Quigley v. Atkins

379 S.E.2d 488, 180 W. Va. 684, 1989 W. Va. LEXIS 35
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 27, 1989
DocketNo. 18281
StatusPublished

This text of 379 S.E.2d 488 (Quigley v. Atkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quigley v. Atkins, 379 S.E.2d 488, 180 W. Va. 684, 1989 W. Va. LEXIS 35 (W. Va. 1989).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

This is an appeal by Jacqueline Joyce Atkins and Dennis Rupert Atkins, III, from a decision rendered by the Circuit Court of Kanawha County in a boundary line dispute. The dispute had been referred to a special commissioner for determination of the location of a boundary between two parcels of property. The circuit court, after receiving the commissioner’s findings and conclusions of law, adopted those findings and conclusions and essentially held that the boundary line in question ran where the appellees claimed it ran. In the present proceeding, the appellants claim that the appellees had not met their burden of proving the location of the boundary line and that the trial court, in view of the nature of the evidence, erred in adopting the commissioner’s findings and conclusions. The appellants also claim that the trial court erred in not holding that they had acquired certain areas enclosed by the disputed boundary by adverse possession. After reviewing the record this Court cannot conclude that the trial court committed reversible error. Accordingly, the judgment of the Circuit Court of Kanawha County is affirmed.

The appellants and the appellees own adjoining parcels of property located in Elk District, Kanawha County, West Virginia. The appellants inherited their parcel from Stella Jarrett in 1983. Stella Jarrett and her husband had purchased the tract, along with three others, from G.E. and Ruby Gibson on April 13, 1946. The deed from the Gibsons to the Jarretts contained only an imprecise description of the property which passed to the appellants.1

The property owned by the appellees had previously belonged to Roy M. Blizzard, Jr. and his wife, Mary. The Blizzards had acquired the tract, along with three other tracts, from Wes Jones by deed dated June 30, 1972. That deed, like the deed in the appellants’ chain, contained relatively imprecise descriptions of the tracts conveyed.2

[686]*686After the Blizzards acquired the Wes Jones tracts, they retained Ralph “Miami” Adkins to survey and prepare a plat of the property. This was required as a condition for obtaining a mortgage. Mr. Adkins performed the survey and drew up a technical description of the property, including the property subsequently conveyed to the ap-pellees. In their later deed to the appellees dated June 15, 1976, the Blizzards did not use the imprecise description of the property contained in their prior chain of title, but rather the technical description drawn up by Ralph “Miami” Adkins.3

After the appellees acquired the Blizzard tract, a dispute arose between them and the appellants over the location of the boundary line. The appellees instituted the present proceeding to resolve that dispute.

As previously stated, the Circuit Court of Kanawha County referred the dispute to a special commissioner, who took extensive evidence on the location of the boundary line.

In the course of the proceedings, the appellees, who were the plaintiffs, adduced the testimony of their predecessor in interest, Roy M. Blizzard, Jr. Mr. Blizzard testified regarding Ralph “Miami” Adkins’ survey of the property later transferred to the appellees. He indicated that he assisted Mr. Adkins in performing the survey and that the appellants’ predecessor in title, Mrs. Jarrett, also assisted. He specifically indicated that Mrs. Jarrett had pointed out a certain boundary post with full knowledge that a survey was being conducted. From the post an old fence line was located. Mr. Blizzard further indicated that in the course of Mr. Adkins’ survey a large rock at the intersection of two lines was located with Mrs. Jarrett’s assistance.

The appellees also called as a hostile witness Ralph “Miami” Adkins, who had performed the 1973 survey. He indicated that he had surveyed and mapped the parcel by field survey and tax map.

An additional witness called by the appel-lees was another surveyor, Dana Keith Clendenin, who indicated that the boundary line in question ran where the appellees claimed it ran. He based his conclusions on the findings of Ralph “Miami” Adkins. He indicated that what Mr. Adkins had tried to do was to take the description contained in the deed to the Blizzards and [687]*687transform it from a monuments description into a metes and bounds description. He further indicated that a critical boundary in dispute was, in the ancient deeds to the appellees property, described as the county road that was in existence prior to 1930. He had been unable to locate this old county road during his survey.

Mr. Clendenin testified that he was able to locate fences or remnants of fences along certain of his survey lines and that he also located certain monuments.

The appellants, as defendants below, called Ralph Calhoun, a surveyor, as their witness. Mr. Calhoun indicated that he had surveyed the boundaries to the appellants’ property in 1983. He indicated that he had consulted both the deeds of the present as well as prior owners. He testified that he was able to find various monuments contained in the descriptions in those deeds. He also found remnants of the county road mentioned in the ancient deeds, and those remnants indicated that the road actually went into a creek located in the area. From his survey he prepared a map which showed that the appellants owned the area which was in dispute.

The appellants also called as witnesses several individuals who had been residents of the area for years. These individuals were familiar with the county road mentioned in the ancient deed descriptions. Clovis Kidd, who had travelled in the area for over fifty-five years, testified that the old county road did run into the creek and that the road generally followed the creek line. Edward E. Moore, another resident, pointed out the point at which the county road went into the creek and where it exited from the creek.

In addition to presenting evidence as to the location of the boundary line, the appellants, through the evidence of several witnesses, suggested that Owen David Jarrett, their predecessor in interest, had farmed and maintained the disputed area from 1946 to 1963, and that after 1963 Mr. Jarrett’s widow, Stella Jarrett, had cut the grass in the area in dispute and maintained it until she died in 1983. They took the position that because of this they owned the area in dispute by adverse possession, if not by record title.

At the conclusion of the hearing, the special commissioner ruled that the boundary line ran where the appellees claimed it ran. The commissioner, however, found that the appellants had established an easement for a gas line over the property and an easement for a right of way and turn around on the property in dispute. The commissioner also found that the appellants had failed to establish adverse possession to the area in dispute. Specifically, the commissioner found that although the appellants had shown that they and their predecessors had utilized the property sporadically for in excess of ten years, the appellees during the same period of time, and their predecessors, had likewise used it. He concluded that the appellants had failed to show that their possession had been exclusive and continuous for ten years.

After receiving the special commissioner’s findings and conclusions, the Circuit Court of Kanawha County, by order entered on December 10, 1986, adopted the commissioner’s findings in toto. It is from that order that the appellants now appeal.

In syllabus point 1 of Baker v.

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Bluebook (online)
379 S.E.2d 488, 180 W. Va. 684, 1989 W. Va. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quigley-v-atkins-wva-1989.