Lammers v. S.D. Game, Fish & Parks

2019 S.D. 44
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 17, 2019
Docket#28808-a-JMK
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2019 S.D. 44 (Lammers v. S.D. Game, Fish & Parks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lammers v. S.D. Game, Fish & Parks, 2019 S.D. 44 (S.D. 2019).

Opinion

#28808-a-JMK 2019 S.D. 44

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA

****

MICHAEL LAMMERS, Plaintiff and Appellant,

v.

STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA, BY AND THROUGH THE DEPARTMENT OF GAME, FISH AND PARKS, Defendant and Appellee.

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE THIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUIT DEUEL COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA ****

THE HONORABLE DAWN M. ELSHERE Judge

MARK V. MEIERHENRY CLINT SARGENT RALEIGH HANSMAN of Meierhenry Sargent, LLP Sioux Falls, South Dakota Attorneys for plaintiff and appellant.

JASON R. RAVNSBORG Attorney General

DAVID M. MCVEY Assistant Attorney General Pierre, South Dakota Attorneys for defendant and appellee.

CONSIDERED ON BRIEFS ON MAY 28, 2019 OPINION FILED 07/17/19 #28808

KERN, Justice

[¶1.] South Dakota Game, Fish & Parks (Department) entered Michael

Lammers’s farmland in Deuel County to build a new fence after a survey indicated

that the physical boundaries between their properties did not coincide with the

surveyed boundaries. Lammers filed an action against the Department seeking a

declaratory judgment and permanent injunction. The Department moved for

summary judgment, which the circuit court granted. We affirm.

Facts and Procedural History

[¶2.] Lammers owns and farms two tracts of land in Section 16 of Altamont

Township, Deuel County. Tract 1 comprises the north half of the southwest quarter

and the southwest quarter of the southwest quarter of Section 16. Tract 2 is the

southwest quarter of the southeast quarter. The northwest quarter of the southeast

quarter of Section 16 is owned and maintained by the Department as a game

production area.1 It borders Tract 1 to the east and Tract 2 to the north.

[¶3.] Altamont Township was first surveyed by the United States in 1872.

In 1889, an Enabling Act passed by Congress admitted South Dakota to the Union

and granted the State 3.5 million acres of land, including all of Section 16. Fred

Rabine obtained Tract 1 through purchases from the State in 1947 and 1962. He

obtained title to Tract 2 in 1960. Lammers began farming Tracts 1 and 2 for Rabine

in 1992. He eventually purchased Tract 1 in 2005 and Tract 2 in 2012 from Rabine.

1. The Department owns and maintains other parts of Section 16, but the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter is the only parcel relevant to this appeal.

-1- #28808

The State granted the Department land within Section 16, including the land

bordering Tracts 1 and 2, in 1962. The land currently owned and maintained by the

Department has thus been continually held by the State or its agencies since the

original grant from the United States in 1889.

[¶4.] A north-south quarter line in the middle of Section 16 has been

historically recognized by physical markers creating a “fence line.” These markers

include old growth trees, signs posted by the Department, and in recent years an

electric fence. The boundaries are also marked by the differing uses of the land—

with agricultural property separated from the game production area. In 2013, the

Department retained Mack Land Surveying to conduct a new survey of Section 16

as part of a project to replace fences bordering State lands. Sometime in the spring

of 2014, Lammers and other landowners were approached by Department officials

informing them that according to the new survey, the existing boundaries were

incorrect. In September 2016, Lammers received a letter from the Department

informing him that a new north-south fence would be constructed that would move

the border 107 feet west of the fence line to reflect the surveyed boundary, resulting

in Lammers losing 2.5 acres from Tract 1 and 1 acre from Tract 2. Department

officials entered the land previously farmed by Lammers to pound steel posts into

the field to mark the surveyed boundary.

[¶5.] On May 25, 2017, Lammers filed a complaint for a declaratory

judgment and permanent injunction. Lammers requested that the court declare the

boundary to be at the historical fence line. He further argued in his complaint that

his “occupation and use of the property also satisfies the elements of the doctrine of

-2- #28808

adverse possession.”2 Pursuant to his request for a permanent injunction, Lammers

demanded that the Department remove the steel fence posts.

[¶6.] The Department filed a motion to dismiss, arguing that Lammers was

essentially claiming that he had acquired land from the State through adverse

possession and such claim was barred by Article VIII, section 10 of the South

Dakota Constitution.3 Following a hearing, the circuit court denied the motion to

dismiss, finding that although the complaint read “a lot like a complaint for adverse

possession,” there were enough other points raised to indicate a question of fact

regarding the location of the true boundary.

[¶7.] The Department then moved for summary judgment. It first

reiterated its argument that because the surveys indicated that these lands were in

fact owned by the Department, there was no way Lammers could obtain these lands

through adverse possession. Furthermore, it maintained that none of the surveys of

Section 16 indicated that the north-south quarter line established in 1872 was

consistent with the fence line. Lammers argued that a material issue of fact existed

regarding the proper location of the boundaries in Section 16 since the original

2. “Adverse possession occurs when there is (1) an occupation that is (2) open and notorious, (3) continuous for the statutory period, and (4) under a claim of title exclusive of any other right.” Underhill v. Mattson, 2016 S.D. 69, ¶ 11, 886 N.W.2d 348, 352.

3. Lammers argued in his complaint that because the parties had acquiesced to the location of the boundaries since at least 1947, the existing boundary should be declared the legal boundary. The doctrine of acquiescence provides “an evidentiary presumption as to the element of hostility [of adverse possession] and applies even though the occupancy occurred due to ignorance, inadvertence, or mistake, and without an intention to claim the lands of another.” City of Deadwood v. Summit, Inc., 2000 S.D. 29, ¶ 22, 607 N.W.2d 22, 28. -3- #28808

corner markers used to create the 1872 survey no longer existed. The original

corner markers were charred oak stakes driven into dirt mounds. They have since

been obliterated—meaning lost—so subsequent surveyors have used collateral

evidence to locate the section corners. Lammers maintained that the historically

recognized boundaries were the best available evidence of true boundaries. The

parties submitted several key surveys into evidence, including the original 1872

survey, two surveys by Wayne Haug (one undated and one from 1996), the Mack

survey from 2013, and an Aason Engineering survey from 2016.

[¶8.] The circuit court heard oral argument from the parties at a hearing on

September 24, 2018. It issued a memorandum opinion on September 27, 2018,

granting summary judgment to the Department. The court concluded that

Lammers’s argument was based in part on a claim of adverse possession against the

State which was precluded under the South Dakota Constitution. It also

determined that the surveys, patents, and property descriptions showed that there

was no genuine dispute of material fact regarding the disputed boundaries. The

court entered findings of fact and conclusions of law on October 11, 2018.4

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2019 S.D. 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lammers-v-sd-game-fish-parks-sd-2019.