Patricia L. Rogers Evans v. Unknown Heirs of Dan A. Arbuthnot, Kevin Smith, Karl Holliday, Mark Holliday, Roy Lee, and Marydia Breckinridge

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedOctober 24, 2023
Docket2022-CA-00215-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Patricia L. Rogers Evans v. Unknown Heirs of Dan A. Arbuthnot, Kevin Smith, Karl Holliday, Mark Holliday, Roy Lee, and Marydia Breckinridge (Patricia L. Rogers Evans v. Unknown Heirs of Dan A. Arbuthnot, Kevin Smith, Karl Holliday, Mark Holliday, Roy Lee, and Marydia Breckinridge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patricia L. Rogers Evans v. Unknown Heirs of Dan A. Arbuthnot, Kevin Smith, Karl Holliday, Mark Holliday, Roy Lee, and Marydia Breckinridge, (Mich. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2022-CA-00215-COA

PATRICIA L. ROGERS EVANS APPELLANT

v.

UNKNOWN HEIRS OF DAN A. ARBUTHNOT, APPELLEES DECEASED, KEVIN SMITH, KARL HOLLIDAY, MARK HOLLIDAY, ROY LEE, AND MARYDIA BRECKINRIDGE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/02/2022 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. E. VINCENT DAVIS COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: WILKINSON COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: SHELDON G. ALSTON MARGARET K. DUFF ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEES: WAYNE DOWDY NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - REAL PROPERTY DISPOSITION: REVERSED, RENDERED AND REMANDED - 10/24/2023 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:

BEFORE WILSON, P.J., McCARTY AND EMFINGER, JJ.

EMFINGER, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. On February 19, 2021, Patricia L. Rogers Evans (Evans) filed her “Sworn Complaint

for Determination of Heirship of Dan A. Arbuthnot and Jessie Arbuthnot, to Confirm and

Quiet Title and to Remove Clouds on Title, and in the alternative Adverse Possession.”

Answers were filed by Steven Davis, Kevin Smith, and Marydia Breckinridge.1 The matter

1 Smith and Breckinridge were represented by Wayne Dowdy. The record reflects that Davis claimed an interest in the subject property by a tax deed. Any interest Davis had in the subject property was not addressed during trial or in the chancellor’s order. At oral argument, counsel advised that the tax deed was filed in this case in error and did not was tried on October 21, 2021, and the court, having heard the evidence presented by the

parties, took the matter under advisement. On February 2, 2022, an “Order Granting Motion

to Dismiss” was entered dismissing Evans’ complaint. Evans appeals.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. In her complaint, Evans sought to have the court confirm her title to a certain 15.8-

acre tract of land in Wilkinson County, Mississippi (the property). Evans claimed fee simple

title to the property as the grantee in a warranty deed executed by Shavone Wells, grantor,

on June 6, 2006, and recorded that same day in the county’s Land Deed Book No. 12-P, Page

604.2 In the alternative, Evans claimed ownership by her adverse possession of the property

since June 6, 2006. She filed the instant complaint to confirm her title.

¶3. As set forth in the deraignment of title attached to Evans’ complaint, on June 7, 1985,

Dan A. Arbuthnot acquired sole title to the property by quitclaim deed from the other heirs

at law of James Arbuthnot, who died intestate on October 10, 1979. Dan held title to the

property until September 7, 2002, when he died intestate. Again, according to the complaint,

Dan’s wife Jessie Arbuthnot and his daughter Shavone Arbuthnot Wells were his sole heirs

at law. Jessie died intestate on December 16, 2005, leaving Shavone as her only heir. There

concern the property that is the subject of this appeal. 2 The subject property had previously been conveyed by Shavone to herself by a quitclaim deed dated February 8, 2006, wherein Shavone declared herself to be the sole and only heir at law of Dan A. Arbuthnot and Jessie Arbuthnot. Years later, well after 2016, while in the process of selling the property, Evans became aware of others who claimed to be heirs of Dan and Jessie, resulting in her filing the complaint to confirm title.

