Cite as 2022 Ark. App. 3 Elizabeth Perry ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS I attest to the accuracy and DIVISION III integrity of this document No. CV-21-11 2023.08.09 11:57:14 -05'00' 2023.003.20244 Opinion Delivered January 12, 2022
KELLY MULLINS APPEAL FROM THE GARLAND APPELLANT COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 26CV-18-523] V. HONORABLE MARCIA R. HEARNSBERGER, JUDGE JOEL HELGREN APPELLEE AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED
BART F. VIRDEN, Judge
Appellant Kelly Mullins appeals from the Garland County Circuit Court’s order
denying her complaint to quiet title. The trial court rejected her claim of adverse possession
and boundary by acquiescence; found that the disputed land belongs to her neighbor,
appellee Joel Helgren; and ruled that she failed to prove that Helgren committed any torts.
Mullins argues that the trial court erred in concluding that she failed to prove boundary by
acquiescence and that she failed to prove that Helgren committed trespass, conversion, and
battery. 1 We initially dismissed this appeal for lack of a final order and failure to provide a
1 Mullins’s attorney cited and discussed six unpublished cases in direct violation of Arkansas Supreme Court Rule 5-2(c). Rule 5-2(c) provides that opinions of the Arkansas Supreme Court and Court of Appeals issued before July 1, 2009, and not designated for publication, shall not be cited, quoted, or referred to in any argument or brief presented to any court. Accordingly, we will not consider any of the unpublished cases, and we urge counsel to consult and comply with our rules in the future. property description. Mullins v. Helgren, 2020 Ark. App. 116, 596 S.W.3d 51. The trial court
has addressed Helgren’s outstanding claims, and we now have a final order. We affirm as
modified. 2
I. Background and Procedural History
Mullins and Helgren own adjoining acreage off Ragweed Valley Road in Royal,
Arkansas. The neighbors got along—Mullins said that she thought of Helgren as a brother—
until February or March 2018 when Helgren began construction of a fence. Mullins
believed that the discord arose after a neighbor across the street from the parties shot one of
Helgren’s chickens. Mullins claimed that Helgren subsequently took his frustration out on
her. The allegations ranged from Helgren accusing Mullins of running an illegal strip club
out of her garage to Mullins asserting that Helgren was holding a stray dog hostage. The
parties also threw gas cans, animal cages, and empty beer cans onto each other’s property
and left unkind notes for each other. When Mullins refused to move her camper, which
Helgren perceived as having been abandoned on his property, Helgren literally built his
2 The trial court accepted, and made findings in accordance with, a survey containing a valid property description, which was incorporated and attached to what is now a final order. Although the survey in the record is legible, the photocopy attached to the order is of poor quality and cannot be easily read. As we pointed out in the previous opinion, the property description or boundary must be described such that it can be identified solely by reference to the order or decree. Accordingly, the trial court is instructed to attach to its final order a clear photocopy of the survey with its property description. See, e.g., Jennings v. Burford, 60 Ark. App. 27, 958 S.W.2d 12 (1997) (affirming as modified the chancery court’s order and allowing the court to amend its decree to include a more specific description of the boundary line).
2 fence between Mullins’s truck and her camper. Mullins now thinks of Helgren not as a
brother but as “a lawless rogue . . . on a fence-building bender.”
On April 9, 2018, Mullins filed a complaint against Helgren seeking to quiet title to
property shown by her 1991 survey. Alternatively, she alleged that she had acquired the
property through adverse possession or boundary by acquiescence. She also sought damages
for trespass, conversion, and battery as well as a temporary and permanent restraining order.
The trial court entered a temporary restraining order (TRO) directing Helgren to cease
building a fence, release the dog named “Shuggs,” corral his chickens, stop cutting trees,
and stay off of Mullins’s property. The trial court later found that Helgren had violated the
TRO and directed him to remove a fence that he had continued to build. Helgren moved
to dismiss Mullins’s complaint but, alternatively, filed an answer and counterclaim to quiet
title. The boundary dispute was heard in early October 2018.
