Metzner v. the Heirs of Reiter

2025 Ark. App. 423
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedSeptember 10, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ark. App. 423 (Metzner v. the Heirs of Reiter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metzner v. the Heirs of Reiter, 2025 Ark. App. 423 (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 423 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION IV No. CV-24-177

CAROL J. METZNER AND ERNIE Opinion Delivered September 10, 2025 METZNER, HER HUSBAND; ROBERT WAYNE FORNASH AND CHRISTY L. APPEAL FROM THE CONWAY FORNASH, HUSBAND AND WIFE; COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT BRADLEY S. FORNASH, A SINGLE [NO. 15CV-21-231] PERSON; AND MELANIE A. TIPTON AND ROBBY TIPTON, HER HUSBAND HONORABLE JERRY DON RAMEY, APPELLANTS JUDGE

V. AFFIRMED

THE HEIRS AT LAW OF FRED REITER, DECEASED, AND ONEDA CHAMBLISS REITER, HIS WIFE, DECEASED; AND THE HEIRS AT LAW OF MARY REITER NOLL, DECEASED, AND FRANK LAWRENCE NOLL, HER HUSBAND, DECEASED; INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO: RENAE REITER AND SPOUSE (IF ANY); BILLY REITER AND SPOUSE (IF ANY); AND JIMMY REITER AND SPOUSE (IF ANY); LORI ARMSTRONG AND BRIAN ARMSTRONG, HER HUSBAND; HEATHER ELKINS AND TYLER ELKINS, HER HUSBAND; AND SARAH MEADERS AND ROBERT MEADERS, HER HUSBAND; JOSEPH D. REITER, JR., AND LINDA REITER, HIS WIFE; FREDONA REITER AND HER UNKNOWN HEIRS; RUTH REITER SHIPMAN AND HER UNKNOWN HEIRS; PATRICIA NOLL LACHOWSKY AND LARRY LACHOWSKY, HER HUSBAND; HELEN NOLL, A SINGLE PERSON; FRANK NOLL, A SINGLE PERSON; NICKOLAS NOLL, A SINGLE PERSON; RITA NOLL LEE AND JOE LEE, HER HUSBAND; AND PAULA NOLL CORNETT AND ROGER CORNETT, HER HUSBAND; HAROLD ZIMMERMAN, A SINGLE PERSON; PAUL ANDREWS AND LEANN ANDREWS, HIS WIFE; MARK ANDREWS AND SUE ANDREWS, HIS WIFE; HAROLD ZIMMERMAN AND KATHY ZIMMERMAN, HIS WIFE; GERALD ZIMMERMAN AND JANEY ZIMMERMAN, HIS WIFE; MARY JANE WOFFORD, A SINGLE PERSON; RALPH NOLL, A SINGLE PERSON; AND DENISE LASOWSKI AND JAMES LASOWSKI, HER HUSBAND APPELLEES

MIKE MURPHY, Judge

This is an appeal from a motion to dismiss. Appellants petitioned to quiet title land by

adverse possession from their cotenants, appellees. In response to the petition, appellees filed

a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim pursuant to Arkansas Rule of Civil Procedure

l2(b)(6). The Conway County Circuit Court granted appellees’ motion and dismissed

appellants’ complaint without prejudice. A week later, appellants filed a motion for

reconsideration; it was deemed denied on January 18, 2024. In this one-brief appeal,

appellants argue that they pleaded sufficient facts to support a claim for adverse possession

2 by a cotenant, and they also contend the court used the wrong standard in dismissing the

case. We affirm.

This case involves the ownership of eighty acres of real property located in Conway

County. The appellants are the heirs of Herbert Reiter. Herbert’s father was Leonard Reiter.

Leonard had several children. Over time, Herbert Reiter acquired title from all of Leonard’s

heirs, except for the heirs of Fred Reiter and Marie Reiter Noll (referred to herein as

“appellees”).