2 is no evidence that an estate was opened for either Dan A. Arbuthnot or Jessie Arbuthnot.

Further, there is no record that prior to this proceeding, any effort had been made to identify

the heirs of Dan A. Arbuthnot or Jessie Arbuthnot, by heirship affidavit or otherwise.

¶4. Marydia Breckinridge and Kevin Smith filed their answer to Evans’ complaint

denying that Evans was entitled to the relief requested. The trial was held on October 21,

2021, at which time Evans’ counsel announced that Evans would not pursue an heirship

determination as requested in her complaint. Evans elected to proceed only on the claim of

adverse possession. Evans and Clyde Brown (caretaker and employee of Evans) testified

during Evans’ case-in-chief.

¶5. Evans testified that she and/or her father had owned land adjacent to the subject

property since 1983. A portion of her property had been used as a “high fence white-tail deer

habitat,” and since 2002, she had operated it as a business and sold whitetail deer hunts. To

access this portion of her property, Evans testified that they had always used a road that

crossed the subject property. According to Evans, while Jessie and Shavone were living on

the subject property, she told Shavone that if they ever wished to sell the property, she would

like to buy it. Evans testified this would give her access to the 500 acres she already owned

“behind” the subject property.

¶6. After Jessie’s death, believing that Shavone was the sole heir to the property, Evans

purchased the subject property from Shavone for $38,000 in exchange for the warranty deed

described above. After the purchase, during 2006, Evans gave the Arbuthnot relatives the

3 opportunity to collect any of Jessie’s possessions that remained in the house on the property.

Later, after the house had been vandalized, Evans had the house demolished. She continued

to use the road to access her other property. Evans said, “I just put up a four or five foot wire

fence to kind of indicate that it was private property. I also put up gates and locked them.”

She testified that she placed double gates with locks on the only entrance and exit to the

property.

¶7. Evans testified that she is the only person who has maintained the subject property.

She keeps the grass cut, the road in passable condition, and the fence in good repair. She had

a smaller house on the property removed. She paid the taxes on the property. She testified

that her ownership of the subject property, since 2006, had been “open and notorious and

clear to everyone.” She advised the court that Clyde Brown helped her maintain the property

and that she and Brown have the only keys to the gates. Evans stated that she allows her sons

to access the property and that she allows hunters to enter the property. She said that she had

“co-op employees come bring feed and seed and sometimes I had people coming in with their

equipment to do land work.” She also testified she had done some timber thinning on the

property. According to Evans, no one has ever questioned her control of the property.

¶8. Clyde Edward Brown testified and confirmed that he maintains Evans’ property. He

keeps the front cut and takes care of the deer and the fences. He keeps the gates locked and

testified that no one ever approached him while he was working on the subject property and

represented that they owned the property. Evans pays him and no one has ever questioned

4 what he was doing on the property.

¶9. At the conclusion of Evans’ case-in-chief, the defendants moved to dismiss the

complaint for Evans’ failure to plead and prove ouster of the co-tenants. The chancellor took

the motion under advisement. The defense went forward, and Smith, Karl Holliday, and

Mark Holliday testified for the defendants.3 The defendants renewed their motion to dismiss

after Evans testified in rebuttal. The chancellor again took the motion under advisement and

requested that both parties submit briefs on the issue.

¶10. On February 2, 2022, the chancellor issued his order finding that Evans and the

defendants were co-tenants. The chancellor then found that because Evans failed to plead and

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Patricia L. Rogers Evans v. Unknown Heirs of Dan A. Arbuthnot, Kevin Smith, Karl Holliday, Mark Holliday, Roy Lee, and Marydia Breckinridge, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patricia-l-rogers-evans-v-unknown-heirs-of-dan-a-arbuthnot-kevin-smith-missctapp-2023.