Powell v. Vanlandingham

2011 Ohio 3208
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 24, 2011
Docket10CA24
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2011 Ohio 3208 (Powell v. Vanlandingham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Powell v. Vanlandingham, 2011 Ohio 3208 (Ohio Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

[Cite as Powell v. Vanlandingham, 2011-Ohio-3208.] IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT WASHINGTON COUNTY

JOAN M. POWELL, :

Plaintiff-Appellant, : Case No. 10CA24

vs. :

STANLY1 P. VANLANDINGHAM, et al., : DECISION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY

Defendants-Appellees. :

_________________________________________________________________

APPEARANCES:

APPELLANT PRO SE: Joan M. Powell, 618 Third Street, Marietta, Ohio 45750

COUNSEL FOR APPELLEES: Daniel A. Fouss, 311 Fourth Street, Marietta, Ohio 45750 _________________________________________________________________ CIVIL APPEAL FROM COMMON PLEAS COURT DATE JOURNALIZED: 6-24-11

ABELE, J.

{¶ 1} This is an appeal from a Washington County Common Pleas Court judgment that

declared the legal description of a disputed boundary line between the properties of Joan M.

Powell, plaintiff below and appellant herein, and Stanly P. and Ruth A. Vanlandingham,

defendants below and appellees herein.

{¶ 2} Appellant raises the following assignments of error for review:

1 The record contains inconsistent spellings of Mr. Vanlandingham’s first name: Stanly and Stanley. We have used the spelling as it appears on the trial court’s final judgment entry. WASHINGTON, 10CA24 2

FIRST ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR:

“THE JUDGE ERRED IN HIS DECISION DUE TO INCORRECT INFORMATION GIVEN HIM IN DEFENDANT’S BRIEF AND FINDING OF FACTS.”

SECOND ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR:

“THE JUDGE MADE THE WRONG DECISION DUE TO FABRICATIONS IN THE TESTIMONY OF THE DEFENDANT.”

THIRD ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR:

“THE COURT ERRED IN RULING FOR THE DEFENDANTS WHEN THE WEIGHT OF THE EVIDENCE, DEEDS FOR BOTH PROPERTIES, AND TESTIMONY BY THE SURVEYOR PROVED THE PROPERTY IN QUESTION LEGALLY BELONGS TO THE PLAINTIFF.”

I. BACKGROUND

{¶ 3} The present case involves a boundary line dispute between two neighbors who

have lived next door to each other since 1974. Appellees assert that in 1974, when they moved

into their home, appellant and her now-deceased husband desired to erect a sixteen-foot privacy

fence along the side of their patio next to appellees’ home. Appellees claim that before

appellant and her husband constructed the fence, appellant’s husband showed appellees where

the boundary line rests, from a stone marker on the Third Street end of the property to a steel rod

(sometimes referred to in the record and this opinion as an “iron pipe”) in the ground near the

alley. Appellees state that appellant and her husband then erected the fence along this boundary

line, which was the same as the boundary line set forth in a 1966 survey conducted by Franklin

Blair (the Blair survey). Appellees assert that from 1974 onward, despite appellant's claimed

lack of knowledge, the parties acted in accordance with the 1974 boundary line until the summer WASHINGTON, 10CA24 3

of 2007, when appellant expressed displeasure with appellees’ placement of a fence.

{¶ 4} In August 2007, appellant hired James M. Mulryan to survey her property.

According to Mulryan’s survey, appellees’ fence line encroaches on appellant’s property by .9

feet at one end and by .5 feet at another end. Appellant requested appellees to remove the

encroachments. When attempts to settle the matter proved unsuccessful, appellant instituted the

present lawsuit and requested the trial court to order appellees to remove the encroachments.

{¶ 5} In their answer, appellees raised several affirmative defenses, including the

defenses of estoppel, waiver, and acquiescence. Appellees further asserted what appears, in

substance, to be a counterclaim. Appellees claimed that appellant acquiesced to the location of

the boundary line, as described in 1974, and further “request[ed] an order of [the trial] Court

establishing the boundary line between [the parties’] properties to be the boundary line agreed to

in 1974, [and] a finding that [appellees] are not encroaching on [appellant’s] property * * *.”

II. TRIAL

{¶ 6} On June 24, 2010, the court held a trial. The parties, not surprisingly, presented

conflicting evidence. Appellant testified that appellees discussed with her the location of the

boundary line before building their fence. She stated that she told them that she did not agree

with their ascertainment of the boundary line. Appellant testified that after appellees built the

fence, she hired Mulryan to perform a survey and that Mulryan’s survey shows that appellees’

fence encroaches on her property.

{¶ 7} Appellant’s surveyor, James M. Mulryan, stated that he reviewed appellant’s deed

to ascertain the location of her property. He explained that her deed called for a total of 40 feet WASHINGTON, 10CA24 4

of frontage on Third Street that extended in an easterly direction, at right angles, 180 feet to the

alley, creating a rectangular-shaped parcel. Mulryan stated that he set pins where he believed

the corners of appellant’s property were located. Mulryan testified that if he were to use the iron

pipe Mr. Vanlandingham referred to and run it to the stone on the front end of the property, then

the boundary line would not conform to the deed. Mulryan testified that appellees’ fence

encroaches on appellant’s property by .9 feet at the back corner of the fence and by .5 feet at the

front corner of the fence. He explained that if Blair’s survey were correct, then (1) appellant’s

property is only 38.5 feet wide, when the deed calls for a 40-foot wide parcel, and (2) appellees’

property is 26.5 feet wide, when the deed calls for a 25-foot wide parcel.

{¶ 8} Mr. Vanlandingham testified that in 1974, shortly after he and his wife moved

into the property, appellant and her now-deceased husband advised appellees that they were

considering installing a fence and that they had a survey performed. According to Mr.

Vanlandingham, appellant and her husband informed appellees that “the property line runs from

the pipe to the stone.” He explained that a stone sits on the Third Street end of the property and

that the boundary line runs from this stone along a pipe that appellant and her husband dug up.

Mr. Vanlandingham testified that since this 1974 conversation, the parties have acted as if the

boundary line ran from the stone then along the pipe, as Mr. Powell had explained. He further

observed that the Powells had a fence built along this line in 1974 and that it remained in place

until 2006.

{¶ 9} Mr. Vanlandingham also stated that in 1998, he requested Blair to survey the

Vanlandingham property and that this 1998 survey confirmed that the boundary line was as Mr.

Vanlandingham had described and as Mr. Powell had indicated in 1974. WASHINGTON, 10CA24 5

{¶ 10} Mr. Vanlandingham testified that before appellees installed their fence, they

discussed with appellant the location of the boundary line. He explained that before they erected

the fence, he used the Blair survey to locate the boundary line and that appellant agreed as to his

location of the boundary line. Mr. Vanlandingham stated that before construction began, he ran

a string from the stone in the front to the pipe in the alley to indicate the boundary line. He

further explained that after marking the boundary line, he measured one inch off the string and

then “another two inches or so to allow for the boards on the outside of the fence and ran another

string three of four inches inside the property line string,” so that the installers would set the

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Bluebook (online)
2011 Ohio 3208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powell-v-vanlandingham-ohioctapp-2011.