McNeil v. Hadden

76 So. 2d 160, 261 Ala. 691, 1954 Ala. LEXIS 540
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 18, 1954
Docket4 Div. 737
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 76 So. 2d 160 (McNeil v. Hadden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McNeil v. Hadden, 76 So. 2d 160, 261 Ala. 691, 1954 Ala. LEXIS 540 (Ala. 1954).

Opinion

*693 LAWSON, Justice.

This suit was filed in the circuit court of Houston County, in equity, by W. E. Hadden against Elmer McNeil and Leon McNeil for the purpose of having a boundary line established.

Submission for final decree was on the complaint, answer of the respondents, and •testimony taken before a commissioner. After reading the testimony the trial court, in company with counsel for both sides, •inspected the area in dispute.

Thereafter a decree was rendered wherein the boundary line was established as contended for by the complainant. In that decree it was ordered that the sheriff or a competent surveyor named by him place land markers so as to show the location of the boundary line as established by judicial decree.

After the sheriff reported that he had placed the markers as ordered, the respondents filed an application for rehearing, "which application the trial court denied. From the final decree the respondents below have appealed to this court.

The first assignment of error is that the trial court erred in overruling the respondents’ demurrer to the complaint.

It is provided by statute that rulings of the trial court on interlocutory decrees may be reviewed by this court on appeal from final decree. § 756, Title 7, Code 1940.

The first assignment of error is sufficient to present for review those grounds of the demurrer which are argued here in brief of counsel for appellant, but we will not treat those grounds of demurrer not argued. Groover v. Darden, 259 Ala. 607, 68 So.2d 28, and cases cited.

Grounds of demurrer which are argued in brief read as follows:

“Seventh. Because it is not alleged with sufficient certainty by the bill of complaint whether the complainant is claiming disputed lands outside of the 40 acres of lands he described in his ■complaint.
“Eighth. Because it is not alleged in the bill of complaint whether the fence row hedge, or woods and settlement road which complainant states constitutes the true and correct boundary line between complainant and respondents lands, is a part of 40 acres of land he states he owns, or is it in addition to the 40 acres of lands he describes in his complaint.”

It is alleged in the complaint, in part, as follows:

“That Complainant owns the following described land in Houston County, Alabama:
“SW % of SW %, Section 32, Township 2, Range 26;
“And Respondents own, or are interested in the following described land in Houston County, Alabama:
“SE 14 of SE J4j Section 31, Township 2, Range 26;
“That Respondents’ land above described adjoins Complainant’s land above described, and Complainant and Respondents are co-terminous land owners; and that a dispute exists between Complainant and the Respondents as to the true and correct boundary line between their respective 40’s above described.”

The quoted averments standing alone show that the boundary line between the lands of the parties is the section line between Sections 31 and 32 of the named township. And while the boundary line between adjacent landowners may be fixed and changed by agreement or by adverse possession, they cannot relocate a section line as surveyed by the government surveyors. Alford v. Rodgers, 242 Ala. 370, 6 So.2d 409; Oliver v. Oliver, 187 Ala. 340, 65 So. 373.

But it is further alleged that complainant and his predecessors have had adverse possession to a line described by reference to landmarks and monuments for more than ten years and that, by reason thereof, com *694 plainant is entitled to have the described line decreed as the correct boundary line.

We are of the opinion that such averments show that it is not the section line property surveyed which complainant seeks to have established as the boundary line, but the line described, though such line extends in point of fact into the forty acres on the west. The argued grounds of demurrer were overruled correctly. See Smith v. Cook, 220 Ala. 338, 124 So. 898; Jennings v. Perkins, 235 Ala. 32, 177 So. 139.

The second assignment of error is that the trial court erred in denying the respondents’ application for rehearing. The decree denying the rehearing is not subject to review on this appeal. Whitman v. Whitman, 253 Ala. 643, 46 So.2d 422. See Wood, Wire & Metal Lathers Intern., etc., v. Brown & Root, 258 Ala. 430, 63 So.2d 372.

Assignments of error 2, 3, 4 and 5 are argued together in brief for appellants, and properly so, for they all challenge the correctness of the trial court’s action in establishing the boundary line as insisted upon by the appellee, the complainant below.

It is without dispute in the evidence that the complainant has paper title to the SW j4 of the SW j4> Section 32, Township 2, Range 26, in Houston County. It is also without dispute thalj the respondents have paper title to twenty-four acres on the east side of the SE ^4 of the SE Section 31, in the same township and range.

It is conceded that according to their paper titles, the boundary which separates complainant’s land on the east from the respondents’ land on the west is the section line between Sections 31 and 32, as surveyed by the government surveyors.

But, as we have indicated, the complainant took the position in his complaint that irrespective of the location of the section line when properly surveyed, the correct boundary between his land and that of the respondents is a man-made line consisting of a well-defined settlement road and a hedgerow, the settlement road being on the southern end of the line and the hedgerow on the northern end. Complainant’s claim, is based on the assertion that the line which he says is the boundary has been recognized as such by his predecessors in title and those of respondents since the two sections involved came out of the government back in the last century.

It is established that: “If two coterminous proprietors agree on a boundary line, and each occupies to its location, the possession is presumed adverse, and after ten years has the effect of fixing such line as the true one. Turner v. DePriest, 205 Ala. 313, 87 So. 370; Copeland v. Warren, 214 Ala. 150, 107 So. 94; Gunn v. Parsons, 213 Ala. 217, 104 So. 390; Mink v. Whitfield, 218 Ala. 334, 118 So. 559; Smith v. Harbaugh, 216 Ala. 202, 112 So. 914. If a coterminous landowner holds actual possession of the disputed strip under a claim of right openly and exclusively for a continuous period of ten years, believing that he is holding to the true line, he thereby acquires title up to that line, even though the belief as to the correct location originated in a misake, and it is immaterial what he might or might not have claimed had he known he was mistaken. Smith v. Bachus, 201 Ala. 534, 78 So. 888; Hoffman v. White, 90 Ala. 354, 7 So. 816; Hopkins v. Duggar, 204 Ala. 626, 87 So. 103; Shepherd v. Scott’s Chapel, 216 Ala. 193, 112 So. 905.” Smith v. Cook, 220 Ala. 338, 341, 124 So. 898, 900. See Treadaway v. Hamilton, 221 Ala. 479, 129 So. 55; Clarke v. Earnest, 224 Ala. 165, 139 So. 223; Guy v. Lancaster, 250 Ala. 226, 34 So.2d 10.

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Bluebook (online)
76 So. 2d 160, 261 Ala. 691, 1954 Ala. LEXIS 540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcneil-v-hadden-ala-1954.