Paseka v. Hall

CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 2, 2020
DocketA-19-521
StatusPublished

This text of Paseka v. Hall (Paseka v. Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paseka v. Hall, (Neb. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE NEBRASKA COURT OF APPEALS

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND JUDGMENT ON APPEAL (Memorandum Web Opinion)

PASEKA V. HALL

NOTICE: THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PERMANENT PUBLICATION AND MAY NOT BE CITED EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY NEB. CT. R. APP. P. § 2-102(E).

DONALD F. PASEKA AND JANIS M. PASEKA, TRUSTEES OF THE PASEKA FAMILY REVOCABLE TRUST, APPELLANTS, V.

BRUCE K. HALL, APPELLEE.

Filed June 2, 2020. No. A-19-521.

Appeal from the District Court for Dodge County: GEOFFREY C. HALL, Judge. Reversed and remanded for further proceedings. David C. Mitchell and Spencer B. Wilson, of Yost, Schafersman, Lamme, Hillis, Mitchell, Schulz & Hartmann, P.C., L.L.O., for appellants. Bradley D. Holtorf and Linsey Moran Bryant, of Sidner Law, for appellee.

PIRTLE, BISHOP, and ARTERBURN, Judges. ARTERBURN, Judge. INTRODUCTION Donald F. Paseka and Janis M. Paseka, as trustees of the Paseka Family Revocable Trust (the Trust), filed suit in the district court for Dodge County, Nebraska, seeking to quiet the title to a .73-acre parcel (the claimed tract), alleging they are the owners of the parcel by adverse possession. The court found in favor of Bruce K. Hall and dismissed the Pasekas’ complaint with prejudice. The Pasekas appeal, and we reverse the order of the district court and remand the matter for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

-1- BACKGROUND Paseka Farms, Inc. and Hall both own large parcels of land in Dodge County which are divided by an earthen berm. Immediately west of the earthen berm is the claimed tract, which is the subject of this dispute. Prior to trial the parties entered into a stipulation of facts which was received into evidence. Restated and summarized, the parties stipulated that the following facts were true: (1) That the Pasekas, as trustees of the Trust, are owners of Paseka Farms. (2) Paseka Farms has farmed all the tillable ground on the claimed tract from March 1, 2004, through February 28, 2015, in an open, obvious, continuous, notorious, exclusive, and adverse manner pursuant to three agricultural land leases comprising the entire period. (3) From at least 1978 to the present day, neither Hall nor any of his predecessors in title, farmed any portion of the claimed tract. (4) During the same period from 1978 to 2015, the Pasekas’ predecessors in title, the O’Connors, either farmed all the tillable ground on the claimed tract or they leased all the tillable ground to third parties including the Pasekas. (5) The use and occupation of the claimed tract for farming by the O’Connors and their tenants from 1978 through 2015 was open, obvious, continuous, notorious, exclusive, and adverse to the interests of Hall and his predecessors in title. During trial additional facts were established. Hall inherited his parcel from his predecessors in title in 1999. Hall operates a business in Omaha, and he has always leased his acres to a tenant, Taylor Farms. The ground Hall inherited actually includes the claimed tract in dispute which is described in a survey Hall commissioned in June 2014. Neither Hall nor his tenant have ever farmed the claimed tract. Hall commissioned the survey of his property in 2014 because he was eager to dig an irrigation well for a center pivot system and he wanted to be sure to place the well in the proper spot. Hall acknowledged he did not pay much attention to the farm ground until he started spending “a lot of money” on the irrigation project. Hall said he paid Taylor (his tenant) to pay attention to the property because he was “spending 99 percent of [his] time doing other things.” On June 27, 2014, during the pendency of the Pasekas’ third lease with the O’Connors, the O’Connors put their farms up for auction, which included all the ground described in the lease with the Pasekas who thought to include the claimed tract. The Pasekas continued to farm the claimed tract because the O’Connors had been farming that parcel since at least 1978 and the Pasekas believed they were responsible for everything the O’Connors had farmed. Donald Paseka testified that he never had reason to believe that any of the land west of the berm was not owned by the O’Connors. He noted that the berm was 3 to 4 feet tall and that there was no access to the claimed tract from the Hall tract on the other side. However, as was determined subsequently, the property line included in the legal description did not track completely with the berm. Therefore, although the Pasekas’ knowledge and years of experience farming the leased property had led them to believe that the legal description tracked with the berm, the legal description on the sale bill did not in actuality include the claimed tract.

-2- The day before the auction the auctioneer was contacted by Hall and advised that Hall’s June 2014 survey established the claimed tract was actually part of his inherited parcel. The day of the auction Hall brought a copy of the survey to the auction and the auctioneer announced to those gathered that a copy of the survey was available for review because there may be a question as to the exact location of the boundary line. The auctioneer told the bidders the property would be sold “subject to the survey.” Donald was the successful bidder on two of the three parcels of farm ground sold on June 27, 2014, including the parcel to which the claimed tract is attached. Donald acknowledged being made aware of the description and boundary issues as to the claimed tract but the surveyor was not present at the auction so there was nobody to talk to about it. “You either bid and buy the property or you don’t.” In August 2014, while Donald was spraying weeds on his newly purchased parcel which included the claimed tract, he noticed an aluminum stake in his bean field. Donald pulled it out and put it on the berm which divides his parcel from Hall’s. Donald had a conversation with Hall about the stake and learned Hall was making a claim for the claimed tract. After the 2014 harvest three more large steel “T” posts appeared in what Donald believed to be his ground. In the spring of 2015, Donald applied fertilizer and pre-emergent herbicide in preparation for corn planting because he “assumed that all the farm ground that had been farmed [for 30 years]” was the ground he purchased at auction. Donald noticed a large dirt moving machine in the area of the claimed tract and discovered Hall was digging a drainage trench. The trench was very steep and came right up to the surveyed boundary between the parcels so it now appeared impossible to turn a tractor around between the trench and the berm. Donald estimated he lost 3 feet of tillable ground on his side of the trench due to the possibility of the ground next to the trench giving way if driven over. Donald did not expect any of the boundary to be in the tillable ground but thought it might have been in the berm nearby. Donald testified Hall could not access the claimed tract without trespassing on the Pasekas’ parcel. ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR The Pasekas assign as error the district court’s finding that they were not in actual, continuous, exclusive, notorious, and adverse possession of the claimed tract under a claim of ownership for the required statutory period of 10 years. We do not address the assignments related to trespass, ejectment, and temporary and permanent injunction but instead leave those matters for the district court on remand. STANDARD OF REVIEW A quiet title action sounds in equity. In an appeal of an equitable action, an appellate court tries factual questions de novo on the record and reaches a conclusion independent of the findings of the trial court, provided, where credible evidence is in conflict on a material issue of fact, the appellate court considers and may give weight to the fact that the trial judge heard and observed the witnesses and accepted one version of the facts rather than another. Wanha v. Long, 255 Neb.

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Bluebook (online)
Paseka v. Hall, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paseka-v-hall-nebctapp-2020.