Slentz v. Cherokee Enterprises, Inc.

529 S.W.2d 495
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 27, 1975
Docket9687
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 529 S.W.2d 495 (Slentz v. Cherokee Enterprises, Inc.) 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
Slentz v. Cherokee Enterprises, Inc., 529 S.W.2d 495 (Mo. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

FLANIGAN, Judge.

This is an action to quiet title.

*496 Plaintiffs-appellants are five married couples, each owning a lot in Cinderella Village, “a subdivision in Greene County, Missouri.” Defendant-respondent Cherokee Enterprises, Inc. 1 is the owner of land adjoining, and located west of, plaintiffs’ lots.

Lot 16, owned by plaintiffs Correll, is the northernmost lot. Lot 18, owned by plaintiffs Larkins, is adjacent to and south of the Correll lot. The Nagy lot, Lot 20, is south of the Larkins lot, the Slentz lot, Lot 22, is south of the Nagy lot, and the Morri-set lot, Lot 24, is south of the Slentz lot.

The north-south dimension of the area in dispute is 455 feet. Its width at the north end, west of the Correll lot, is 14.8 feet and its width at the south end, west of the southern border of the Morriset lot, is 10 feet.

The claim of plaintiffs to the disputed area is based on adverse possession; the claim of defendant Cherokee to that area is based on record title. The west side of the disputed area is marked by “an old fence” and the east side of it is the true boundary line as shown by a survey based on record titles.

In the petition each set of plaintiffs requested a decree adjudging them to be the owners of that portion of the disputed area lying west of their respective lots. The counterclaim of defendant Cherokee requested a decree “quieting title in the defendants to the disputed property.” Both the petition and the counterclaim contained additional claims but they are no longer in dispute.

The trial court, after making findings of fact and conclusions of law, found in favor of defendant Cherokee and declared that Cherokee was the owner of the disputed strip. Plaintiffs appeal.

This court must review this non-jury case upon both the law and the evidence as in suits of an equitable nature and must give due regard to the opportunity of the trial court to have judged the credibility of witnesses. Rule 73.01, par. 3, V.A.M.R.

Since plaintiffs base their claim on adverse possession, the burden of proof as to each of the five elements 2 of adverse possession is on plaintiffs. Wilton Boat Club v. Hazell, 502 S.W.2d 273, 276[5] (Mo.1973). However, once the plaintiffs made a prima facie case on the issue of adverse possession, the burden of going ahead on that issue shifted to the defendants. Sandy Ford Ranch, Inc. v. Dill, 449 S.W.2d 1, 4[1] (Mo.1970) and authorities there cited.

Although the reviewing court will defer to the findings of the trial court where credibility of witnesses is involved, the reviewing court need not do so where “a disputed question is not a matter of direct contradiction by different witnesses.” West v. Witschner, 428 S.W.2d 538, 542[7] (Mo.1968). See also Schott v. Bruce, 407 S.W.2d 61, 65[6] (Mo.App.1966).

Because certain facts pertain only to the appeals of plaintiffs Correll and Morriset, they will be discussed later.

The appeals of Larkins, Nagy, and Slentz are treated first.

The action was commenced on August 22, 1973. Slentz obtained title to and possession of Lot 22 in June, 1963. Earlier the Nagys and Larkins had acquired their lots. These plaintiffs presented evidence, which need not be detailed, sufficient to make a *497 prima facie case on the issue of adverse possession. In general their testimony was that throughout their respective ownerships they had possessed that portion of the disputed strip adjacent to their lots, claiming that the old fence was the boundary line, and exercising open and notorious dominion over the area by planting trees and shrubbery, gardening, and mowing it. The “old fence” had been there at least since 1958. Photographs were introduced in support of plaintiffs’ testimony.

There was also testimony that one Meeks, defendants’ predecessor in title, had recognized the old fence as being the boundary line.

The evidence of these plaintiffs shifted to the defendants the burden of going forward on the issue of adverse possession. The evidence adduced by the defendant falls short of sustaining that burden.

Defendants’ witnesses were Bill Ma-cLachlin, Allen Cates, and Gerald Simkins. Their testimony disclosed the following: Simkins and MacLachlin obtained record title to the disputed area on September 22, 1972, and conveyed it, with other land, to Cherokee in November, 1972. Sometime after March, 1973, plaintiff Larkins told MacLachlin that he, Larkins, knew where the true boundary line was. MacLachlin knew that the plaintiffs were using the disputed area “but I figured that they had been given permission to use it . . .1 just took it for granted.”

Cates made a survey for Simkins in September, 1972, and the survey showed the location of the true boundary line which was east of the old fence. On the ground Cates found some pins which indicated the location of the true boundary line. Cates noticed “some pretty good sized trees” were in the disputed area and they had been there several years. He noticed also that east of the old fence the yards were maintained in a mowed and clipped condition, while on the west side of the old fence it was pasture land. Cates said “In two of the places I can remember,” without specifying which two, “the people living in the houses east of the fence were using as their yards the land right up to the fence.”

Cates also testified that while Simkins, for Cherokee, was having the area surveyed and platted, Simkins “had some question about whether the fence was where he owned or whether the property line was where he owned,” the “property line” meaning the true line as disclosed by Cates’ survey.

Simkins testified that Cherokee platted an area in February, 1973, as “Cherokee Estates Second Addition” and this area included the strip in dispute. After the area had been platted, and Simkins and his associates started to install utilities, Simkins first became aware that plaintiffs were making an adverse claim. However, he had not had any conversation with any of the plaintiffs prior to March, 1973. When Sim-kins talked with the plaintiffs “they seemed to know where the true line was.” Simkins admitted seeing the old fence and seeing “the way the lands were being used up to the old fence.” Simkins did not ask the plaintiffs whether the plaintiffs were claiming ownership up to the fence, although the plaintiffs indicated they knew the location of the true boundary line. Simkins also testified that “[i]t is probably true that later on when the plaintiffs found out I was contending their ownership did not go to the fence that they had used for years, they told me they did not agree with me.”

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