Stancil v. Farris

60 So. 3d 817, 2011 Miss. App. LEXIS 248, 2011 WL 1643584
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedMay 3, 2011
DocketNo. 2009-CA-01962-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 60 So. 3d 817 (Stancil v. Farris) 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
Stancil v. Farris, 60 So. 3d 817, 2011 Miss. App. LEXIS 248, 2011 WL 1643584 (Mich. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

IRVING, P.J.,

for the Court:

¶ 1. This appeal arises out of a land dispute between Martha J. Stancil and James Terry Farris, who own adjacent properties in Itawamba County, Mississippi. Farris had previously been granted an easement to pass over a portion of Stan-cil’s property; in 2008, Stancil filed a complaint alleging that Farris had abandoned the easement. Farris filed an answer and counter-complaint, wherein he alleged that he had not abandoned the easement and that he owned a small portion of Stancil’s property due to adverse possession. In November 2009, the Itawamba County Chancery Court held a hearing regarding the easement and Farris’s adverse-possession claim. The chancellor ruled that the easement had not been abandoned and found that Farris had successfully established his claim of adverse possession. Feeling aggrieved at the chancellor’s judgment, Stancil appeals and asserts that the easement was abandoned and that Farris failed to present sufficient evidence to support a finding of adverse possession.

¶2. Finding no error, we affirm the judgment of the chancery court.

FACTS

¶ 3. Farris has owned the property at issue in this case since 1997. In 2003, the property that Stancil currently owns was owned by her mother, Sybil Prestage Wilburn. In 2003, Wilburn granted a ten-foot easement to Farris so that he could access the southern portion of his property.

¶ 4. In 2008, Stancil and her family members erected yellow metal posts at the end of the easement and constructed a new fence along the easement. Part of this fence was placed along a piece of property referred to throughout the record as the triangular piece of property. Stancil’s son, Destry Stancil, testified that he built the posts and that he placed them over ten feet apart. At trial, Farris testified that the posts prevented him from fully using his easement, as the posts were too close together for him to get all of his equipment through them. Farris also disagreed with the placement of portions of the new fence. There is no question that relations between Stancil and Farris became increasingly inimical after the placement of the metal posts and the new fence.

¶ 5. As a result, in November 2008, Stan-cil filed a motion in the chancery court, alleging that Farris had abandoned his easement and that it should be rescinded. Farris filed an answer and counterclaim, wherein he denied abandonment of the easement and asserted ownership by adverse possession of the triangular piece of Stancil’s property.

¶ 6. At trial, Stancil, Destry, and Allen Stancil, Stancil’s ex-husband, all testified on Stancil’s behalf. They testified that they had never observed Farris using his easement. Stancil testified that the easement was only granted in 2003 because of flooding that prevented Farris from traversing through to the southern portion of his property. Stancil indicated that the flooding has since been resolved by improvements to her property. Destry, who lives near the easement and the disputed land, testified that he has never seen Far-[819]*819ris use the easement. By contrast, Farris testified that he uses the easement several times a year to access his property. Randy Phillip Boyd, a registered professional land surveyor and registered forester, was hired by Stancil to conduct a survey on the property line that separated Stancil’s property from Farris’s. His survey was admitted into evidence as exhibit 4. He testified that the new fence erected by Stancil was essentially in the same location as an old fence “except for a portion along the south right-of-way of Thrasher Road. The old fence turned about forty feet before reaching the right-of-way.”

¶ 7. Regarding the triangular property, Destry testified that he regularly mowed and maintained the property and that Far-ris never did anything to care for the property. Farris and his father, Terry, both testified that Farris regularly uses the easement to access the southern portion of his pi’operty. Farris testified that he bush-hogs the triangular piece of property every year or so and has always considered that land to be part of his property. Farris stated that he purchased his property from Dr. Tom McDonald, who walked the metes and bounds of the property with him in 1997 and indicated that the triangular piece of property was part of Farris’s land. Terry stated that he has lived in the area for many years and that the triangular piece of property has always been understood to be part of the land that Farris currently owns, which was known for many years as the Thrasher place.

¶ 8. In addition to entering a written order, the chancellor provided extensive findings from the bench, which we find helpful to quote:

This matter is before the Court on two basic issues that were submitted to me this morning, or this afternoon really, really just before lunch, and the issue of whether or not the easement has been abandoned as noted here and the issue of the triangle, for lack of a better description .... The Court will accordingly refer to those as such.
I’ll deal with the matter of the easement first.
[[Image here]]
The Court has heard the testimony of the parties here today, including, first of all, findings of fact, Mr. Boyd, who testified that the easement about where it was running and what the south right-of-way line of Thrasher Road encompassed and so forth. He testified basically that the new fence was built essentially on the line as established by this Court’s decree earlier even though it varied hither and yond a few feet back and forth.
The next testimony was that of Ms. Stancil. Basically, her testimony was essentially that there never was — never a line between them and the Thrashers basically established as far as the triangle was concerned.... No condition attached to the easement as to the pond. This Court observed from her testimony here that I could find she testified about — she testified, of course, that the easement runs east of the fence line on the Stancil property through a point at the end of the triangle — I mean, a tree at the point of a triangle on cross-examination was sought to be established by [Farris’s attorney]. There were two sets of posts that had been set up by the Stancils as noted in succeeding testimony. She stated that she has a deed to the triangle. I have no evidence per se of the establishment of that line as such before me. Since 1997, basically the testimony was that on cross-examination, that Mr. Farris had owned what was known as the Old Thrasher place. On redirect examination, she indicated the crux of it, as I see it, and she said [820]*820the red line and the triangle area — the southern red line in the triangle area, “the husband built an old fence on it in the 70s, I think,” as to the time at least. They put another fence on the north line of the triangle. And testimony was that she “thought the land was ours.”
Mr. Allen Stancil then testified. He’s the ex-husband of Ms. Stancil, the Plaintiff in this case. He testified among other things that they had cut pine trees along the triangle area for Ms. Thrasher to observe so she could see down the road. He put back up the fence on the south line of the triangle in 85 or so, as he indicated. He stated that he had bushhogged it but not since the 1980s. He stated that he maintained the land in the triangle to the left.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Greenwood v. Young
80 So. 3d 140 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2012)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 So. 3d 817, 2011 Miss. App. LEXIS 248, 2011 WL 1643584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stancil-v-farris-missctapp-2011.