Appellants alleged the following in their amended response to the motion to dismiss

and the amended petition to quiet and confirm title:

(a) [Appellants’] predecessor in title, Herbert Reiter, acquired title to a portion of the subject property by way of a patent from the United States of America in 1957.

(b) The Estate of Herbert Reiter listed a portion of the subject property as his in an Inventory of his Estate.

(c) Herbert Reiter, in 1933, went into possession of the property and built and maintained a home place on the property.

(d) Herbert Reiter and [appellants] have assessed and paid real property taxes on the subject property for many years.

(e) Herbert Reiter and [appellants] leased the property and received rents on same.

(f) Herbert Reiter and [appellants] made improvements on the property.

(g) [Appellants] have conveyed a portion of the subject property to third parties.

(h) Herbert Reiter and [appellants] have insured improvements on the property.

(i) Herbert Reiter and [appellants] have raised cattle on the property, and maintained fences around same.

3 (j) Herbert Reiter and [appellants] have treated the property as their own.

In dismissing appellants’ complaint, the circuit court found that appellants failed to

give actual notice to the other tenants in common that their possession was adverse.

Appellants now appeal, asking us to reverse and remand.

The standard of review for granting a motion to dismiss is whether the circuit court

abused its discretion. Blackburn v. Lonoke Cnty. Bd. of Election Comm’rs, 2022 Ark. 176, at 5,

652 S.W.3d 574, 578–79. In making that determination, we treat the facts alleged in the

complaint as true and view them in the light most favorable to the party who filed the

complaint. Id. We construe the pleadings liberally and resolve all reasonable inferences in

favor of the complaint. Id. However, our rules require fact pleading, and a complaint must

state facts, not mere conclusions, in order to entitle the pleader to relief. Id. We treat only

the facts alleged in the complaint as true but not a plaintiff’s theories, speculation, or

statutory interpretation. Id.

The establishment of title to real property through adverse possession is governed by

both statutes and case law. In re Est. of Slaughter, 2021 Ark. 199, at 7, 632 S.W.3d 746, 750.

To succeed on a claim for adverse possession, a petitioner must show by a preponderance of

the evidence that he or she possessed the disputed property continuously for seven years and

that the petitioner’s possession was actual, open, continuous, hostile, exclusive, and

accompanied by an intent to hold adversely and in derogation of the true owner. Id. In 1995,

the Arkansas General Assembly added as a requirement for proof of adverse possession an

4 element that the claimant must prove color of title and payment of taxes on the contiguous

property for seven years. Ark. Code Ann. § 18-11-106 (Repl. 2015).

The requirements of adverse possession are more stringent for a cotenant and require

stronger evidence. Ueltzen v. Roe, 242 Ark. 17, 21, 411 S.W.2d 894, 896 (1967). Because

possession by a cotenant is not ordinarily adverse to other cotenants, each having equal right

to possession, a cotenant must give actual notice to other cotenants that his possession is

adverse to their interests or commit sufficient acts of hostility so that their knowledge of his

adverse claim may be presumed. Slaughter, 2021 Ark. 199, at 7, 632 S.W.3d at 750. The

statutory period of time for an adverse-possession claim does not begin to run until such

knowledge has been brought home to the other cotenants. Id.

On appeal, appellants first argue that they pleaded they had performed numerous

actions that should have put appellees on notice that appellants were holding the land

adversely to appellees’ interests. In acknowledging that they did not provide verbal notice of

hostile intentions to the other cotenants, appellants rely on Hirsch v. Patterson, 269 Ark. 532,

601 S.W.2d 879 (1980).

In Hirsch, the Patterson family had paid property taxes on the disputed land since

1941 without any contribution from the Hirsch family, the cotenant. They also executed oil

and gas leases, sold timber, and allowed various groups to use the property, all without

sharing proceeds or seeking approval from the Hirsches. The property was known locally as

the “Patterson Estate.” When Henry Hirsch, the appellants’ predecessor, approached the

Pattersons about selling his interest in the late 1950s and early 1960s, he was informed that

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