LEWIS CHILDRESS, ANDREA HOPPER, CHRISTA CHILDRESS, LARRY CHILDRESS and GARY CHILDRESS, Petitioners-Respondents v. ALLAN and TINA LOVINS, husband and wife

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 27, 2019
DocketSD35435
StatusPublished

This text of LEWIS CHILDRESS, ANDREA HOPPER, CHRISTA CHILDRESS, LARRY CHILDRESS and GARY CHILDRESS, Petitioners-Respondents v. ALLAN and TINA LOVINS, husband and wife (LEWIS CHILDRESS, ANDREA HOPPER, CHRISTA CHILDRESS, LARRY CHILDRESS and GARY CHILDRESS, Petitioners-Respondents v. ALLAN and TINA LOVINS, husband and wife) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LEWIS CHILDRESS, ANDREA HOPPER, CHRISTA CHILDRESS, LARRY CHILDRESS and GARY CHILDRESS, Petitioners-Respondents v. ALLAN and TINA LOVINS, husband and wife, (Mo. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

LEWIS CHILDRESS, ANDREA HOPPER, ) CHRISTA CHILDRESS, LARRY ) CHILDRESS and GARY CHILDRESS, ) ) Petitioners-Respondents, ) ) v. ) No. SD35435 ) ALLAN and TINA LOVINS, ) Filed: August 27, 2019 husband and wife, ) ) Respondents-Appellants. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF WEBSTER COUNTY

Honorable Kenneth F. Thompson, Associate Circuit Judge

Before Lynch, P.J., Rahmeyer, J., and Francis, Jr., J.

AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED IN PART

PER CURIAM. Allan and Tina Lovins appeal the trial court’s January 29, 2018

judgment that condemned the Childress Cemetery, which was located on land owned by

the Lovins, vested title to the cemetery in Webster County, and assessed costs in the

amount of $2,874.85 against the Lovins. Five members of the Childress family (“the

Childress petitioners”) sought the condemnation pursuant to sections 214.200 and

1 214.080 and Chapter 523 of Missouri’s statutes. 1 The Lovins raise four points. We deny

the first three points, but grant the fourth point and remand to the trial court for it to

redetermine and reassess costs under Rule 86.09 rather than Rule 77.01 and section

214.120. 2

Facts and Procedural History

Trial

A trial to the court occurred on August 10, 2017. Larry B. Childress, who lived in

Rogersville, Greene County, at the time of the trial and is a third cousin to Lewis, Christa

and Gary Childress and a third cousin once removed to Andrea Hopper, testified as

follows. Larry lived on a farm located just south of the Childress Cemetery from the time

he was born in 1947 until he left home in 1969. Larry and his father, mother and brother

have visited the Childress Cemetery “[m]any times” “over the years.” Larry’s great-great

grandparents “settled” on the property that now contains the Childress Cemetery “around

1850” and Larry believed started the Childress Cemetery “sometime in the 1850’s” – a

Childress family member was buried there at least as early as 1862. Allan and Tina

Lovins now own the land that contains the Childress Cemetery. Larry’s family has

maintained the Childress Cemetery “over the years.” Larry’s great-great and great

grandparents and a great aunt are buried in the Childress Cemetery – the great aunt was

“buried there fairly recently, the last – probably 20 years.” The most recent burial at the

Childress Cemetery was in 2009, and was a Childress family member. “There’s vacant

area within the cemetery for other burials” on a “first come first served” basis.

1 All references to a specific section of a statute are to RSMo (2016). 2 All references to rules are to the Missouri Court Rules (2019).

2 “[O]ver the years, there’s been some difficulty for the family to get access to the

cemetery” though Larry has “always managed to be able to get to the cemetery.” In a

letter dated March 21, 2017, the Childress family offered to pay Allan and Tina Lovins

$1,500 for the Childress Cemetery, but that offer was rejected. Larry testified that the

Childress petitioners “are petitioning the Court to condemn the property as a private

cemetery to be deeded to the public for future maintenance and care of that cemetery of

the people that are buried there and the future burials that will take place at that location.”