The following is a summary of the testimony. 3 Mullins testified that she has lived on
her property for twenty-six years and that the only property she sought to quiet title to is
the property depicted in her 1991 survey. 4 Since 2008, Mullins has been splitting her time
between the Ragweed Valley residence and her home in Bryant. Helgren testified that he
3 As we have mentioned in prior unrelated opinions, parties to a land dispute, as well as their lawyers, should limit their use of pronouns and adverbs such as “this,” “that,” “here,” and “there” because of the obvious difficulty for appellate courts to later discern from the record what is being said. 4 A 2000 redemption deed was introduced showing that Mullins had failed to pay taxes on the 1.85-acre tract from 1996 to 1998.
3 bought his property in 2007 and has lived there ever since. The land in dispute is described
as a gravel area where vehicles have been parked and various items have been placed.
Mullins offered into evidence a photograph with a red line drawn on it by her to
indicate where her alleged property line lies. Mullins explained that her property starts at a
culvert, which is not depicted in the photograph, to the right of her driveway and extends
to the corner of Helgren’s shed and then on to a line of trees beyond the gravel area.
According to Mullins, when Helgren bought the adjoining property, she walked the
property line with him just as her predecessors in title had walked the property line with
her. Mullins said that she and Helgren had “lots of conversations” about the boundary line.
Mullins said that a few years before trial, Helgren asked for her permission to build
the shed and that he had built it up to the asserted boundary line as discussed. Helgren, on
the other hand, said that he and Mullins did not have any agreement about the property
line’s location and that there was never a discussion that the edge of his shed represented
the property line. He claimed that he built the shed where he did because Mullins had said
that it would look nice at that location.
Helgren testified that, at Mullins’s request, he hired Kevin Foshee in March 2018 to
survey his property. Foshee testified that Helgren’s property line matches up perfectly with
Mullins’s 1991 survey. Foshee determined that Mullins’s camper overlaps Helgren’s
property by over twenty feet and that part of her driveway is on Helgren’s property.
According to Foshee, Mullins’s driveway encroaches ten feet to the east and extends thirty
feet north. Foshee explained that he picked up a strong magnetic signal underneath Mullins’s
driveway and that he put a “PK pin” in it representing a corner of Helgren’s property.
4 Mullins insisted that she has always parked vehicles, campers, trailers, boats, jet skis,
etc., off her driveway in the gravel area. The camper mentioned previously was acquired by
Mullins in 2014 and is inoperable. Many witnesses, including her friends, ex-husband, and
sister, confirmed that Mullins used the gravel area for parking. Helgren, however, testified
that he also used the gravel area. In Mullins’s photograph on which she drew the red line
depicting her camper, Helgren pointed out that a boat, a golf cart, and a trailer belonging
to him could be seen parked there as well. Kenny Morrison, a neighbor on the other side
of Helgren, testified that in the twenty years that he has lived there, he saw numerous things
parked in the gravel area, but he said that nothing stayed there and that there were times
when nothing was parked there. He said that he had seen a mower, implements, and hay
bales belonging to Helgren in the gravel area.
Helgren testified that he had given permission for Mullins to park on his property.
This was confirmed by Morrison, who testified that he had heard Mullins ask Helgren for
permission to park vehicles in the gravel area when she had friends over and that he had also
heard Mullins ask Helgren if she could park her camper there so that she could work on it.
Morrison said that he had overheard these conversations within a year and a half before trial.
When asked what maintenance she had done to the gravel area, Mullins said that,
aside from planting a cedar tree “back there,” she had not planted any shrubs or done any
landscaping. She said that she has trimmed the trees to keep them off her camper and dug
trenches to keep the rainwater from washing away the gravel. Mullins initially claimed that
she mowed the area but then clarified that she had just pulled “stragglers.” Helgren testified
5 that he had picked up limbs, and there was testimony that he had raked the gravel. Morrison
testified that the property does not require any maintenance because it is gravel.
Regarding the incident leading to her allegation of battery, Mullins testified that,
when she confronted Helgren the following morning about his fence building during the
night, he began cursing and screaming at her. She said that he had come at her and shoved
her backwards, that the sheriff had been called, and that she had been taken to the hospital
by ambulance. Mullins claimed that the rods and pins in her back had not been disturbed
by the shoving but that there had been inflammation.
Helgren denied shoving Mullins during the disagreement but said that Mullins had
punched him in the face while filming him. Morrison testified that he was present during
the dispute—he had been inside Helgren’s shed sharpening blades. He said that he heard
raised voices; that he heard Helgren tell Mullins to “stop filming [him]”; and that he saw
Helgren’s hand move and then Helgren stepped back. Morrison insisted that Helgren had
not done anything to Mullins that would have required hospitalization. Referring to a
photograph of Helgren with a black eye, Morrison said that the photograph accurately
depicted the way Helgren looked the day after the incident.
