Jordan v. Judy

776 S.E.2d 96, 413 S.C. 341, 2015 S.C. App. LEXIS 147
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 22, 2015
DocketAppellate Case No. 2013-002129; No. 5334
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 776 S.E.2d 96 (Jordan v. Judy) 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
Jordan v. Judy, 776 S.E.2d 96, 413 S.C. 341, 2015 S.C. App. LEXIS 147 (S.C. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

KONDUROS, J.

In this boundary dispute action, Betty L.S. Judy appeals the trial court’s setting of the boundary line, contending it was arbitrary and the only reasonable inference was the boundary should be set where prior plats and surveys showed it. We affirm.

FACTS/PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Wilbur L. Judy, Sr. and John A. Howell, Jr. owned adjoining tracts of land in Dorchester County (the Judy Property and the Howell Property, respectively). In the early 1970s, Interstate 95 was constructed next to their properties. They both allowed the Department of Transportation to remove dirt from their respective properties, in turn creating a pond on each property. Between the ponds was a strip of land known as the dike or dike road. Both owners used the dike.

John died, leaving the Howell Property to his wife, Marion S. Howell. Marion placed a gate across the road through the Howell Property leading to the Judy Property because she was concerned drugs were being used at the ponds. According to Kay Howell Jordan, John and Marion’s daughter, Marion gave Wilbur a key to the gate but the problems continued. Marion changed the lock and gave Wilbur a new key. Because the problems still continued, she changed the lock again and according to Kay tried to give Wilbur a new key, which he refused. Wilbur and Betty’s son, Wilbur Judy, Jr. (Roy), testified his family was eventually denied access through the Howell Property.

Wilbur died in 1993, leaving his property to his wife, Betty. According to Roy, he began investigating where the boundary line was located between the two properties after Marion blocked driving access to the Judy Property through the Howell Property. Roy had a survey prepared, which showed a billboard John had constructed was actually on the Judy Property. Betty filed a lawsuit against Marion and another neighbor, Ronnie Elrod,1 for trespass and an easement. See Judy v. Howell, Op. No 2004-UP-199, 2004 WL 6250802 (S.C.Ct.App. filed Mar. 24, 2004) (Judy II); Judy v. Howell, Op. [345]*345NO.2001-UP-423 (S.C. Ct.App. filed Oct. 8, 2001) (Judy I). The master found and this court affirmed the easement action was barred by res judicata due to an earlier action Wilbur brought that was dismissed after his death. Judy I at 4. However, this court reversed the master’s decision that the trespass action was barred by res judicata and remanded that action for trial. Judy I at 5. Following trial, this court affirmed the master’s finding the billboard was on the Judy Property. Judy II at 3. The court noted the parties had not asked the master to determine the boundary of the properties and thus it was not preserved for this court’s review on appeal. Judy II at 3.

Marion later died, leaving the Howell Property to her children, Kay, Marion Howell Tolson (Marion T.), and Lewis Virgil Howell (collectively, the Howells). At some point after losing access through the Howell Property, the Judy family began accessing their property by coming down a narrow path beside the railroad tracks, with the railroad’s permission.2 After Roy received the survey around 1995, he installed a fence along what he believed was the property line, which caused the Howells to lose vehicle access to the dike.

The Judy and Howell families met several times and reached a settlement in 2009 that allowed the Judy family to travel over the Howell Property to get to the Judy Property and to share the dike. The trial court found the settlement agreement unenforceable.

On August 12, 2010, the Howells filed a complaint against Betty, requesting a declaratory judgment that the boundary line of the properties is in the center of the dike or in the alternative, as shown in an attached plat. They also requested the court issue an order of quiet title declaring the property line as requested. Further, they contended if the court did not set the property line as they requested, they were entitled to an easement on the dike. Additionally, they asserted Betty should be estopped from denying them access to the dike. Betty filed an answer denying most of the complaint and requesting the court dismiss the complaint.

[346]*346At trial, Roy was present on Betty’s behalf with her power of attorney. Lewis Edward Jordan, Kay’s husband, testified John and Wilbur had agreed the dike was the boundary line for the properties and had used it without any problems. Roy testified that “to the best of [his] knowledge,” Wilbur and John had not “fussed about” the dike. The Howells and Kay’s husband testified the Howell family and the Judy family both maintained the dike, but Roy testified only he did.

Betty sought to qualify Ben Coker, Jr. as an expert in land surveying, but the Howells objected. The trial court did not qualify him in surveying because he was not licensed as a land surveyor and was not formally educated in land surveying. The court did qualify him as an expert in the area of field work. He testified about the field work he did in 1995 for a plat (Ashley Plat) for the Judy family signed by Paul Clifton Lawson, Jr. He used a 1927 plat (F.A. Moorer Plat) as a basis for his plat, and his plat agreed with that plat. He testified the measurements on the F.A.

Moorer Plat were “very crude measurements compared to our measurements now.” Coker testified he also tried to locate points on a plat from 1867 (1867 Plat) but could not locate any of the points shown on it. He indicated the deeds for the two properties were ambiguous and did not show metes and bounds. He admitted on cross-examination one of the measurements he found in doing his field work did not match the F.A. Moorer Plat. He also stated his field work did not match with the 1867 Plat. The Ashley Plat showed the dike as being located completely on the Judy Property.

John David Bass testified as an expert in surveying on behalf of the Howells. He prepared a plat in 1998 (Bass Plat) for the Howells. He testified he used several old plats and surveys for the basis of his plat. He indicated he used the 1867 Plat, but it did not close perfectly because old compasses only measured to the nearest degree. He testified he took the error and “pushed” it into Interstate 95. He testified his plat agreed with the 1867 Plat while the Ashley Plat agreed with the F.A. Moorer Plat. On cross-examination, he testified he could have pushed the error anywhere. On redirect, Bass testified that by pushing the error into Interstate 95, it [347]*347actually benefited the Judy Property. He testified he based his plat off of one iron. He testified the Ashley Plat relied on a sweetgum tree shown on the F.A. Moorer Plat but because the sweetgum tree was no longer there when the Ashley Plat was created, it relied on angles and bearings "without knowing if it was correct. Because of that, the boundary line could have been moved either way. The Bass Plat shows the dike as approximately half on the Howell Property and half on the Judy Property, divided diagonally down the middle.

Coker testified that when Bass made his plat, because he could not find the corners shown on the plat he was using, he drove or set his own corners except for the one he found. Lawson testified he agreed with Bass the 1867 Plat did not close but thought Bass should not have placed all of the error in one spot because it was accumulated error.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
776 S.E.2d 96, 413 S.C. 341, 2015 S.C. App. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jordan-v-judy-scctapp-2015.