Howard v. Fulcher
This text of 806 So. 2d 328 (Howard v. Fulcher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Leo M. HOWARD, Brenda S. Howard, Betty D. Sisson, John W. Dempsey and Lottie C. Dempsey, Appellants
v.
Max O. FULCHER and Barbara R. Fulcher, Appellees.
Court of Appeals of Mississippi.
*329 Helen J. McDade, DeKalb, for Appellants.
J. Niles McNeel, Louisville, for Appellees.
Before KING, P.J., LEE, and BRANTLEY, JJ.
KING, P.J., for the Court.
¶ 1. The Fulchers filed a complaint against adjoining landowners to quiet title and remove cloud to real property situated in Choctaw County. A counterclaim to quiet title and remove cloud from title was filed by the adjoining landowners, Leo M. Howard, Brenda S. Howard, Betty D. Sisson, John W. Dempsey, and Lottie C. Dempsey (hereinafter referred to collectively as "the Howards"). The chancellor ruled in favor of the Fulchers and determined that they had a prescriptive easement regarding the use of a roadway. Aggrieved by this decision, the Howards have appealed and stated the issue as follows:
Whether the chancellor is manifestly wrong or applied an improper legal standard when he chose a survey which did not find any established government corners and did not use the original bearings and did not compensate for excesses in the distances and which did not coincide with the established landowner corners and was so wrong in failing to find an old land line fence, where one was destroyed by the plaintiffs and gave the plaintiffs a prescriptive easement *330 where all use of a road was by agreement and permission of the true owner of the land.
FACTS
¶ 2. This case arose from a dispute involving ownership of land situated in Choctaw County and a dispute over the location of a section line situated on property in Choctaw County. In 1948, Victor and Okley Romedy acquired by warranty deed ownership of the:
North half of the Northwest Quarter of Section 25, Township 15 North Range 10 East, containing eighty acres, more or less in Choctaw County.
In 1976, the Romedys conveyed to their daughter Barbara and her husband Max Fulcher, a portion of this property described as:
N½ of N½ of NW¼ of Section 25, Township 15 North, Range 10 East, containing 40 acres, more or less.
The remaining 40 acre Romedy tract was conveyed to Barbara's sister.
¶ 3. In 1967, the Sissons acquired a tract of property adjacent to the Romedys, but situated in Section 24, described as:
½ acre Southeast corner SE¼ of NE¼ of Section 23; S½ of SW¼, less 2 acres North side and less 1 acre South side SE¼ of SW¼ and N½ of SW¼ less 25 acres Northeast corner and ½ acre Southwest corner SW¼ of NW¼ of Section 24; all in Township 15 North, Range 10 East, containing 133 acres, more or less.
In 1976, the Sissons, conveyed to Leo and Brenda Howard, a portion of their tract described as:
Begin at the SE Corner of the SE¼ of the SW¼ of Section 24, Township 15 North, Range 10 East and run Westerly along an existing fence 559.0 feet; thence North 10.6 feet to the point of beginning of the plot herein described. From the above P.O.B. run N 62° 30' W 290.4 feet to a point on the South and East side of the existing Public Gravel Road as it now lies; thence run N 27° 30' E along the South and East side of said road 150.0 feet; thence S 62° 30' E 290.4 feet; thence S 27° 30' W parallel to said road 150.0 feet to the P.O.B., describing 1.0 acre in the SE¼ of the SW ¼ of Section 24, Township 15 North, Range 10 East, Choctaw County, Mississippi.
¶ 4. On September 9, 1998, the Fulchers filed a complaint to quiet and confirm title and remove cloud from title against the Howards. The issue placed before the court was where the location of the section line lay. The Fulchers have record title to the north one-half (N½) of the north one-half (N½) of the northwest quarter (NW¼) of section 25, and the Howards own land along the south line of the southwest quarter (SW¼) of section 24. At trial, on May 1 and 4, 2000, both parties introduced evidence to show deraignment of title.
¶ 5. Both parties called surveyors who testified to the surveys performed by them. Don Gregory, the Fulchers' surveyor, stated that based on his surveying method, there was a slight deviation on the bearings used because the original surveyors used a compass while he used solar observations. Mr. Gregory testified that he started his survey near the southwest corner of section 24, which would be the northwest corner of section 25. He testified to having located a pine knot at the northwest corner of the southwest quarter as a beginning point, and based on his conversation with other landowners in the area, believed this pine knot was the true corner of the northwest corner.
¶ 6. The Howards' surveyor, Chris Barker, found an iron rod at a fence corner by using the United States Geological Survey (USGS) Quad map to find a starting point *331 for his survey of the property. Based on Barker's findings, he disagreed with the accuracy of the starting point used by Gregory. He determined that the iron rod located at the fence corner was the northwest corner of section 25, which would also be the southwest corner of section 24.
¶ 7. At the conclusion of all testimony, the chancellor, by prior agreement of the parties, examined the property.
¶ 8. The chancellor found that the land in dispute belonged to the Fulchers, and the location of the section line between sections 24 and 25 was a fence or fence line that ran the distance from Spay Road east to the northeast quarter of section 25. The court determined that the Fulchers were the owners of all of the land south of the fence or old fence line east of Spay Road, and that the Howards did not have a prescriptive easement that existed east of Spay Road. The court further determined that since the Fulchers had used the Lee Knighton Road as an access road to the property for over fifty years, they acquired an easement by prescription which entitled them to use the Lee Knighton Road to access their property. The court granted the Howards the right to place a gate across the Lee Knighton Road conditioned upon the preservation of the Fulchers' prescriptive easement. Aggrieved, the Howards filed this appeal.
¶ 9. While the Howards have presented their claims as one issue, we have divided the issue into three components.
ISSUE AND ANALYSIS
I.
Whether the chancellor was manifestly wrong or applied an improper legal standard when he chose a survey which did not find any established government corners and did not use the original bearings and did not compensate for excesses in the distances and which did not coincide with the established landowner corners.
¶ 10. The Howards contend that the chancellor erred manifestly when he determined the location of the section line based on Mr. Gregory's survey. The Howards argue that the Gregory survey should not have been accepted because it used the original distances but allowed the bearings to vary a little.
¶ 11. It is well settled that chancellors are vested with broad discretion, and this Court will not disturb a chancellor's findings unless the court's actions were manifestly wrong, the court abused its discretion, or the court applied an erroneous legal standard. Andrews v. Williams, 723 So.2d 1175(¶ 7) (Miss.Ct. App.1998) (citing Sandlin v. Sandlin, 699 So.2d 1198, 1203 (Miss.1997)).
¶ 12. In his opinion, the chancellor concluded that:
[S]ince Mr.
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