McDilda v. Norman W. Fries, Inc.

628 S.E.2d 195, 278 Ga. App. 51
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 7, 2006
DocketA05A2086
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 628 S.E.2d 195 (McDilda v. Norman W. Fries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDilda v. Norman W. Fries, Inc., 628 S.E.2d 195, 278 Ga. App. 51 (Ga. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Adams, Judge.

Norman W. Fries, Inc., d/b/a Claxton Poultry Farms (“Fries”) filed a declaratory judgment action in the Superior Court of Evans County to seek judicial determination of the common boundary line between its property and the property of the adjacent landowner, John A. McDilda. McDilda appeals the trial court’s determination of that line which resulted in Fries obtaining approximately 100 acres that McDilda had claimed.

On appeal, a trial court’s factual findings in a bench trial must be deferred to when supported by any evidence. See Kimbrell v. Effingham Bd. of Tax Assessors, 191 Ga. App. 544, 546 (382 SE2d 388) (1989). A trial court’s legal conclusions are subject to de novo review. See Suarez v. Halbert, 246 Ga. App. 822, 824 (1) (543 SE2d 733) (2000).

So considered, the underlying dispute concerns the exact location of “the edge of the Canoochee River swamp” which forms the common boundary line between two adjoining tracts, the so-called Foy tract belonging to Fries and the so-called Freeman tract owned by McDilda. During a bench trial, Fries and McDilda offered conflicting evidence as to the correct location of that line. McDilda claimed that the edge of the river swamp was the line marked in 1969 by surveyor Joe Davis, for Georgia-Pacific Corporation (“GP”) which owned the Foy tract at that time. Fries, on the other hand, claimed that the boundary was the line marked for GP by Jack Snelling, a registered surveyor and forester, when GP acquired the Foy tract in 1966.

Fries obtained the Foy tract when the property was sold at auction in October 1999. The area at issue appears on a plat showing a part of the Foy tract that is south and east of the Kennedy Bridge paved road. At Fries’s behest, in November 1999, Timothy W. Eason prepared a survey of the property and his plat was recorded. Fries presented evidence identifying the boundary as a line first marked with white paint and blazed trees by Snelling who marked the line after GP acquired the Foy tract in 1966. David Borem, who managed the Foy tract for GP, testified that the line had already been marked in white paint before he became GP’s forest manager for the Foy tract in 1972. Borem testified that at his direction, the color of the line was changed to blue so it would be easier to identify. Borem explained that:

when I had it marked in the late seventies,... we marked it in blue paint, putting three bands on the trees within three feet of the exact line. Within three feet, we put three bands facing the other property line, and we put two bands on the *52 trees facing our property line that were on the adjoining land owner. But all within a six foot wide, maximum width. And those trees that were exactly, what we felt were exactly on the line, we painted with one band.

Borem supervised the marking by the workers and recalled that “I walked the line with them.” Borem also testified that “[w]e never painted a line unless we got agreement from the adjoining owner. The fellows, myfellows, wenttothe adjoining owner, whoever it was along here, and said let’s walk this line and this is the way it is.”

When shown the composite plat by Eason, Borem confirmed that it virtually followed his blue line aerial photograph. In his opinion, the common boundary line designated by Eason on the plat corresponded with where GP had marked the line, first in white paint then in blue paint.

When GP sold the property in October 1987 to Allen Paulsen, GP reserved a right for 18 months to cut all merchantable timber and trees including stump wood. After the sale, a GP employee, James F. Palmer III, was responsible for supervising the cutting of the timber on the Foy tract. Concerned about the location of the property line and told that the line was marked, Palmer walked to the edge of the swamp and using his compass and running a 90 degree shot to the line, Palmer walked the line to make certain that the logger was cutting behind the line. Palmer testified that GP did not have all of the timber cut up to the blue line because some of it was small in diameter and not merchantable. GP had a logger cut the pine on “three islands in the swamp, pine islands” that were on “kind of high land.”

Andrew Claxton, another former GP employee, was also familiar with the Foy tract. Claxton was involved with logger supervision and re-inventory cruising on the Foy tract. He recalled the line being marked by blue-painted trees. By checking the distances on an aerial photograph, “doing my compass and pacing,” and cruising, Claxton ran his lines to the hill and back. Claxton testified that he particularly remembered this tract because of its topography and because “I was impressed with the high sand ridge.” Claxton testified that the GP line was visibly marked and that the Joe Davis line was not the GP line as he knew it.

Eason, a registered licensed surveyor and the Evans County elected surveyor, testified that shortly after Paulsen purchased the Foy tract from GP, the farm manager had contacted him “to come find the line.” According to Eason, even before Paulsen bought the GP tract, the blue painted line was recognized as the boundary line. Eason recalled on the hillside seeing a “marked and painted line along the edge of the swamp.” He testified that the edge of the river *53 swamp had a painted line in blue. When shown GP’s map, Eason agreed that the GP line was a virtual match with his own surveyed line. Eason testified that he had not seen any evidence on the ground of the Joe Davis line. Eason also testified that in swampy areas it is not unusual for the actual acreage as determined by an accurate survey to vary significantly from the “more or less” acreage that appears in old deeds. He added, “[r]egardless of the acreage, the line is the same.” Eason explained that nobody knew how many acres were in the Foy tract because the property had never been surveyed prior to his survey.

To prove that the common boundary line was located further to the west than Fries claimed, McDilda relied heavily on a 2003 survey by Joe Davis, various legal descriptions in documents, and the topography at the edge of the swamp. Citing the number of acres depicted on various plats and recitals in deeds in the chains of title for both tracts, McDilda claimed that the Freeman tract was approximately 100 acres larger than Fries alleged and that the Foy tract was approximately 100 acres less than Fries claimed. The legal descriptions, however, described the acreage by using the phrase “more or less” or by using the symbol

McDilda also submitted in evidence a videotape depicting the location of the boundary line that he claimed. The videotape was filmed by his son, Shane McDilda, as his son walked and operated a four-wheeler on what McDilda claimed to be the south edge of the river swamp. At various sites recorded on the videotape, Shane McDilda pointed out the topography of the ridgeline, sand hills, gopher holes, changes in the terrain and elevation, areas “holding water,” two ponds, and even a sand mine. McDilda argued that the higher land, 30 to 50 feet up a sand hill was not river swamp and that the edge of the swamp should be a wet area.

After the presentation of the courtroom evidence, the trial court, by mutual agreement between the parties, conducted a view and walked the land accompanied by the parties and their counsel.

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628 S.E.2d 195, 278 Ga. App. 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdilda-v-norman-w-fries-inc-gactapp-2006.