Stewart v. Rader

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedJuly 31, 2020
Docket121519
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
Stewart v. Rader, (kanctapp 2020).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 121,519

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

INGER STEWART and JAMES STEWART, Appellees,

v.

KIM D. RADER and VICKY S. COPESS, Appellants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Atchison District Court; MARTIN J. ASHER, judge. Opinion filed July 31, 2020. Reversed.

John W. Fresh, of Farris, Fresh & Werring Law Offices, of Atchison, for appellants.

No appearance by appellees.

Before ARNOLD-BURGER, C.J., WARNER, J., and LAHEY, S.J.

PER CURIAM: This appeal arises from a real property dispute over a boundary line. James and Inger Stewart brought this action against their neighbors Kim Rader and Vicky Copess (the Raders) to prevent them from removing a fence between the properties. Surveys showed the fence was not on the property line and encroached onto the Raders' property. The district court ultimately found the fence had existed for more than 40 years and determined the Stewarts were the owners of the disputed strip of land by adverse possession. The Stewarts' ownership spanned only three years, meaning they were required to tack their claim to the period of ownership by their predecessors in

1 interest. Because the Stewarts failed to present evidence of the prior owners' good-faith possession of the disputed strip of land, we find they have not established a claim for adverse possession and reverse the judgment of the district court.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In 2015, the Stewarts purchased a house and lot in Atchison. The neighboring house to the west was unoccupied. That house was eventually torn down and replaced with a new house in 2017, which the Raders purchased in 2018. Between the two properties, a fence runs north to south but does not stretch to the ends of the property—it extends only one-third the length of the property. The fence existed before either party purchased their respective properties. There is an identical fence that runs north to south on the east side of the Stewarts' house. The Stewarts subsequently connected the two fences across the back of their property.

In 2018, the Raders moved into their property and thereafter obtained a survey which revealed the fence was not on the boundary line—the fence encroached onto their property by varying amounts but as much as three feet at one point. A sidewalk on the east side of the fence also encroached by approximately three inches. The parties had some friendly discussions concerning the matter, but the Raders did not share their survey with the Stewarts. The relationship between the parties quickly deteriorated when the Raders told the Stewarts to move their personal property from along the fence because the fence and trees were being removed. The Stewarts obtained a temporary injunction to enjoin the Raders from removing or modifying the fence or trees. Not long after, the Stewarts procured a separate survey which confirmed the fence encroached on the Raders' property. Up until that point, the Stewarts believed the fence was the boundary line. The Raders also obtained their own temporary injunction to enjoin the Stewarts from using the fence and the disputed strip of land until the matter could be resolved.

2 Neither party filed a formal petition to quiet title or other claim aside from the injunctions, and there was no pretrial order. As a result, there was some confused procedural discussion at the outset between counsel and the district court. But the cause of action ripened into a quiet title action where the Stewarts claimed they acquired the disputed strip of land that abutted the fence line through adverse possession. The district court held a bench trial on the matter. Five witnesses testified: Mrs. Stewart, Mr. Rader, and three long-time neighborhood residents.

Mrs. Stewart testified she and her husband purchased the property in October 2015 from the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and have occupied it since. They did not survey the boundaries when they purchased the property. Fences were already in place along both the east and west sides of the rear portion of the property, and the Stewarts believed the fences marked the boundary lines. The distance between the east and west fences is 45 feet, which was consistent with the width of the lot according to its legal description. Mrs. Stewart described the fencing as old, fancy metal. The Stewarts did not know how long the fence had been in place or who put it up, but trees have grown into the fence over time. The trees were in place when they moved into the house in 2015. There was also a concrete sidewalk on the Stewarts' property that led to a gate connected to the fence. The surveys noted approximately three inches of this sidewalk also encroached the Raders' property line. This sidewalk—from the corner of the Stewarts' house along the west side to a gate on the fence—existed when the Stewarts purchased the home but they did not know its age. Mrs. Stewart testified she planted irises along the west property line between the fence and the sidewalk, supplementing lilac and jasmine plants that were present at the end of the fence when they purchased the property.

On cross-examination, Mrs. Stewart acknowledged the fence was not the property line and the fence encroached two or three feet into the Raders' property according to both surveys. She confirmed she was unaware of boundary agreements between any of

3 the preceding owners of either parcel and they had not reached any boundary agreement with the Raders.

Three long-time residents of the neighborhood testified that the fence had been in the same location as long as they could remember. One of the neighbors testified the fence was in place 43 years ago when he moved into his house and the fence had not changed over that time period. None of the neighbors knew who built the fence or had any knowledge of any boundary agreement between prior owners of the properties. None of the neighbors knew if prior owners of either parcel knew where the actual property line was located or if there had ever been a dispute over it. None of the neighbors testified about any prior owner's use of the disputed strip of property.

Mr. Rader testified he purchased his property in July 2018 but did not get a survey done until after closing. One of his reasons for obtaining the survey was his concern that the fence line was not the true property line because he knew the exact dimensions of his lot and the survey points. The survey he obtained showed an irregularly shaped encroachment, measuring about 3 inches at the front to 3.3 feet in the middle of the back yard and 2.5 feet at the back of the property. He knew of no prior boundary line agreement by anyone for the property, and he had made none. He intended to remove the fence and replace it with a new one for "privacy and to mark the proper property line." And although he agreed a fence was "absolutely" for marking the property line, he did not agree the 40-year-old fence was the property line. Mr. Rader did not dispute that the fence had been in existence for more than 40 years.

After considering the evidence presented at trial, as well as proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law from the parties after the trial, the district court held that the Stewarts had successfully claimed title to the disputed strip by adverse possession under a good-faith belief of ownership theory. The district court ruled:

4 "No one testified when the fence was built or under what circumstances it was built but testimony by surrounding neighbors established that is has been in existence for at least 40 years. Neither party got a survey before they purchased their property nor had either any reason to know the true location of the property line until a survey was completed.

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Stewart v. Rader, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-rader-kanctapp-2020.