Jerry Kyle Smith v. Patrick J. Sims

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedMay 28, 2019
Docket2018-CA-00407-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Jerry Kyle Smith v. Patrick J. Sims (Jerry Kyle Smith v. Patrick J. Sims) 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.

Bluebook
Jerry Kyle Smith v. Patrick J. Sims, (Mich. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2018-CA-00407-COA

JERRY KYLE SMITH AND DEBBIE SMITH APPELLANTS

v.

PATRICK J. SIMS APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/21/2018 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. H. DAVID CLARK II COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: JASPER COUNTY CHANCERY COURT, SECOND JUDICIAL DISTRICT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANTS: ROBERT WENDELL JAMES ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: RANCE N. ULMER NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - REAL PROPERTY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 05/28/2019 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE CARLTON, P.J., TINDELL AND McDONALD, JJ.

CARLTON, P.J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. This case concerns a strip of land in Jasper County, Mississippi, located between

property owned by the appellants, Jerry and Debbie Smith, to the south, and the appellee,

Patrick Sims, to the north, referred to by the parties as “Old Pickens Road.”1 In June 2016,

the Smiths sued Sims and the Jasper County Board of Supervisors, seeking to quiet title in

them to Old Pickens Road (Smith I). The Jasper County Chancery Court held that Old

Pickens Road was a public road and that it had not been abandoned by Jasper County. The

1 The Smiths also refer to the disputed property as the “Subject Lands” in their appellants’ brief, but they state on page one of their brief that the “Subject Lands” are the same as Old Pickens Road. Smiths did not appeal the Smith I final judgment.

¶2. In October 2017, the Smiths sued Sims again, seeking to quiet title to Old Pickens

Road based upon a June 2017 quitclaim deed to them from the purported owner of the

property (Joseph Waites) (Smith II). In the alternative, the Smiths claimed rights to the

property under the doctrine of adverse possession.

¶3. The chancery court granted Sims’s Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss in Smith II,

finding that (1) the Smiths’ adverse possession claim was barred by the doctrine of collateral

estoppel, among other equitable theories; (2) the Smiths’ quiet title claim was barred by the

doctrines of res judicata and judicial estoppel; and (3) the Smiths were entitled to no relief

under any set of facts that could be proven in support of their claims. The Smiths appealed,

asserting that (1) the chancery court erred in determining that they did not prove the elements

of adverse possession so as to quiet title in them to the subject property; and (2) the chancery

court erred when it did not confirm ownership of the subject property to the Smiths through

Joseph Waites’s quitclaim deed.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶4. On June 21, 2016, the Smiths filed a complaint for a declaratory judgment and for

adverse possession in the Second Judicial District of the Jasper County Chancery Court

(cause number 2016-2097) pertaining to a seventeen-foot strip of Old Pickens Road (Smith

I). The Smiths named Patrick Sims2 and the Jasper County Board of Supervisors as

2 The Smiths also named as defendants Patrick Sims’s sisters, Michele Sims and Bridget Redditt. Prior to trial, Patrick Sims bought his sisters’ interests, and the only parties remaining at trial were Patrick Sims and the Jasper County Board of Supervisors.

2 defendants and requested, in relevant part, that the court (1) declare that Old Pickens Road

is not a public road; and (2) find that the Smiths “have full and complete title to the

seventeen-foot strip between their property and [Sims’s] by adverse possession.” In their

June 2016 complaint the Smiths aver that they acquired their property through an August 24,

2010 warranty deed obtained from Ernest and Maxine Yawn. That deed was attached as

exhibit “A” to the Smiths’ complaint and provided that the Smiths’ property line ran along

Old Pickens Road. The Smiths further aver that Sims obtained title to his property through

a warranty deed dated January 7, 1957, which was attached as exhibit “D” to the Smiths’

complaint. Sims’s property also abuts Old Pickens Road, as provided in that warranty deed.

¶5. A two-day trial was held in Smith I.3 In its final judgment, the chancery court

dismissed the Smiths’ adverse possession claim without prejudice, finding that no party could

show who was the record titleholder to Old Pickens Road. The chancery court’s final

judgment then provided “that the parties and the court proceeded with a trial on [Sims’s]

allegation . . . that Old Pickens Road is a public road.” Id. On this issue, the court found that

the evidence and testimony presented at trial established that Old Pickens Road was a public

road and that the Jasper County Board of Supervisors (sometimes referred to as the Board)

had not abandoned Old Pickens Road.

¶6. In its final judgment, the court described in detail the evidence and testimony

supporting these findings, including, but not limited to, (1) minutes from the Jasper County

Board of Supervisors, establishing that the county had worked on and spent county funds on

3 The chancery court’s final judgment provides that a two-day trial took place on January 19 and 20, 2017. There is no transcript of this trial in the record.

3 Old Pickens Road from April 1907 at least through June 1921 and photos showing that the

road continues to be maintained; and (2) testimony from a number of witnesses that Old

Pickens Road had been “used by the public for farming, logging, hauling hay, and general

travel” since the 1940s and had been used by at least some witnesses up until the time the

Smiths blocked access in 2016. The court’s final judgment was entered on January 27, 2017.

No post-trial motions were filed, and no one appealed.

¶7. In March 2017 the Smiths petitioned the Jasper County Board of Supervisors to

abandon the subject seventeen-foot portion of Old Pickens Road pursuant to Mississippi

Code Annotated section 65-7-121 (Rev. 2012).4 By an order dated March 14, 2017, the

Jasper County Board of Supervisors voted unanimously to abandon the subject portion of Old

Pickens Road “[from where] it travels adjacent to the lands of the Atha Sims Estate [now

owned by Patrick Sims], [the] Kyle and Debbie Smith property, and [the] Ethel Jones

property.” The Board found that Old Pickens Road had “not [been] officially closed” and

that “the public interest or convenience does not require that the Old Pickens Public Road

remain open to the public and that it is in the public interest and convenience to vacate and

abandon said Road for the cost to keep and maintain said road far outweighs the benefit of

the public interest.”

¶8. On October 12, 2017, the Smiths filed a complaint against Sims in the Second Judicial

District of the Jasper County Chancery Court to quiet title and for adverse possession, cause

4 The petition in the record does not have the Smiths’ signatures as petitioners. The Smiths, however, do not dispute that they petitioned the Jasper County Board of Supervisors to abandon the subject seventeen-foot portion of Old Pickens Road, and the survey attached to that petition indicates that the survey was prepared for Debbie Smith.

4 number 2017-2098 (Smith II). The Smiths alleged that they were the owners of the subject

portion of Old Pickens Road “by virtue of a [q]uitclaim [d]eed executed by Joseph G. Waites,

dated June 7, 2017, filed for record July 6, 2017” (the Waites quitclaim deed). The Waites

quitclaim deed was attached to the complaint as exhibit “A.” The Smiths requested that the

court enter an order confirming and quieting title to the subject property in them.

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Jerry Kyle Smith v. Patrick J. Sims, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jerry-kyle-smith-v-patrick-j-sims-missctapp-2019.