Phillip J. Jackson v. Earl Ross Downs and Raymond Abramson

2022 Ark. App. 17, 639 S.W.3d 416
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 12, 2022
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2022 Ark. App. 17 (Phillip J. Jackson v. Earl Ross Downs and Raymond Abramson) 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
Phillip J. Jackson v. Earl Ross Downs and Raymond Abramson, 2022 Ark. App. 17, 639 S.W.3d 416 (Ark. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Cite as 2022 Ark. App. 17 Elizabeth Perry ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS I attest to the accuracy and SPECIAL DIVISION integrity of this document No. CV-21-125 2023.08.09 11:34:53 -05'00' 2023.003.20244 Opinion Delivered January 12, 2022 PHILLIP J. JACKSON APPEAL FROM THE MONROE APPELLANT COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 48CV-19-114] V. HONORABLE CHALK S.MITCHELL, EARL ROSS DOWNS AND JUDGE RAYMOND ABRAMSON AFFIRMED APPELLEES

ANNABELLE IMBER TUCK, Special Judge 1

Phillip Jackson brings this appeal from a judgment of the Monroe County Circuit

Court awarding Raymond Abramson an easement across his property. Specifically, the

circuit court found that Abramson had acquired an easement by necessity, an easement by

implication, and a prescriptive easement across Jackson’s property. We affirm the circuit

court’s finding that Abramson had acquired a prescriptive easement across Jackson’s

property.

Since 1991, Raymond Abramson has owned ninety-three acres of rural, undeveloped

land (the Abramson Property) in Monroe County. This land has been in the Abramson

family since 1895. It is heavily wooded and primarily used recreationally for hunting, hiking,

1 Appellee Raymond Abramson is a judge on the Arkansas Court of Appeals. For that reason, all current court of appeals judges have recused themselves from this case, and this appeal has been decided by a special panel of retired judges. fishing, and timber production. In June 2019, Abramson leased his property to appellee Earl

Downs for hunting purposes, and thereafter Downs visited the property frequently.

Adjacent to Abramson’s property is 240 acres of land owned by appellant, Phillip

Jackson, which he primarily uses for farming. Jackson’s land shares a property line with

Abramson’s on the north, east, and south. Jackson obtained title to his land by warranty

deed in 1986.

The dispute in this case arose after Earl Downs was denied access to the Abramson

Property in October 2019. On October 31, Downs went to visit the Abramson Property

to prepare for a hunt. As he did every time before, he planned on using the road that crossed

over Jackson’s property. However, Jackson had barricaded the road with a gate and an

excavator, effectively preventing Downs from accessing the Abramson Property from the

east.

Downs subsequently filed a complaint alleging that he had an easement by

prescription, necessity, or implication, and he requested an “Ex-Parte Temporary

Injunction”against Jackson seeking access to the Abramson Property for hunting purposes.

The circuit court granted the Ex-Parte Temporary Injunction without a hearing and

subsequently served it on Jackson. Thereafter, Jackson filed a motion to dismiss and

requested a hearing. Downs later filed an amended complaint, which added Raymond

Abramson as a party.

On February 27, 2020, the circuit court held a trial on the amended complaint. At

the trial, Abramson testified about his family’s use of the blocked road both prior to and

during his ownership. He said that the blocked road was the only road his family and others

2 had ever used to access the property. He indicated that his father was a farmer who used to

rent what is now Jackson’s property and that, as a child, he would ride out to the farm with

his older brother. He testified that he even remembers driving a tractor out there.

Further, Abramson testified about how he used the blocked road during his

ownership, which began in 1991. He said that he goes to the land “at least once a year if

not multiple times every year, some years more than others.” He testified that he goes

whenever he wants and he waves to people in Jackson’s fields, and they wave back.

Abramson said that each fall, he and his wife enjoy walking the property and viewing the

wildlife. Abramson conservatively estimated that he has been to the property around one

hundred times.

Abramson offered evidence that others use the road as well. He said that Pat Gerlach,

who leased the property for hunting purposes from 2008 to 2018, used the blocked road to

access the property. He said that scrap dealers had traversed the blocked road when they

came to purchase his father’s old farming equipment and that loggers had used the blocked

road to haul timber.

Jackson testified that the road he blocked existed when he purchased his land in 1986.

However, he described the road as being nothing more than a trail that was mostly impassable

except by tractor. He said that, over the years, he had improved the road so that he could

better work the land for farming. He testified that he made these improvements for his own

benefit and without consultation with others in the area. He further testified that in 1995

or 1996, he posted no “trespassing signs” and installed a cable across the road because “[he]

was having a bunch of people steal stuff and tearing [his] road up.” Moreover, Joe Jackson,

3 who is Phillip Jackson’s son, testified that thirty-gallon barrels were also placed in the road.

Downs testified about his use of the blocked road. He said that he accessed the

Abramson Property via that road at least fifty times. He said that on two or three occasions,

he waved at people in Jackson’s fields. Moreover, Downs testified about a courtesy phone

call with Joe. He said that five or six days before the road was blocked, he called Joe to

introduce himself. He told Joe that he was leasing the Abramson Property, and he also

provided him with a description of his truck. Joe told Downs that he knew somebody had

been coming and going because he could see the tracks.

Pat Gerlach, who obtained the hunting lease immediately prior to Downs, testified

that he also utilized the blocked road. Gerlach said that he first used the road in 1968 when

he was helping farm the land as a teenager. He further stated that he used the road to haul

deer stands in and out of the Abramson Property when he hunted the land from 2008 to

2018.

Following the hearing and after visiting the property in person, the court took the

case under advisement. Both parties submitted posthearing briefs and proposed findings of

fact and conclusions of law. On November 4, 2020, the circuit court issued an order finding

that Abramson had acquired a prescriptive easement, an easement by implication, and an

easement by necessity over Jackson’s land. The circuit court also ordered that Downs had a

right to use the easement. Jackson now appeals, challenging the circuit court’s findings.

This court reviews equity matters de novo on the record but will not reverse a finding of

the lower court unless it is clearly erroneous. See Owners Ass’n of Foxcroft Woods, Inc. v.

Foxglen Assocs., 346 Ark. 354, 57 S.W.3d 187 (2001). A finding is clearly erroneous when,

4 although there is evidence to support it, the reviewing court on the entire evidenceis left

with a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed. Id. at 361, 57 S.W.3d

at 192. In reviewing a circuit court’s findings, we give due deference to that court’s superior

position to determine the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be accorded to their

testimony. Carson v. County of Drew, 354 Ark. 621, 128 S.W.3d 423 (2003). Disputed facts

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2022 Ark. App. 17, 639 S.W.3d 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillip-j-jackson-v-earl-ross-downs-and-raymond-abramson-arkctapp-2022.