II. Trial Court’s Orders
The trial court entered an order pointing out that Mullins had neither provided a
survey of the property she sought to prove was acquired by acquiescence nor described the
boundary line she claimed using a metes and bounds system. The trial court concluded that
it had “no proof from which to adequately describe the property line between the parties
other than the original property line.” The trial court further found that Mullins failed to
6 prove that she and Helgren had ever acquiesced in moving the property line from its original
location and pointed out that Mullins had never erected a fence, planted a shrub, paved, or
placed any marker to signify her ownership of Helgren’s property. The trial court concluded
that the property line should remain as written in the parties’ respective deeds and in the
2018 survey and that Helgren was entitled to put a fence along his property line. Finally,
the trial court found that Mullins failed to prove that Helgren committed any of the torts
alleged. The trial court entered a second order to dispose of Helgren’s outstanding claims.
Mullins filed timely notices of appeal from both orders; Helgren did not file a cross-appeal.
III. Standard of Review
Boundary-line cases are reviewed de novo. Durham v. McCone, 2018 Ark. App. 392,
555 S.W.3d 907. Our court, however, will not reverse findings of fact unless they are clearly
erroneous. Id. A finding of fact is clearly erroneous when, although there is evidence to
support it, we are left with a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made. Id.
Because the location of a boundary is a disputed question of fact, we will affirm the trial
court’s finding unless it is clearly against the preponderance of the evidence. Id. In reviewing
findings of fact, we give due deference to the trial court’s superior position to determine the
credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be accorded their testimony. Id.
IV. Discussion
A. Boundary by Acquiescence
Mullins addresses two points separately under this subheading, but she essentially
argues that the trial court erred in finding that she failed to prove boundary by acquiescence.
Whenever adjoining landowners tacitly accept a fence line or other monument as the visible
7 evidence of their dividing line and thus apparently consent to that line, it becomes the
boundary by acquiescence. Myers v. Yingling, 372 Ark. 523, 279 S.W.3d 83 (2008).
Boundaries are frequently found to exist at locations other than those shown by an accurate
survey of the premises in question and may be affected by the concepts of acquiescence and
adverse possession. Charles R. Griffith Farms, Inc. v. Grauman, 2009 Ark. App. 515, 333
S.W.3d 430. A boundary line by acquiescence is inferred from the landowners’ conduct
over many years so as to imply the existence of an agreement about the location of the
boundary line, and in such circumstances, the adjoining landowners and their grantees are
precluded from claiming that the boundary so recognized and acquiesced in is not the true
one, although it may not be. Id. Moreover, a boundary line by acquiescence may exist
without the necessity of a prior dispute. Id. Boundary by acquiescence requires three key
elements: (1) a tacit agreement between the parties, (2) recognition of the boundary for a
long period of time, and (3) a fixed line that is definite and certain. Follett v. Fitzsimmons,
103 Ark. App. 82, 286 S.W.3d 746 (2008). Whether a boundary line by acquiescence exists
is to be determined by the evidence in each individual case. Boyette v. Vogelpohl, 92 Ark.
App. 436, 214 S.W.3d 874 (2005).
Mullins’s first point is that the trial court erred in requiring her to provide a survey
or to use a metes and bounds description of the asserted boundary. Mullins, who had the
burden of proof, initially insisted that she wanted only the land shown by her 1991 survey,
but the 1991 survey reflected the true property line and aligned with Helgren’s 2018 survey.
Realizing this midtrial, Mullins conceded that her camper was on Helgren’s property and
claimed that she was seeking to acquire about twenty to thirty feet of Helgren’s property.
8 Mullins said, however, that she was just “guesstimating” and that she would need to go out
there and measure it to be sure. 5
A trial court’s order must describe a boundary with sufficient specificity that it can
be identified solely by reference to the decree. See Dohle v. Duffield, 2011 Ark. App. 135.
