Mark W. Besemann v. Roger T. Weber

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedJune 20, 2016
DocketA15-1810
StatusUnpublished

This text of Mark W. Besemann v. Roger T. Weber (Mark W. Besemann v. Roger T. Weber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mark W. Besemann v. Roger T. Weber, (Mich. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

This opinion will be unpublished and may not be cited except as provided by Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A15-1810

Mark W. Besemann, Appellant,

vs.

Roger T. Weber, et al., Respondents.

Filed June 20, 2016 Affirmed Connolly, Judge

Itasca County District Court File No. 31-CV-13-2695

Jaclyn Corradi Simon, Sellman Borland & Simon, PLLC, Duluth, Minnesota (for appellant)

Brian C. Bengtson, Lano, O’Toole & Bengtson, Ltd., Grand Rapids, Minnesota (for respondents)

Considered and decided by Connolly, Presiding Judge; Stauber, Judge; and Kirk,

Judge.

UNPUBLISHED OPINION

CONNOLLY, Judge

After a court trial in this boundary dispute, appellant challenges the district court’s

determination that he failed to meet his burden of proving (1) adverse possession, (2) trespass or an appropriate measure of damages for trespass, and (3) prescriptive

easement. We affirm.

FACTS

Respondent Roger T. Weber is the owner of approximately 39 acres of real property

in Itasca County, Minnesota (the 39-acre parcel). Appellant Mark W. Besemann acquired

title to one acre of real property in Itasca County, Minnesota (the one-acre parcel).

Appellant’s property is adjacent to the 39-acre parcel owned by respondent.

Prior to 1953, W. Raymond Dodson (Dodson) and Mary Dodson (collectively, the

Dodsons) owned both of the above-described properties in one 40-acre parcel. On July 23,

1953, the Dodsons carved out the one-acre parcel and conveyed it to their daughter Colleen

and her husband, Robert Weber (Robert), respondent’s parents, as a wedding present. On

March 18, 1968, Robert and Colleen divorced and, as part of a written agreement, the one-

acre parcel was transferred to Robert by way of conduit deeds.

On November 3, 1976, Robert gave respondent a one-half interest in the one-acre

parcel. In 1996, at his father’s request, respondent re-conveyed his one-half interest in the

one-acre parcel back to Robert so that Robert could convey the one-half interest to his

daughter Ann, who is respondent’s sister. In March of 2013, appellant notified Ann that

he was interested in buying the one-acre parcel. On or about April 18, 2013, Ann sold the

one-acre parcel to appellant “as is” for $15,000. A quitclaim deed dated April 12, 2013,

was filed with the Itasca County recorder on April 22, 2013.

After conveying the one acre parcel in 1953, the Dodsons kept ownership of the

remaining 39-acre parcel until June 7, 1978, when respondent, the Dodsons’ grandson,

2 purchased it. The 39-acre parcel was subsequently transferred to Colleen on September 3,

1986. Respondent then reacquired the title back from his mother Colleen and other

relatives who had an interest in the property on March 20, 1998 by a quitclaim deed.

The 1953 deed constituted a subdivision of the 40 acre parcel and no dimensions

were formally surveyed. In the late 1950s, Robert, with the assistance and implicitly the

permission of Dodson, moved a small house on the one-acre parcel to a position that was

straddling the line between the one-acre parcel and the 39-acre parcel. After the house was

moved it was converted to a garage. A lean-to was attached, and a detached shed was

erected next to the lean-to by driving poles into the ground and nailing oriented strand

board (OSB) to the poles. It is the land under and around these structures, on the 39-acre

parcel that is now in dispute. Multiple witnesses testified that the garage, lean-to, and shed

were eyesores that had no value and that their condition warranted that they be torn down

for safety reasons. Robert mowed the grass on the disputed property and testimony at trial

indicated that he maintained the disputed property as if it was his own. Robert also stored

vehicles, a boat, and deer antlers in the garage.

Robert passed away on January 2, 2013, leaving the one-acre parcel to his daughter,

Ann. A family feud arose following Robert’s death due, in part, to hurt feelings regarding

the funeral, to which Ann and her sister Amy, were not able to attend. In preparation for

the sale of the one-acre parcel, then owned solely by Ann, a survey was done revealing that

the garage, shed, and lean-to were on the boundary line between Ann’s one-acre parcel and

respondent’s 39-acre parcel. Ann, who resides out of state, contacted her brother Frank to

show the one-acre parcel to appellant in March 2013 because she could not show the parcel

3 herself. On a visit to the one-acre parcel, Frank and appellant observed a house and several

outbuildings, including a three-stall garage, to which a single-stall lean-to was attached, as

well as a separate shed located south of the garage. The three-stall garage and lean-to were

locked when appellant visited, but he looked inside the garage-door windows and observed

an older vehicle, deer antlers, and miscellaneous items including tools stored within the

garage. But the district court found that both appellant and Frank credibly testified that,

during the March 2013 property visit, Frank explicitly told appellant that the boundary line

between the one-acre parcel Ann was selling and the 39-acre parcel respondent owned went

through the middle of the garage.

It is undisputed that, beginning on April 22, 2013 and after the sale to appellant,

respondent used a chainsaw to remove the single-stall shed, a portion of the lean-to, and a

portion of the three-stall garage that were located on the 39-acre parcel. Neither appellant

nor any other witnesses saw respondent remove the buildings. Respondent claims that,

based on a conversation with his sister Ann prior to their father’s death, Ann wanted the

garage and outbuildings removed from the property in preparation for the sale of the one-

acre parcel. The district court explicitly found that “[respondent’s] testimony regarding

his mindset when he destroyed and removed the shed, lean-to[,] and a portion of the three

stall garage [was] neither credible nor accepted.”

Appellant objected to removal of the buildings. Despite several conversations, the

parties were unable to resolve their dispute, and appellant commenced this action against

respondent on December 26, 2013. Appellant alleged that he, through his predecessor in

interest, had seized possession of the land under the garage by adverse possession or,

4 alternatively, by a prescriptive easement. According to appellant, respondent committed

trespass and damaged appellant’s property by entering onto appellant’s property to remove

portions of the garage, shed, and lean-to. The district court ruled that appellant “failed to

prove by clear and convincing evidence that [appellant’s] predecessors in title adversely

possessed the disputed property to the west of the [o]ne [a]cre [p]arcel, encompassing the

garage, lean-to, and shed . . . for more than 15 years” because, “[a]lthough [appellant]

arguably proved by clear and convincing evidence that [Robert’s] possession of the

disputed property was actual, open, continuous, and exclusive, [appellant] wholly failed to

prove that such possession was hostile.” The district court also concluded that, even if

appellant were able to demonstrate trespass, he “failed to prove an appropriate measure of

damages for such intrusion.”

DECISION

Appellant argues that, because testimony at trial clearly shows that no interested

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Mark W. Besemann v. Roger T. Weber, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mark-w-besemann-v-roger-t-weber-minnctapp-2016.