Roebuck v. Massey

741 So. 2d 375, 1999 WL 410478
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedJune 22, 1999
Docket97-CA-00002COA
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 741 So. 2d 375 (Roebuck v. Massey) 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
Roebuck v. Massey, 741 So. 2d 375, 1999 WL 410478 (Mich. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

741 So.2d 375 (1999)

Wesley T. ROEBUCK and Hortense I. Roebuck, Appellants,
v.
Donny W. MASSEY, Executor of Estate of Welton Anthony, Deceased; Bobbie Anthony, Joyce Anthony Bottcher and Norma Anthony Massey, Appellees.

No. 97-CA-00002COA.

Court of Appeals of Mississippi.

June 22, 1999.

*377 Wesley T. Roebuck, pro se, Appellant.

J. Niles McNeel, Louisville, Attorney for Appellees.

BEFORE KING, P.J., BRIDGES AND COLEMAN, JJ.

COLEMAN, J., for the Court:

¶ 1. The appeal of this case emanates from a judgment rendered by the Chancery Court of Kemper County which confirmed appellees' title to a strip of land containing approximately four acres which lay north of a fence which Wesley T. Roebuck completed in 1994 and south of an old fence in existence since at least the year 1928. Noteworthy is the chancellor's observation found in his formal opinion that this was "an unusual landline suit [because] no survey was introduced to identify the true location of the line between the [land] owned by the Anthonys [appellees] and the [land] by the Roebucks [appellants]...." The appellant, Wesley T. Roebuck, represented himself throughout the entire course of this litigation.[1] In their appeal, the Roebucks present six issues for this Court's analysis and resolution. We quote their six issues verbatim from the statement of issues which the Roebucks included in their brief as required by Rule 28(a)(3) of the Mississippi Rules of Appellate Procedure:

1. The Chancery Court's decision that Welton Anthony, deceased, and his heirs had acquired title to the land in litigation by adverse possession was against the overwhelming weight of the evidence.
2. The Chancery Court abused its discretion in excluding relevant evidence and this was prejudicial to and affected substantial rights of Wesley T. Roebuck and Hortense I. Roebuck.
3. The Chancery Court erred in allowing the case to be tried as an Adverse Possession Case when the Bill of Complaint was brought as a Trespassing Case.
4. The Chancery Court erred in dismissing and failing to consider a court ordered survey by Kemp, Springer and Assoc., where the Roebucks had gained fee simple title to a part of the land in this case.
5. The Chancery Court erred when it allowed Wesley Roebuck to be called as an adverse witness in violation of discovery without prior knowledge.
6. The Chancery Court erred when it would not let the Defendant challenge *378 the credibility of Bobbie Anthony. This violates (MRE, Rule 608).

From our analysis and resolution of the Roebucks' six issues we find no error by the chancellor, and thus we affirm the judgment from which the Roebucks have appealed.

I. FACTS

¶ 2. Recitation of these facts is consistent with the opinion and judgment rendered by the chancellor as the fact-finder. On October 31, 1953, W.H. Anthony and Bertha Anthony, husband and wife, conveyed the northeast quarter (NE¼) of the southwest quarter (SW¼) of Section 15, township 11, range 14 east, to Welton Anthony. On February 28, 1962, Bertha Anthony conveyed to Welton Anthony her "undivided 8/10ths interest in and to the northwest quarter (NW¼) of the southeast quarter (SE¼) of Section 15, township 11, range 14 east." On that same date, the Kemper County Chancery Clerk, acting as the special commissioner for the Kemper County Chancery Court, conveyed the remaining undivided 1/10th interests of both Lathan Anthony and Narvell Anthony —a total of an undivided 2/10's interest —in and to the same northwest quarter (NW¼) of the southeast quarter (SE¼) of Section 15, township 11, range 14 east, to Welton Anthony. W.A. Anthony, the father of Welton Anthony, had died intestate on July 19, 1960.

¶ 3. On August 7, 1974, Carlous B. Denton and Carolyn S. Denton, husband and wife, conveyed to Wesley T. Roebuck and Hortense I. Roebuck, husband and wife, "as joint tenants ... with full rights of survivorship" a tract of land which contained 133.34 acres in section 15, township 11 north, range 14 east. Included in these 133.34 acres was the following described smaller tract:

The southwest quarter (SW¼) of the northeast quarter (NE¼); and the southeast quarter (SE¼) of the northwest quarter (NW¼); LESS three (3) acres in the southwest corner of the southeast quarter (SE¼) of the northwest quarter (NW¼) of section 15, township 11 north, range 14 east, described by metes and bounds as follows: Beginning at the southwest quarter of the SE¼ of the NW¼ of section 15 aforesaid, run thence north 630 feet, thence run east 210 feet, thence run south 630 feet, thence run west 210 feet to the point of beginning of the three acres herein EXCEPTED.

In summary, the Roebucks' land was north of the Anthonys' land. Thus, the disputed landline marked the southern boundary of the Roebucks' land and the northern boundary of the Anthonys' land.

¶ 4. For many years before Welton Anthony bought the two forty-acre parcels of land from his parents and siblings in the early 1950's, a barbed wire fence meandered along the south side of the Roebucks' land. Burl Haggard, who once owned Roebucks' eighty-acre tract, built this fence before 1928 according to Johnny B. Clark, who had married Burl Haggard's daughter in 1928. The fundamental issue for the chancellor's resolution was whether the Anthonys and their predecessors in title had acquired title by adverse possession to all of the land located on the south side of this fence regardless of where the original government survey line was located between the Roebucks' and the Anthonys' respective eighty-acre tracts.

II. Litigation

¶ 5. Welton Anthony owned the northeast quarter (NE¼) of the southwest quarter (SW¼) and the northwest quarter (NW¼) of the southeast quarter (SE¼) when he died testate on September 25, 1994. In his will, Welton Anthony devised the north one-half of these two contiguous forty-acre parcels to his daughter, Joyce Anthony Bottcher, who had been a resident of Gillman City, Missouri since 1982. Welton Anthony devised the south one-half of these same two contiguous forty-acre parcels to his other daughter, Norma Anthony Massey, a resident of Neshoba County. Norma Anthony Massey's *379 devise was subject to a life estate in and to a one-acre parcel of land located in the southwest corner of her parcel of land which Welton Anthony had devised to his wife, Bobbie Anthony. Welton Anthony had appointed Donny W. Massey, the husband of Norma Anthony Massey, to serve as the executor of his last will and testament.

¶ 6. The genesis of this litigation was an order of the Kemper County Chancery Court obtained by Donny W. Massey as the executor of Welton Anthony's will which authorized Massey as executor "to enter a land line suit ... to seek to recover land owned by the decedent [Welton Anthony] at the time of his death and to clear the title to lands in the estate...." Pursuant to the authority which this order vested in him, the executor, Donny W. Massey, filed a "complaint to quiet and confirm title and remove cloud" against Wesley T. Roebuck. All three beneficiaries of Welton Anthony's will, Bobbie Anthony, his widow, Joyce Anthony Bottcher, his daughter, and Norma Anthony Massey, joined the executor as parties plaintiff in the complaint. Wesley T. Roebuck as sole defendant filed an "answer, defense and crossbill of complaint" in response to the Anthonys' complaint. Wesley T. Roebuck has represented himself from the beginning of this litigation.

¶ 7.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
741 So. 2d 375, 1999 WL 410478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roebuck-v-massey-missctapp-1999.