Steven Noe v. Robert McIntosh

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 19, 2022
Docket2020 CA 001013
StatusUnknown

This text of Steven Noe v. Robert McIntosh (Steven Noe v. Robert McIntosh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steven Noe v. Robert McIntosh, (Ky. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

RENDERED: MAY 20, 2022; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals

NO. 2020-CA-1013-MR AND NO. 2020-CA-1085-MR

STEVEN NOE APPELLANT/CROSS-APPELLEE

APPEAL AND CROSS-APPEAL FROM ESTILL CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE MICHAEL DEAN, JUDGE ACTION NOS. 11-CI-00286, 13-CI-00001, AND 13-CI-00045

ROBERT MCINTOSH; CATIE MCINTOSH; AND CAYLA MCINTOSH APPELLEES/CROSS-APPELLANTS

OPINION AFFIRMING IN PART, VACATING IN PART, AND REMANDING APPEAL NO. 2020-CA-1013-MR AND REVERSING AND REMANDING CROSS-APPEAL NO. 2020-CA-1085-MR

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: CALDWELL, MCNEILL, AND TAYLOR, JUDGES.

TAYLOR, JUDGE: Steven Noe brings Appeal No. 2020-CA-1013-MR and

Robert McIntosh, Cayla McIntosh, and Catie McIntosh bring Cross-Appeal No.

2020-CA-1085-MR from a July 22, 2020, Order and Amended Final Judgment of the Estill Circuit Court rendering judgment in favor of the McIntoshes and against

Noe for trespass to timber and dismissing Noe’s claims to quiet title and establish a

boundary line for failure to name indispensable parties.1 We affirm in part, vacate

in part, and remand Appeal No. 2020-CA-1013-MR and reverse and remand

Cross-Appeal No. 2020-CA-1085-MR.

BACKGROUND

On October 11, 2011, Robert McIntosh filed a complaint against

Steven Noe in the Estill Circuit Court alleging, inter alia, a timber trespass

pursuant to Kentucky Revised Statutes (KRS) 364.130. The timber was taken

from an area known as Tipton Ridge in Estill County, Kentucky. In July of 2011,

Noe had contracted with Harold Estes to log the Noe property. Estes logged the

subject property in early August, 2011.

In his complaint, McIntosh sought treble damages for the wrongful

cutting of timber on his property but did not seek to establish the boundary line

between the Noe and McIntosh properties. In a “Response to Verified Complaint,”

Noe maintained that McIntosh no longer held any legal interest in the real property

at issue. Noe pointed out that McIntosh and his previous wife, Cynthia McIntosh,

had deeded the subject property to their minor children, Catie McIntosh and Cayla

1 The July 22, 2020, Order and Amended Final Judgment also set aside the original Final Judgment that had been entered on February 14, 2020.

-2- McIntosh, by deed dated June 4, 1999.2 Noe also filed a motion to dismiss

McIntosh’s complaint based upon McIntosh’s lack of legal interest in the property.

Thereafter, by deed dated November 2, 2011, McIntosh’s daughters,

Catie and Cayla who were by then adults, deeded a life estate in the subject real

property to McIntosh and retained the remainder interest. On November 10, 2011,

an amended complaint was filed by McIntosh, Catie, and Cayla (collectively

referred to as the McIntoshes) as plaintiffs. Noe filed an amended answer and

counterclaim seeking, inter alia, a declaratory judgment to establish the boundary

line between the parties’ property and to quiet title.

On January 8, 2013, Charles Terry3 filed an action (Action No. 13-CI-

00001) against McIntosh seeking to quiet title, to establish the boundary line

between the parties, and to restrain McIntosh from blocking a roadway Terry

utilized to access his property. Terry was the owner of real property that was

partly located between the McIntoshes’ property and the Noe property. On

February 27, 2013, McIntosh, pro se, filed a complaint against Terry (Action No.

2 The June 4, 1999, deed conveyed the subject property from Steven and Cynthia McIntosh to their minor children Catie McIntosh and Cayla McIntosh. As the conveyance was made pursuant to the Kentucky Uniform Transfer to Minors Act, the transferors obligation expired upon the minor children reaching the age of majority. When this action was commenced both Catie and Cayla had reached the age of majority. 3 Charles Terry died on April 7, 2019, before the bench trial in this case was conducted. Additionally, no motion to substitute a personal representative of Terry’s estate was filed, and no order was entered substituting a personal representative. His case was effectively dismissed and otherwise not adjudicated. Terry’s case is not relevant to this appeal.

-3- 13-CI-00045) alleging that “a controversy exists over [Terry’s] property and

roadway and division line between the parties’ property.” February 27, 2013,

Complaint at 1. Terry filed an answer and counterclaim seeking, inter alia, to

quiet title in the property. By docket order entered February 12, 2016, Action Nos.

13-CI-00001 and 13-CI-00045 were consolidated with Action No. 11-CI-00286.

There was little activity of record over the next couple of years. Then,

on August 7, 2018, the McIntoshes filed a motion in limine to prevent Noe from

arguing that any fault related to the timber trespass could be apportioned to Harold

Estes, a nonparty. As noted, Estes was the logger Noe had contracted with to cut

and remove timber from the subject property. Noe subsequently moved to dismiss

Action No. 11-CI-00286 on the basis that Estes was an indispensable party to the

litigation. By order entered August 10, 2018, the circuit court denied Noe’s

motion to dismiss the action and ordered that Estes be joined as a party defendant.

Noe eventually asserted a claim against Estes for contribution, indemnity, and

apportionment of any damages. By docket order entered February 7, 2019, Estes

was dismissed from the action based on statute of limitations grounds.

A bench trial was conducted on November 8, 2019, and by Order and

Amended Final Judgment entered July 22, 2020, the court made the following

findings of fact, conclusions of law, and judgment:

-4- II. FINDINGS OF FACT

Robert McIntosh holds a life estate in the property described in DB 288, P 300, recorded in the Estill County Clerk’s Office. His daughters, Cayla and Catie, hold the remainder interest. The Defendant Steve Noe owns a life estate in an adjoining property which shares a common boundary with the McIntosh property below the cliff. Noe’s daughters[,] Letisha and Stephanie[,] own the remainder interest. The McIntoshes and the Noes do not share a common boundary line above the cliff where the trespass occurred. The Court finds that of the 11 acres logged above the [c]liff as determined by Surveyor Oliver, 8 acres belonged to the McIntoshes.

The Court finds that 350 trees were cut on the 11 acres above the cliff, and that the value of this timber on the stump was $17,770.80. Because the McIntoshes owned 8 of the 11 acres logged, 8/11th of the value on the stump is attributed to the McIntoshes, for a timber value on the stump of $12,924.22. Based on the testimony of the McIntosh’s [sic] forester, [Gavin Wilson] the Court finds the cost to reclaim the property is $20,000, which would have included among other things, removing the remaining timber to allow for uniform regrowth. Adjusting this amount to the ratio (8/11th), gives $14,545.45 in reclamation costs on the McIntosh land.

III. MEASURE OF DAMAGES

....

No experts were called by Steve Noe to rebut the McIntosh’s [sic] timber expert, but Defendant Steve Noe did disagree with the amount of timber that the Plaintiffs and their experts determined to be cut on the McIntosh land. Nor did Steve Noe call a land surveyor to rebut the testimony of Michael Oliver. However, Steve Noe testified that he gave [Harold] Estes a survey and his

-5- deed. The fact that the Defendant Noe commissioned a survey indicates at least a good intention of respecting adjoining property lines. Penix [v.

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