Poe v. Mitchener

275 S.W.3d 375, 2009 Mo. App. LEXIS 245, 2009 WL 189948
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 28, 2009
DocketSD 28276
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 275 S.W.3d 375 (Poe v. Mitchener) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Poe v. Mitchener, 275 S.W.3d 375, 2009 Mo. App. LEXIS 245, 2009 WL 189948 (Mo. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

JOHN E. PARRISH, Judge.

Tommie Mitchener 1 , Mona Boyd 2 , Jody Cheshire and Steve Cheshire (collectively referred to as defendants) appeal a judgment rendered against them in an action brought by William F. Poe and Stella Poe (plaintiffs) and in a counterclaim defendants brought against plaintiffs. This court affirms.

Plaintiffs sought to quiet title to certain property in Ripley County, Missouri (Count I); a declaratory judgment that a certain lake is a private, non-navigable waterway (Count II); and to enjoin defendants from entering onto the property in question and for damages for trespass (Count III). 3

Defendants’ counterclaim sought to establish an easement by prescription for the use of the lake referred to in plaintiffs’ petition (Counterclaim Count I) and for injunction prohibiting plaintiffs from “(1) placing a fence or net in the lake ... restricting access of persons and stream wildlife in the lake; (2) reducing the flow from the dam so as to lower the level of the lake; or (3) in any other manner interfering with or inhibiting the access of ... Defendants” to any portion of the lake (Counterclaim Count II).

Plaintiffs and defendants own contiguous tracts of real estate. Plaintiff William F. Poe and defendant Tommie Mitchener are brother and sister. They have three other siblings, Joanne Harder, Janet Russell (deceased), and Don Poe (deceased). Their parents are Voris Poe (deceased) and Marie Poe. In 1971 plaintiffs purchased most of the tract of real estate they now own from William Poe’s parents. The warranty deed by which plaintiffs acquired title to that property recites that the tract conveyed was “520 acres, more or less.” It further recites that the grantors, Voris Poe and Marie Poe, his wife, reserved a life estate in the real estate that was conveyed. The life estate was later released by quitclaim deed dated August 26, 1980, from Voris Poe and Marie Poe, his wife, to plaintiffs.

The following events occurred at the dates noted.

1980
Plaintiffs granted an easement to Little Black Watershed Subdistrict of Ripley County, Missouri, for the purpose of “construction, operation, maintenance, and inspection of a floodwater retarding structure ... for the permanent storage and temporary detention, either or both, of any waters that are impounded, stored, or detained by such structure.” Plaintiffs reserved “the right and privilege to use the [property over which the easement was granted] at any time, in *378 any manner and for any purpose not inconsistent with the foil use and enjoyment by [the watershed subdistrict].”
Voris Poe and Marie Poe conveyed an easement over real estate they owned to the watershed subdistrict that contained identical language to that in the conveyance by which plaintiffs conveyed the easement to the watershed district.
1991
Voris Poe and Marie Poe conveyed real estate that included the property over which they had granted the easement to the watershed subdistrict in 1980 to Tommie Mitchener, Janet Russell (deceased), and Joanne Harder (not a defendant).

A dam was thereafter constructed on the Poe property. It was completed in 1992. The water the dam impounded created the artificial lake that is the subject of this litigation. The lake covers approximately 73 acres, about 65 of which are on plaintiffs’ property. The remaining eight acres are on defendants’ property.

Other events that led to the litigation that is the subject of this appeal occurred as follows.

199h
Defendants had the property they acquired surveyed. They divided their property equally among Joanne Harder, Janet Russell, and Tommie Mitchener. The lake was in existence at the time of the survey. The survey undertook to divide the land and the area on which water was impounded for the lake into equal shares among the sisters Harder, Russell, and Mitchener.
1995-96
Janet Russell and her husband, Sidney, moved onto their property in late 1995 or early 1996. They posted their property with no trespassing signs about the time they moved onto it.
Plaintiffs put pink ribbons on trees near a cove at the lake to mark the property boundary between their real estate and other real estate owned by defendants. They told other people to honor that boundary line.
2001, et. seq.
Plaintiffs acquired the property of William Poe’s sister, Joanne Harder, by general warranty deed dated November 8, 2001. Plaintiffs thereafter had a survey performed and marked the corners of their property in the lake with buoys. This occurred sometime in 2001 or 2002. Plaintiffs thereafter improved their land and the lake. The improvements included stocking the lake with fish, clearing some of the area around the lake, and construction of shelters and other structures.
From time to time, plaintiffs operated a small, private hunting and fishing business on their property. They permitted hunting and fishing on the property and charged fees for those privileges.
Plaintiffs allowed the use of their property for recreational hunting and fishing to those to whom they gave prior permission and limited that use to the portion of the lake that covered property they owned.
Plaintiffs have not granted use of their property or the lake to the general public. They erected fences and gates to control entry onto the property and marked the areas on the lake that could be used with buoys. Their property is posted with no trespassing signs and is marked by purple paint on fences.

The trial court held that plaintiffs and defendants each own the respective tracts of real estate that had been conveyed to them; that no party had the right to use *379 the surface of the lake that is impounded over the land owned by the other. The trial court further found for plaintiffs on their claim against defendants for trespass and awarded plaintiffs judgment against defendants in the amount of $1.00. It made permanent the temporary injunction that had previously been entered, thereby ordering that “Defendants Mitchner [sic], Boyd and Cheshire, be and are ... restrained from trespassing, fishing and boating on the Plaintiffs’ property.” Judgment was entered in accordance with the trial court’s findings. Judgment was also entered for plaintiffs and against defendants on defendants’ Counterclaim Counts I and II. The relief sought by defendants by way of those counterclaims was denied.

This is a case tried before the court without a jury. As such, the standard of appellate review requires that the judgment be affirmed unless there is no substantial evidence to support it, it is against the weight of the evidence, or it erroneously declares or applies the law. M.F.M. v. J.O.M.,

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Bluebook (online)
275 S.W.3d 375, 2009 Mo. App. LEXIS 245, 2009 WL 189948, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poe-v-mitchener-moctapp-2009.