Glaser v. Bayliff, Unpublished Decision (1-29-1999)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 29, 1999
DocketC.A. Case No. 98-CA-34, T.C. Case No. 96-428
StatusUnpublished

This text of Glaser v. Bayliff, Unpublished Decision (1-29-1999) (Glaser v. Bayliff, Unpublished Decision (1-29-1999)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glaser v. Bayliff, Unpublished Decision (1-29-1999), (Ohio Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

The parties to this case are adjacent landowners, and their dispute arises over a sixteen-foot wide parcel of land that runs between their properties. Appellants/cross-appellees, Matthew and Michelle Glaser, appeal from an order granting summary judgment in favor appellees/cross-appellants, James and Pamela Bayliff, as to the southernmost six feet of the parcel. The court found that the Bayliffs had established an adverse possession of that strip of land. The Bayliffs have cross-appealed the grant of summary judgment in favor of the Glasers with regard to the remainder of the parcel. The court found that the Bayliffs could not show constructive adverse possession over the northern ten feet of the disputed strip. We agree with well reasoned opinion of the trial court that the evidence submitted for summary judgment showed adverse possession of the six-foot wide section of land. We also agree with the court that the Bayliffs' claim for constructive adverse possession failed because the Glasers and their predecessors also used the northern ten feet of the strip. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the common pleas court in its entirety.

I.
The Glasers own the property located at 326 West Walnut Street in Tipp City, Ohio. That property is located on Inlot 489, at the corner of Walnut and Seventh streets in Tipp City. The Glasers purchased that property in 1994. The Bayliffs own the property at 327 West Main Street in Tipp City, where they live and where they operate the Frings and Bayliff Funeral Home. That property lies on Inlots 193 and 194. Inlot 194 is adjacent to Inlot 489, at the corner of Seventh and Main Streets. In early 1996, the Glasers discovered that the property that they were occupying was six-feet shorter, running north to south, than the extent of land conveyed to them by deed. They commissioned a survey which showed that six feet of Inlot 489 lay beyond a picket fence constructed by James Bayliff years before the Glasers purchased their property.

This case originated on December 3, 1996 when the Glasers filed a suit for declaratory relief against the Bayliffs in the Miami County Common Pleas Court. The Glasers sought ownership of the six-foot strip of land lying south of the picket fence. They also sought right-of-way use over a ten-foot alley lying between the two lots, which had been vacated by the city in 1969 and joined to Inlot 194, and over another fourteen-foot wide alley to the south of the vacated alley. On appeal, the Glasers have abandoned their claims over these latter two strips of land.

The Bayliffs responded to the suit by counterclaiming for ownership over, not only the six feet lying south of the fence, but also an additional ten-foot strip lying north of the fence. The Bayliffs had ostensibly purchased the whole sixteen-foot tract in 1978 for $500. The deed that conveyed the property was invalid, however. Thus, the Bayliffs had to rely on an adverse possession claim for the land both north and south of the picket fence.

The relevant factual history of this land conflict begins in 1958. At that time, Inlot 489 was owned by Edna Wells. Inlot 194 was then owned by Otto and Isabel Frings, who operated the Frings Funeral Home on the property. On December 1, 1958, Wells conveyed the whole of Inlot 489 to Sarah Seighman. The deed conveying the whole lot was duly recorded.

Wells died on October 6, 1962. On October 19, 1962, the Frings purchased the southernmost sixteen feet of Inlot 489 from the estate of Edna Wells for $400. That deed was also recorded. The executor of the estate could not convey good title to the sixteen-foot strip of property, however, because the whole inlot had already been conveyed to Sarah Seighman approximately four years earlier. The Glasers are the successors in interest to Seighman.

The Frings purchased the extra property in order to use a garage that was actually located on an old ten-foot wide alleyway that ran between Inlot 489 and Inlot 194. After 1962, Otto Frings used the garage as a private garage, with a driveway that ran through the alley onto Seventh Street. Later, when Frings discovered that he did not have title to the land under the garage, he petitioned the city to formally vacate the old alley. On November 17, 1969, the city enacted Ordinance No. 43-69 vacating the ten-foot wide alley that ran between Inlots 489 and 194. The property was ceded to the abutting property owners. Because Otto Frings had occupied property on both sides of the alley, he took over the whole vacated alley.

James Bayliff began to reside at the Frings Funeral Home in 1965, where he worked as an employee. On January 1, 1971, Otto and Isabel Frings sold lot 194 and the funeral home business to Bayliff. At that time, however, the Frings did not convey the title to the vacated alley or any of the property to the north. Later, in 1978, they sold the alley and title in the south sixteen feet of lot 489 to James Bayliff. Sometime between 1983 and 1985, James Bayliff tore down the old garage on the vacated alley and constructed the wooden fence that now marks one boundary within the disputed property. (A map showing the location of the wooden fence and the vacated alley in relation to the two adjoining lots is attached to this opinion as Appendix A.)

Given this evidence of ownership, the trial court found that the Glasers had held legal title to all of Inlot 489, including the two strips of disputed land immediately north and south of the wooden fence. The court also held, however, that the Bayliffs and their predecessor in interest, Otto Frings, had established an adverse possession over the six feet of land that lay south of the wooden fence by exclusive use of that land for at least twenty-one years. The court nevertheless rejected the Bayliffs' argument that they held constructive possession over the whole sixteen-foot wide strip deeded to the Frings in 1962 and then to the Bayliffs in 1978. Although the court recognized that they held the land under color of title, it found that the Bayliffs could not show exclusive possession of the strip north of the fence. The Glasers and their predecessors had also maintained that strip of land. Accordingly, the court granted summary judgment in favor of the Bayliffs as to the six-feet south of the fence, and in favor of the Glasers as to the ten feet north of the fence.

Both parties have appealed from that judgment.

II.
The Glasers raise two assignments of error on appeal, which are as follows:

I. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN GRANTING PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT FOR THE DEFENDANTS.

II. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN OVERRULING PLAINTIFF-APPELLANTS' MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT.

Both these assignments of error relate to the question of whether the Bayliffs successfully established an adverse possession of the six-foot strip of Inlot 489 south of the picket fence.

To acquire title in land through adverse possession, the party claiming the land must show exclusive possession of the land and open, notorious, continuous, and adverse use of the land for a period of twenty-one years. Grace v. Koch (1998),81 Ohio St.3d 577, 579; Pennsylvania R. Co. v. Donovan (1924),111 Ohio St. 341, 349-350. The twenty-one year period is governed by the statute of limitations for the recovery of real estate, R.C. 2305.04. The remaining elements are creatures of the common law. See Note, Requisites of Adverse Possession in Ohio (1953), 22 U.Cin.L.Rev. 480, 481.

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Bluebook (online)
Glaser v. Bayliff, Unpublished Decision (1-29-1999), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glaser-v-bayliff-unpublished-decision-1-29-1999-ohioctapp-1999.