Roylston v. Conway

555 S.E.2d 28, 251 Ga. App. 648, 2001 Fulton County D. Rep. 2897, 2001 Ga. App. LEXIS 1105
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 26, 2001
DocketA01A1157
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 555 S.E.2d 28 (Roylston v. Conway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roylston v. Conway, 555 S.E.2d 28, 251 Ga. App. 648, 2001 Fulton County D. Rep. 2897, 2001 Ga. App. LEXIS 1105 (Ga. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

Smith, Presiding Judge.

A special master was appointed to settle a boundary line dispute between two next-door neighbors. 1 The special master recommended a particular dividing line, and the trial court entered an order to that effect. Because we find that the trial court’s order relied upon “evidence” not of record and that insufficient findings were made as to the issue of prescriptive title, we reverse.

This case is a dispute as to the exact location of an interior boundary line between Lot 6 and Lot 7 of Block B of the Legend Park subdivision. In April 1996, Grayson M. Roylston and Wynell Roylston purchased Lot 6 which had a one-story home with a basement on it. Almost immediately thereafter, Betty J. Conway, the next-door neighbor and owner of Lot 7, erected a chain-link fence that ran within two feet of the Roylstons’ house down the length of their side yard. The placement of the fence impeded access to the Roylstons’ backyard and effectively precluded their use of a one-car garage door dubbed a “boat door” located on the side of their house. The boat door provided the sole access for storing a vehicle or boat in the basement. It is undisputed that a brick wall running down the property line on the opposite side of the Roylstons’ house blocks access to the backyard from that side. Wynell Roylston testified that after Conway erected the fence, they could no longer use their backyard or the basement storage area and were unable to move their riding lawnmower out or to remove their furniture stored in the basement. After installation of the fence, meter readers “had to come through our house and go down the steps to the back porch to read the meter.” To mow the grass in their backyard, the Roylstons had to use a push mower which they carried through their house and down their back steps.

Conway’s chain-link fence remained in place from May 1996 until October 14,1996, when one of the Roylstons’ sons dismantled it. After negotiations between the Roylstons and Conway floundered, Conway filed a petition to quiet title. The disputed property forms a pie-shaped piece of land that begins at a common front boundary *649 point on the right-of-way of Ridge Road and widens to form a wedge about 20 feet wide at its back point.

The trial court referred the matter to a special master. At the hearing before the special master, the Roylstons and Conway presented conflicting testimony and land surveys. A discrepancy of approximately 13 feet, perhaps attributable to an early surveying error in marking adjacent lot lines on the original subdivision plat, formed the crux of the controversy. The Roylstons also asserted that prescriptive title had been obtained by adverse possession by their predecessors in title. Chester Thomas Harden, a neighbor living directly across the street for 32 years, testified that Opal Erwin, his wife’s sister, and her husband had built the house on Lot 6 in 1968. Harden, who had a role in the construction, testified that he was familiar with the side yard area between Lot 6 and Lot 7 and knew the location of the original back comer pin. Harden testified that the Erwins kept a car in the basement behind the boat door and had adequate room in their side yard to turn the car around. Harden recalled having occasionally driven his brother-in-law’s car down there. He testified that the Erwins planted shrubbery in the currently disputed area and grew “regular grass” which they kept mowed.

In 1980, Opal Erwin sold the property to Nancy Ross Gresham, who sold it in 1990 to the Jacobsens, who subsequently sold it in 1996 to the Roylstons. When the Roylstons bought the property, they were unaware that since 1995 Conway and Jacobsen had been embroiled in a dispute over the interior boundary line. As a result of that disagreement, Conway had ordered a fence in April 1996 because as Conway testified, “I was fencing Mr. Jacobsen out.” Bobby Conway testified that Mr. Erwin never commented when he cut trees in the disputed area and never disputed the title or any of the actions he took. Yet a warranty deed shows that the Erwins sold their interest in Lot 6 in 1980, years before the Conways purchased Lot 7.

After the hearing, the parties agreed to a consent order authorizing the special master to select an independent surveyor. The special master selected Herndon & Betterton, Inc. as the independent surveyor “to work with me in determining the correct dividing line between the properties.” Subsequently, the special master found:

After [hearing] the testimony of the parties, having personally inspected the property in the presence of Mr. Bobby Betterton of Herndon & Betterton, Inc., Surveyors, and after having further discussions with Mr. Betterton regarding the proper dividing line between the parties, I find the proper dividing line between the parties is that as shown on the plat of Herndon & Betterton which is more particularly described as follows. . . .

*650 After citing a lengthy legal description, the special master stated, “It is my recommendation that the Court issue an Order making this line as the dividing line between the parties.” The trial court adopted the findings of the special master and ordered the parties to abide by the dividing line set forth in the special master’s report.

The Roylstons sought a new trial or, in the alternative, the entry of supplemental findings of fact and conclusions of law. They asserted that the original pin established a boundary line that included all of the area in dispute as belonging to Lot 6. They also claimed that the special master ignored uncontroverted evidence proving that they had obtained title by prescription. They pointed to evidence that their predecessors in title had planted and mowed grass, maintained landscaping, and used the area now in dispute for ingress and egress to the boat door.

The trial court directed the special master to file supplemental findings. The special master submitted a supplemental report in which he noted, “After hearing all testimony, I reported to the parties that I did not feel that the Plaintiff had carried the burden of proof to be entitled to have her Quia Timet action granted.” According to the supplemental report:

There was no testimony heard other than the original testimony given in the Quia Timet action. As Special Master, I hired the surveying firm of Herndon & Betterton, Inc. to prepare the independent survey and once completed, I visited the property in the presence of Mr. Bobby Betterton of Herndon & Betterton and inspected his findings and inspected the property. The boundary line between the parties, as determined by Mr. Betterton, was within an area between the parties’ homes that was not in conflict with the testimony received at the Quia Timet hearing and was in an area that in my opinion was not adversely possessed by either party.

The trial court adopted the special master’s supplemental findings of fact and conclusions of law and denied the motion for new trial. Enumerating four errors, the Roylstons appeal.

1. The Roylstons contend that the trial court erroneously considered matters outside the scope of the evidence introduced at trial in the form of conversations between the special master and the independent surveyor who was not a sworn witness and who was never subject to direct or cross-examination by the parties.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
555 S.E.2d 28, 251 Ga. App. 648, 2001 Fulton County D. Rep. 2897, 2001 Ga. App. LEXIS 1105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roylston-v-conway-gactapp-2001.