James L. Braswell, Sr. v. James F. Amick (2)

CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 6, 2024
Docket2020-000458
StatusPublished

This text of James L. Braswell, Sr. v. James F. Amick (2) (James L. Braswell, Sr. v. James F. Amick (2)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James L. Braswell, Sr. v. James F. Amick (2), (S.C. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA In The Court of Appeals

James L. Braswell, Sr., Respondent-Appellant,

v.

James F. Amick, Appellant-Respondent.

Appellate Case No. 2020-000458

Appeal From Newberry County Grace Gilchrist Knie, Circuit Court Judge

Opinion No. 6054 Heard April 20, 2023 – Filed March 27, 2024

AFFIRMED

Karl Stephen Brehmer, of Brown & Brehmer, and James Donald Floyd, of Gibbs Law Firm, LLC, both of Columbia, for Appellant.

Jennifer Dowd Nichols and Samuel M. Price, Jr., both of Nichols & Price, of Newberry, for Respondent.

MCDONALD, J.: In this declaratory judgment action, James F. Amick argues the circuit court erred in finding James L. Braswell, Sr. 1 had an appurtenant prescriptive easement across Amick's land. Amick contends the circuit court used an incorrect test in declaring the existence of the easement and failed to make

1 Braswell chose not to file a final appellant's brief; therefore, his cross-appeal is dismissed. findings necessary to show Braswell's "use of the dirt road was open and notorious by clear and convincing evidence." We affirm.

Facts and Procedural History

Braswell sought a judgment declaring the existence of a right-of-way over Amick's property in order to access his farmland from Highway 76 in Newberry County. Braswell owns 120 acres (the Braswell Property) with no access to Highway 76; Amick owns a 17.08-acre tract along Highway 76 (the Amick Property). Both properties border a tract to the west known as the Ballentine Property. 2 The dirt road over which Braswell claims an easement runs across the Amick Property along the side of the Ballentine Property. However, title searches and surveys performed in connection with this litigation revealed a 12.5-foot gap between the Ballentine Property and the Amick Property; this gap property, owned by Sula Miller, was never conveyed to Amick. Thus, although Braswell sought a twenty-five-foot easement, the circuit court addressed only the 12.5-foot portion of the road on the Amick Property.

In 1964, Miller conveyed a 4.04-acre parcel and a three-acre parcel to L.K. Bedenbaugh. In 1966, Bedenbaugh conveyed his land to Henry Bickley; the property was described as bound "on the West by a dirt road which separates same from lands of Ballentine." Later that year, Bickley's estate conveyed approximately twenty acres to Bedenbaugh, including a seven-acre parcel described as bound "by a dirt road which separates the conveyed premises from the lands of Ballentine." In 1967, Bedenbaugh conveyed the land to Oscar Harley and again the deed described "a dirt road which separates the conveyed premises from the lands of Ballentine." In 1971, Harley conveyed the property to Steven and Lynn Gaston; this deed again referenced the dirt road. The Gastons conveyed the land to Grady Tarlton in 1972 and although the description did not reference the dirt road, it was the same land conveyed to the Gastons by Harley, other than a one-acre parcel the Gastons retained. In 1979, Grace Tarlton conveyed 17.08 acres to H.L. and Thelma Brock, including the land from the Gastons. This deed's property description incorporated by reference a 1979 plat prepared by Claude Johnson.3

2 The Braswell family (and others) refer to the western parcel as the "Ballentine side" and the eastern parcel as the "Parr side." 3 A 1964 plat, also prepared by Johnson, shows the 12.5-foot strip bordering the Ballentine Property. This 12.5-foot strip from the 1964 plat is referred to as a On June 8, 1988, Amick and his wife purchased their tract from the Brocks. This deed describes the Amick Property as:

All that certain piece, parcel or tract of land, consisting of 17.080 acres, more or less, located on U.S. Highway No. 76, in the County of Newberry, State of South Carolina, with the following buttings, boundings and delineations, to-wit: beginning at the northernmost point and running on a southeasterly direction along the right-of-way of U.S. Highway No. 76 for a distance of 268.43 feet to an iron pin; thence running in a southwesterly direction along the tract of land conveyed to Grace K. Tarlton by Grady Tarlton for a distance of 410 feet to an iron pin; thence running in an southeasterly direction along the tract of land conveyed to Grace K. Tarlton for a distance of 290 feet to an iron pin; thence running in a southwesterly direction along the right-of-way of a farm road and the lands now or formerly of Sula Miller Harley for a distance of 457.53 feet to an iron pin; thence running along the lands, now or formerly of Sula Miller Harley in the aggregate of 320.22 feet to an iron pin located in a pond; thence running in a northwesterly direction along the lands of James Braswell for a distance of 329.31 feet to an iron pin; thence running in a northeasterly direction for a distance of 887.27 feet along the lands of James Braswell to an iron pin; thence [] running in a northwesterly direction for a distance of 198.05 feet to an iron pin; thence running in a northeasterly direction along the lands of William Ballentine for a distance of 604.97 feet to an iron pin, the point of beginning. Reference is hereby craved to and incorporated as a part of this description to a plat entitled "Tarlton Tract", prepared by Claude E. Johnson, L.S., dated August 14, 1979, which plat is of record in the office of the Clerk of Court for Newberry County in Plat Book AU at page 14.

ALSO, all our right, title and interest which we own in a twenty-five (25) foot right-of-way which is located on the eastern boundary of the property herein conveyed and on the eastern boundary of a 2.996 acre tract conveyed to Grace Tarlton September 7, 1979.

12.5-foot R/W. At trial, an expert testified "R/W" may have been a surveyors' annotation, and a dotted line indicates the surveyor did not actually measure the boundary. This is the identical property conveyed to the grantors herein by deed of Grady Tarlton dated September 7, 1979, recorded in the office of the Clerk of Court for Newberry County in Deed Book 165 at page 6.

In the 1960s, Braswell began leasing several pieces of land from Sula Miller to grow feed for his existing dairy business. On June 20, 1972, Braswell purchased the property from Miller. The Braswell Property deed includes:

All that piece, parcel or tract of land containing one hundred twenty and eighty-one-hundredths (120.80) acres, more or less, situate, lying and being in Tax District No. 3, in the County of Newberry, State of South Carolina, said property being bounded by lands of Harold Long, by lands of William Ballentine; by lands of Sula S. Miller, and by lands of Henry Parr. This tract of land is more particularly described on a Plat made by Claude E. Johnson, L.S. 1373, surveyed May 1962-September 1964-October 1971, and recorded in the office of the Clerk of Court for Newberry County in Plat Book AG at page 28. This is a portion of the property conveyed to A.B. Miller and Sula S. Miller by deed dated March 14, 1960, and recorded in the office of the Clerk of Court for Newberry County in Deed Book 75 at page 575, and a portion of the property inherited by Sula S. Miller from the Last Will and Testament of A.B. Miller on file in the office of the Probate Judge for Newberry County.

On the western (or Ballentine) side of his property, Braswell grew row crops for feed for his dairy business. As long as Braswell's sons could remember, when they needed to reach the area containing these row crops, they accessed it through what is now the Amick Property. In 1984, Braswell constructed two ponds on his land; he later installed an irrigation system.

Shortly after Amick purchased his property in 1988, he installed gates across the dirt road because he began noticing trash in certain areas and he needed to keep his horses from getting loose.

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James L. Braswell, Sr. v. James F. Amick (2), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-l-braswell-sr-v-james-f-amick-2-scctapp-2024.