John Belork v. Robin Latimer, Davis Township Trustee and DMK&H Farms, Inc.

47 N.E.3d 1, 2015 Ind. App. LEXIS 715, 2015 WL 7185538
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 16, 2015
Docket75A04-1503-MI-100
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 47 N.E.3d 1 (John Belork v. Robin Latimer, Davis Township Trustee and DMK&H Farms, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John Belork v. Robin Latimer, Davis Township Trustee and DMK&H Farms, Inc., 47 N.E.3d 1, 2015 Ind. App. LEXIS 715, 2015 WL 7185538 (Ind. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

BROWN, Judge. " -

John Bélork appeals the trial court’s order granting a motion for judgment on the evidence by Robin Latimer'as the Davis Township Trustee and DMK & H Farms, Inc. (“DMK & H” and, together with Latimer, the “Appellees”) with respect to Belork’s claim under Indiana’s Partition Fence statutes found at Ind.Code §§ 32-26-9. Belork raises ■‘three issues which we consolidate and restate as whether the court erred in entering judgment on the evidence in favor of the Appellees. We affirm.

Facts and Procedural History

Belork is the owner of real property in Starke County,. Indiana, which he uses in part to raise cattle. Jan Ferch is the owner of real property along the eastern boundary of Belork’s property, and Ferch’s farming operation includes grain production. DMK & H is the owner of real property along the southern boundary of Belork’s property, and its farming operation includes grain production. At some point, Belork rebuilt portioris of fencing along the eastern and southern boundaries of his property, specifically, the “southern half’ of a fence along his eastern boundary which was adjoining Ferch’s property and the “western half’ of a .fence .along his southern boundary which was adjoining DMK & H’s property. 1 Transcript at 24. Ferch did not complete the northern 1 half of the fence along the Belork-Ferch property line, and DMK & H did not complete the eastern half of the fence along the Belork-DMK & H property line. Belork requested that Latimer as the Davis Township Trustee require Ferch and DMK.& H to construct or fund the construction of the remainder (of the fences along the shared boundaries. Latimer did not grant Belork’s request.

In June 2014, Belork filed a Petition fdr Writ of Mandamus pursuant to Ind.Code §§ 34-27-3 naming Latimer, as the Davis Township Trustee, as the respondent. 2 Belork alleged that-his fatal is used primarily for the pasturing of cows, that the land owned by Ferch and DMK & H is used for agriculture, that he had rebuilt portions of the' fence along the southern and eastern boundaries of his property, and that he had requested that Ferch and DMK & H rebuild their respective portions of the fence line and they refused to do so. He further alleged that he had requested Latimer as the Davis Township Trustee to adhere to her statutory duty to see that the line fence was completed and that Latimer wholly failed after reasonable requests to do so. Belork requested that the court order Latimer to adhere to her obligations and that the *3 court award him attorpey fees. DMK & H filed a motion to intervene as a respondent, and the court granted the motion.

On February 9, 2015, the court held a bench trial at which the parties by counsel presented arguments and Belork testified. His counsel argued that Ind.Code §§ 32-26--9 “employs what has always been known as the right-hand rule,” which exists where two adjoining property owners, facing each other at the center of the fence along their shared property boundary, each “agree to build [the] right half from the center of the property to the end of the property line.” Transcript at 8. His counsel argued that Belork built his half of the eastern and southern fence lines but that Ferch and DMK & H have not built their respective halves and Latimer as the trustee has refused to follow the statute. DMK & H’s counsel argued in part that there are overgrown trees and shrubs on Belork’s property north of the fence and that it is impossible to access the fence row, that Belork maintains cattle on his property while the other farms grow grain, and that there is a history of Belork’s cattle leaving his property and roaming DMK & H’s fields and causing damage. DMK & H’s counsel stated there had been a judgment in 2003 stemming from an injunction in 1997 to keep Belork’s cattle on his own property. Belork’s counsel stated it was disputed whether Belork built the western half of the new fence along the southern boundary of his property on the property line or on DMK & H’s property. His counsel also stipulated that, at one point, Belork owned the property which is now owned by Ferch.

The court asked why Ind.Code § 32-26-9-1 3 applies in this situation because DMK & H did no.t use the fence for any purpose whatsoever. Belork’s counsel stated that the statute applies if one of two adjoining parcels is agricultural. The court noted that the statute by its terms states that it applies to a fence that is “used by adjoining property owners as a partition fence.” Id at 34. Latimer’s counsel argued that the partition fence statute applies when the fence is being used by both parties, that it makes sense for both parties to contribute to its maintenance, and that the statute does not state it applies where a fence “exists” between two parcels. Id. at 36. The court responded that, if both property owners receive a benefit from the fence, it would be fair for both owners to maintain the fence, and Latimer’s counsel replied that such was clearly the intent of the statute. DMK & H’s counsel then argued that the fence is of no benefit to DMK & H, that it is not using the fence, the fence has been in a state of disrepair for years, and that it had been in court in 2003 on the same issues.

Belork’s counsel responded that, although the majority of farms in the area are grain production farmers, there is still an interest for both sides to have a fence, and that the only prerequisite for the statute to apply is that one of the parcels be used for agriculture. The court noted the statute does not refer to a fence that exists between adjoining property owners but to one that is used by the property owners, and asked Belork’s counsel what evidence he had that DMK <¾ H “used” the partition fence. Id at 41. Belork’s counsel replied that “[t]he only evidence ... is that it is a fence that marks the property line as a partition.” Id. Belork’s counsel further stated that DMK & H was not keeping cattle, goats, sheep, or anything else loose *4 on its property and that “I think their use is going to be limited to what marks the property line.” Id.

Belork testified that he raised cattle and used his property for pasturing them, that there had been a woven wire fence along the southern boundary of his property, and that “the new high-tensile wires actually touched the old woven wire fence post” and so the new fence is “directly on the line of the previous fence.” Id. at 58.

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47 N.E.3d 1, 2015 Ind. App. LEXIS 715, 2015 WL 7185538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-belork-v-robin-latimer-davis-township-trustee-and-dmkh-farms-inc-indctapp-2015.