Green v. Lemarr

744 N.E.2d 212, 139 Ohio App. 3d 414
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 6, 2000
DocketC.A. Case No. 2000-CA-6; T.C. Case No. 1996 CV-0328.
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 744 N.E.2d 212 (Green v. Lemarr) 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
Green v. Lemarr, 744 N.E.2d 212, 139 Ohio App. 3d 414 (Ohio Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

Brogan, Judge.

This case involves a bitter dispute between adjoining property owners over about one-tenth of an acre of land. The dispute has been played out through repeated calls to the police to report “missing property stakes,” general acrimony in the trial court, and opposing motions for a restraining order to prevent the other party from entering the disputed property.

Originally, John and Anna Booklet owned approximately 13.94 acres of land in Greene County, Ohio. On August 13, 1955, a registered surveyor, Ben Pierce, conducted a survey, and a 1.20-acre parcel was subdivided from the main parcel. The small parcel was then conveyed to Robert and Betty Beason on September 6, 1955. At the time, Greene County did not require surveys to be filed, and Pierce *417 did not file a survey. However, the deed indicated that it was based on Pierce’s survey of August 13, 1955.

Subsequently, on April 5, 1957, the Beasons conveyed their parcel to Chester and Miriam Barton. In turn, the Bartons conveyed their land to Wesley and Edith Green on April 6,1959. After owning the land for more than twenty years, Mr. Green conveyed it to his son, Louis, and Louis’s wife, Joyce, on December 18, 1979. Louis and Joyce Green were the plaintiffs below, and still owned the property at the time they filed their lawsuit in June 1996.

The main 12.74-acre parcel was kept by the Bocklets for some time but was then sold. A subsequent owner, Richard Bull, conveyed this parcel to the defendants, Mike and Janet Lemarr, on September 21,1991. At some point after the Lemarrs bought the property, a dispute arose about the ownership of the land abutting a creek or channel. Mr. Green maintained that the property line was on the east side of the creek, which would mean that he owned the creek and the adjoining land. In contrast, Mr. Lemarr claimed that the property line was on the west side of the creek, and that the disputed land belonged to him.

Mr. Green was a licensed surveyor. On May 3, 1996, Mr. Green filed an affidavit with the Greene County Recorder, indicating that the deed conveying the 1.20-acre parcel was erroneous and did not conform to the intent of Pierce’s original survey of August 13, 1955. In the affidavit, Green pointed out various discrepancies between the deed and survey, including the fact that the survey placed the property line on the east side of a stone-walled channel, while the deed placed the same courses and distances on the west side of the ditch. Subsequently, Green commissioned surveyor Randy Norfleet to perform a resurvey. Nor-fleet attempted to retrace Pierce’s original survey notes and concluded that the property line was on the east side of the creek. After Norfleet’s survey was filed in the Greene County Surveyors’ Records, the Greens transferred their property, with a revised description, to trustees. The trustees then transferred the land back to the Greens, and this action to quiet title followed.

The Lemarrs answered the complaint and also filed a counterclaim for slander of title. In the counterclaim, they alleged that Mr. Green had removed survey monuments along the true boundary and had wrongfully filed documents to gain title to 0.153 acres of disputed land. They also raised the issue of adverse possession.

On October 8, 1996, the matter was referred to a magistrate, who subsequently issued three decisions. The first, on October 13, 1997, granted summary judgment to the defendants. The second, on February 19, 1998, corrected some errors in the first decision, awarded the defendants judgment on their counterclaim, and overruled the plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment. Finally, the third decision awarded defendants $602.50 in attorney fees. Eventually, on *418 December 10, 1999, the trial court adopted the magistrate’s decisions, after overruling the objections of both sides. This appeal then followed.

Appellants (the Greens) raise the following five assignments of error:

“I. The trial court erred in confirming the Magistrate’s Decision [sic] failing to find that there were survey pins at the 159 foot mark along Gultice Road, failing to find that there were no survey pins on the west side of the stone ditch, failing to find that the two surveyors hired by the Plaintiff found that there was monumentation of a fallen tree noted in the description, and failing to find that the intent of the original surveyor was to have the line fall on the east side of the natural monument, the ditch, dividing the parties’ property.
“II. The trial court erred in confirming the Magistrate’s Decision [sic] failing to apply the law of boundaries as stated by the Ohio Supreme Court.
“HI. The trial court erred in confirming the Magistrate’s Decision [sic] failing to find the ‘survey’ relied upon by the Defendant was not, in fact, a survey of the Plaintiffs property, but only an attempt to locate the dividing line between Plaintiffs and Defendant’s property and that it did not comport with Ohio Revised Code, Chapter 4733 and its Administrative Rules.
“IV. The trial court erred in confirming the Magistrate’s Decision wherein she failed to consider the letter sent by Randy Norfleet, a surveyor, and the response of the State Board of Registration for Professional Engineers and Surveyors. The trial court further erred in confirming the Magistrate’s Decision wherein she incorrectly found the letters to be immaterial despite the fact that Norfleet’s survey found the disputed property line to be as claimed by the Plaintiff.
“V. The trial court erred in confirming the Magistrate’s Decision wherein she found slander of title.”

On the cross-appeal, appellees (the Lemarrs), assert the following two assignments of error:

“I. The trial court erred to the prejudice of the Defendant Appellees [sic] when it ruled that they were entitled to an award of only $602.50 in attorney fees.
“II. The trial court erred to the prejudice of the Defendant Appellees [sic] when it ruled that they were not entitled to an award of special damages as they related to timber removed from the land, removed boundary markers, and other similar events.”

After considering the record and the assignments of error, we find that genuine issues of material fact precluded summary judgment. Accordingly, this matter will be reversed and remanded to the trial court for further proceedings. An explanation of our decision follows.

*419 I

In the first two assignments of error, appellants point out various factual and legal deficiencies in the decisions of the magistrate and trial court. In particular, appellants focus on the failure of the magistrate and trial court to consider relevant evidence from surveyors and to correctly apply the law of boundaries. Although the assignments of error do not specifically mention the existence of genuine issues of material fact, we interpret appellants’ argument to be that such issues of fact exist. Furthermore, appellants raised the fact that the case was not appropriate for summary judgment when they filed objections to the magistrate’s report.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
744 N.E.2d 212, 139 Ohio App. 3d 414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-lemarr-ohioctapp-2000.