedurally a dismissal on the merits under Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 41(b).

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Double J Farmlands, Inc. v. Paradise Baptist Church, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/double-j-farmlands-inc-v-paradise-baptist-church-miss-2007.