The trial court accurately pointed out that Mullins could not show by way of either a survey
or a metes and bounds description the exact area that she was claiming. The only way
Mullins had of describing the area was by reference to moveable objects like her camper,
which had been sitting in its location for about four years, or Helgren’s shed, which had
been built only a few years before trial. Mullins also referred to a line of trees, but the
photographs show the trees in a scattered pattern instead of a line. Mullins pointed to the
magnetic marker under her driveway; however, the record indicates that, although Mullins
claimed that her driveway has been paved for twenty years, she also described it as a gravel
driveway in her complaint and said during her testimony that she had poured the asphalt in
2013 or 2014.
In Mullins’s second point, she argues that she proved boundary by acquiescence
because there was a tacit agreement between her and Helgren. Mullins asserts that the
boundary has been recognized for twenty-six or twenty-seven years, collectively, by
Helgren and his predecessors. Mullins contends that the boundary line is definite and certain
5 Descriptions that we have found lacking include a decree denoting a line for which no width was given, Johnson v. Jones, 64 Ark. App. 20, 977 S.W.2d 903 (1998), and a decree describing the boundary as a meandering fence reflected by a survey, Jennings, supra. In those cases, we remanded for a better description because the landowners had proved their claims of a prescriptive easement and boundary by acquiescence, respectively. Here, Mullins failed to prove either adverse possession or boundary by acquiescence.
9 in that it begins at the culvert by the road to the right of her driveway under which is a
magnetic marker, then runs to Helgren’s shed, and extends to the line of trees where Mullins
and her friends have been parking since she moved there. Mullins argues that, although
Helgren contests these facts, he is not credible because he is a felon.
The trial court, which determines credibility and the weight of evidence, apparently
believed Helgren’s testimony that there was no agreement, tacit or otherwise, about the
property line. The testimony indicated that both parties used the gravel area and maintained
it, to the extent it needed any maintenance. Helgren and Morrison testified that Mullins
had within the past year or two sought Helgren’s permission to park in the disputed area,
which shows her recognition of the area as Helgren’s property. Also, Mullins’s attempt to
establish a fixed boundary by drawing a red line on a photograph falls short of the proof
necessary, as do her earlier statements about purported concrete markers. Given the
evidence, we cannot say that the trial court clearly erred in finding that Mullins failed to
prove boundary by acquiescence.
B. Trespass, Conversion, and Battery
Mullins argues that the trial court erred in finding that Helgren did not commit any
of the various torts alleged. She asserts that Helgren trespassed on her property; that he
converted her property by erecting a fence between her truck and her camper; and that he
committed battery by shoving her, threatening her, and cursing at her.
Given the trial court’s ruling that the disputed property belongs to Helgren, Mullins
cannot prevail on her trespass claim because a trespasser is a person who goes onto the premises
of another without permission and without invitation.
10 Conversion is defined as
the exercise of dominion over property in violation of the rights of the owner or person entitled to possession. Conversion can only result from conduct intended to affect property. The intent required is not conscious wrongdoing but rather an intent to exercise dominion or control over the goods that is in fact inconsistent with the plaintiff’s rights.
BBAS, Inc. v. Marlin Leasing Corp., 104 Ark. App. 63, 66, 289 S.W.3d 153, 155–56 (2008).
Mullins has not developed her argument other than to say that Helgren built his fence
between her truck and her camper. The trial court could have reasonably concluded that
Helgren did not intend to exercise dominion or control over Mullins’s inoperable camper
given that Helgren considered it “abandoned property” and simply wanted it removed so
that he could build a fence.
In order to prove battery, Mullins had to show that Helgren acted with the intent to
cause some harmful or offensive contact with her or acted with the intent to create the
apprehension of some harmful or offensive contact with her and that this contact resulted
in and caused damages. Haley v. Elkins, 2019 Ark. App. 247, 576 S.W.3d 111; AMI Civ.
418 (2021). The trial court apparently did not believe Mullins’s version of what happened.
Helgren denied her allegations, and a disinterested witness who was present during the
incident offered testimony in support of Helgren’s denial. In any event, Mullins sought
damages for the alleged battery but did not introduce a shred of evidence in that regard such
as medical bills related to her hospitalization and transport by ambulance or photographs of
her injuries. We cannot conclude that the trial court clearly erred in determining that
Mullins failed to prove that Helgren committed any of the alleged torts.
Affirmed as modified.
11 ABRAMSON and KLAPPENBACH, JJ., agree.
Niswanger Law Firm PLC, by: Stephen B. Niswanger, for appellant.
Tapp Law Firm, P.A., by: Tylar C.M. Tapp III, for appellee.