McGlothlin v. Livingston

2012 OK CIV APP 48, 276 P.3d 1042, 2011 WL 7827435, 2011 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 141
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 9, 2011
Docket107,144. Released for Publication by Order of the Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, Division No. 4
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2012 OK CIV APP 48 (McGlothlin v. Livingston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGlothlin v. Livingston, 2012 OK CIV APP 48, 276 P.3d 1042, 2011 WL 7827435, 2011 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 141 (Okla. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

JERRY L. GOODMAN, Presiding Judge.

' 1 Defendants Ruby, John, and Dawn Livingston (Collectively, West Landowners), appeal the trial court's April 30, 2009, order which granted prescriptive title to property taken from them and granted to Plaintiffs Vaylen and Lori McGlothlin (East Landowners) when the trial court moved the true boundary line between their respective properties by holding that a fence of unknown origin and purpose had become the boundary between the properties. Based on our review of the facts and applicable law, we reverse the trial court's order.

FACTS

12 East Landowners and West Landowners own adjoining properties divided by a north-south boundary line. East Landowners' son shot West Landowners' dog. As a result, criminal charges were filed against the son. After these events, East Landowners wrote a letter to West Landowners telling them to stop using the north-south roadway between the parties' adjoining properties, roughly paralleling the boundary line, apparently believing the roadway was wholly on their property. 1 West Landowners had obtained a survey in 1992 to reconfirm the legal boundary between the adjoining properties, as described in their respective deeds. The survey showed that the entrance to the roadway was on West Landowners' property. Relying on the survey, West Landowners parked a truck across the entrance to block East Landowners' use of it.

T3 East Landowners then obtained a temporary injunction keeping the road open, claiming the fence on the western side of the roadway was in fact the true boundary line between the properties and further request, ing the court quiet title in them to that portion of the land on East Landowners' side of the fence. The fence is not on the surveyed boundary line. It runs across the adjoining properties in a northwest-to-southeast direction. According to the survey, the northwest portion of the fence is on West Landowners' property and the southeast portion is on East Landowners' property. This fence has been in place at least since the 1940s and its origin and purpose is unknown. Previous adjoining landowners have worked on and maintained the fence during their ownership of the respective properties.

T4 A section line road runs east-west on the northern boundary of both properties. An "old trail" provided access from the seetion line road to the parties' adjoining properties and to several properties adjoining East Landowners on the south. The subject fence was originally on the west side of the "old trail" and ran somewhat parallel to it.

5 In 1981, East Landowners stopped the owner of the property adjoining theirs on the South from using the "old trail" to gain access to his property. This owner, together with other owners of property next to East Landowners' southern boundary (Southern Landowners) filed suit against East Landowners to condemn a way of necessity across East Landowners' property because theirs was landlocked.

T 6 This suit was settled among the parties by East Landowners predecessor in title granting to the landlocked South Landowners a thirty-three foot right of way across the west side of East Landowners' property. In consideration for the grant, South landowners agreed to improve the existing road and enclose East Landowners' property with a fence. South Landowners, believing the existing fence marked East Landowners' western boundary, improved the road on the east side of and substantially parallel to the existing fence and essentially over the "old trail." As part of the agreement, they then built a new fence along the east side of the new road *1045 and along the south boundary of East Landowners' property in order to enclose the road.

17 As previously stated, West Landowners had their property surveyed in 1992 to determine the true record title boundary line of their property. 2 According to the survey, the north entry point from the section line road and a portion of the new road is on West Landowners' property; the road then runs southeasterly intersecting the surveyed boundary line deep into East Landowner's property, then continues to the south and southeast.

McGlothlin I

18 This is the second time this case has been before us. We will refer to the previous appeal as McGlothlin I (Appeal, No. 104,126, McGlothlin v. Livingston ) and this appeal as McGlothlin IL.

T9 East Landowners sued West Landowners, claiming the existing fence line had become the true boundary line. West Landowners disagreed, contending the true boundary line was that revealed in the descriptions contained in the deeds and confirmed by the survey. Of critical importance is the fact that neither party disputed the boundary line described in the deeds or, survey. Rather, East Landowners seek to move that boundary to match the existing fence line, while West Landowners seek to maintain the legally described boundary intact. East Landowners were granted summary judgment determining the fence to be the boundary, by acquiescence of the parties, and prescriptive title was given to East Landowners to those portions of West Landowners' property lying beyond the surveyed boundary. West Landowners appealed in McGlothlin I.

1 10 In McGlothlin I, which is now the law of the case, this Court held the fence did not create a boundary by acquiescence because there was no evidence yet produced to prove that the fence was built to divide a commonly owned unit of real property; further, that "No boundary dispute was being settled by the erection of the fence." Rather, there was "some implication in this record that the fence, was erected and maintained to enclose cattle, not to delineate a boundary." Finally, Judge Reif, now Justice Reif, specially concurred for the purpose of emphasizing:

6 . a property owner is not required to place a fence on the property line and does not give up any rights by placing a fence off the property line and along some line within the property. In my opinion, East Landowners have the additional burden of showing who built the fence for purposes of boundary by acquiescence and adverse possession." (Emphasis in original.)

111 A Petition for Certiorari filed in McGiothlin I was denied by the Oklahoma Supreme Court by a vote of nine to zero and mandated December 14, 2007. Therefore, McGlothlin I is now the law of the case.

McGlothlin II

112 After remand, a non-jury trial was held. The same trial court once again determined the doctrine of boundary by acquiescence applied to establish the boundary between the parties' land, and additionally found the doctrine of adverse possession applied, giving prescriptive title of portions of West Landowners' property to East Landowners. West Landowners once again appeal.

1183 In McGlothlin IL, to its credit, the trial court made extensive, carefully written findings of fact and conclusions of law. In doing so it fashioned a remedy providing ingress and egress on the current roadway, holding the original fence between the properties is the new boundary line, and giving each party some of the other's property under the theory of adverse possession.

114 We reverse the trial court's order.

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Bluebook (online)
2012 OK CIV APP 48, 276 P.3d 1042, 2011 WL 7827435, 2011 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcglothlin-v-livingston-oklacivapp-2011.