Gary L. Childress, who lived in Branson at the time of the trial and is related to

Lewis, Christa and Larry Childress and Andrea Hopper, added the following testimony.

The deed that conveyed the land containing the Childress Cemetery “out of the Childress

family” contained a restriction that “allow[s] the Childress family to have access to the

property to maintain and care and continue the cemetery.” Farmland surrounds the

Childress Cemetery, and Gary has “seen corn there, and I know that sometimes it’s

pasture.” In about 2007 during a “Childress reunion,” Gary and numerous relatives were

unable to reach the Childress Cemetery without walking because a corn crop “blocked”

Gary and his relatives from driving a bus to the cemetery.

After the Childress petitioners rested, Allan Lovins took the witness stand and

testified as follows. Allan and his wife Tina own a sixty-six acre tract that includes the

Childress Cemetery. The Lovins purchased the tract in “about 2002, 2003 somewhere,”

and were aware the deed reserved “ingress and egress” to the cemetery to the Childress

family. The Lovins grew corn “for at least five years, four or five years” and explained

to the Childress family “that corn was just a 90-day event.” During the years the Lovins

grew corn, the Lovins followed the corn with wheat and pasture rotations. The wheat did

3 not prevent access to the cemetery, and the Lovins “left a route” through the corn for

access to the cemetery. The Childress family could not understand the explanation so the

Lovins switched to a hay crop, which grew very tall because of a “rain event” and caused

the Childress family to threaten to sue. The Lovins “mowed” the cemetery “for around

six years,” and the Childress family paid for this service. A previous lawsuit resulted in

an “agreement for . . . ingress and egress at that point in time.” Allan believed he and his

wife had given the Childress family ingress and egress.

The Lovins then rested, and there was no rebuttal evidence.

Pleadings

In their answer, the Lovins admitted (1) the Childress Cemetery was located in

Webster County on land that they owned; (2) the Childress Cemetery “has been

continuously used as a private burial ground for more than ten years and . . . has not been

deeded to the public for the purposes of a burial ground;” (3) the Childress petitioners

“seek title” to the Childress Cemetery “for the continued use as a burial cemetery;” and

(4) despite good faith efforts, the Childress petitioners have been unable to acquire the

Childress Cemetery from the Lovins. Though denied by the Lovins in their answer, the

Childress petitioners alleged in their condemnation petition that the “purpose of the

taking is to maintain, own, care for and provide the burial grounds in perpetuity for use

by the public,” and requested authority to, among other things, “[m]aintain the burial

grounds of the cemetery,” “[t]o prepare for future internments [sic],” and “[f]or all other

uses normally associated with a burial cemetery.” Among other things, the prayer of the

condemnation petition requested that the trial court “vest in the public title[] to” the

Childress Cemetery.

4 Order of Condemnation and Judgment

In an order of condemnation entered on August 17, 2017, the trial court found (1)

the Childress petitioners “are five members of the public having an interest in the

Childress Cemetery;” (2) “[t]he Childress Cemetery has been in continuous use as a

private cemetery for more than ten years” and “has never been deeded to the public for

the purpose of a burial ground;” and (3) “[t]he parties have, in good faith, negotiated to

obtain the subject property without exercising condemnation concerning the property

sought to be appropriated, but they have been unable to reach an agreement as to value.”

The order then decrees in part that “the property containing the Childress Cemetery and

property rights be and stand condemned for the uses and purposes as set out in the

Petitioners’ Petition.” Following the filing of a report of commissioners and the

Childress petitioners’ filing of a motion to review and tax costs in the amount of

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LEWIS CHILDRESS, ANDREA HOPPER, CHRISTA CHILDRESS, LARRY CHILDRESS and GARY CHILDRESS, Petitioners-Respondents v. ALLAN and TINA LOVINS, husband and wife, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-childress-andrea-hopper-christa-childress-larry-childress-and-gary-moctapp-2019.