Sunray DX Oil Co. v. John E. Mahaffey & Associates, Inc.

474 S.W.2d 119, 251 Ark. 632, 1971 Ark. LEXIS 1193
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 20, 1971
Docket5-5723
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 474 S.W.2d 119 (Sunray DX Oil Co. v. John E. Mahaffey & Associates, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sunray DX Oil Co. v. John E. Mahaffey & Associates, Inc., 474 S.W.2d 119, 251 Ark. 632, 1971 Ark. LEXIS 1193 (Ark. 1971).

Opinion

Carleton Harris, Chief Justice.

Appellee, John E. Mahaffey and Associates, Inc., hereafter called Mahaffey, instituted suit in the Washington Chancery Court on June 25, 1969, against Sunray Oil Company DX Division, one of the appellants herein, and by such complaint and subsequent amendments filed, asserted that Maurice A. Finney and wife, Louise McDonald Finney, were the owners of real estate west of appellees’ property, and that appellant, Sunray, had leased the Finney and Harper lands. It was alleged that the lessee was encroaching upon the Mahaffey property by some 8.3 feet on the south and 7.3 feet on the north, and the prayer was that the defendants would be enjoined from further encroachments, required to remove present encroachments, and fair rental was sought for the property occupied by such encroachments prior to removal. Appellant answered with a general denial, and the appellants Finney and Harper answered, admitting ownership of the premises leased by Sunray, denying that appellees were entitled to any relief, and further stating that if such an encroachment existed, it was without any knowledge on the part of the owners. A cross-complaint was filed by these appellants against Sunray praying that if appellee recovered a judgment against the Finneys and Harper for rentals, or was granted a mandatory injunction which occasioned expense to these appellants, that they be given judgment against Sunray for the amount of any such judgment or expenses incurred. Sunray answered this cross-complaint with a general denial, and subsequently filed an amendment to the answer to Mahaffey’s complaint asserting adverse possession; the Finneys and Harper likewise amended their answer pleading adverse possession, and an agreed boundary line between appellants and appellee was also pleaded. On trial, the court resolved the issues in favor of appellee as against all appellants, and in favor of appellants, the Finneys and Harper on their cross-complaint against Sunray. The decree required Sunray to remove the encroachment placed on the property, a retaining wall, and specifically found that the true boundary line between the two properties was that alleged in the complaint of appellee; that the encroachment extended to the east onto the Mahaffey property 7.3 feet on the north and 8.3 feet on the south. No amount was given appellee for damages. From the decree so entered, appellants bring this appeal. For reversal, it is asserted that the trial court erred in its finding that the appellees had established the true location of the common lot line, and further the court erred in holding that appellants did not sustain their burden of proof relative to an agreed boundary.1 We proceed to a discussion of these points in the order listed.

Mr. Mahaffey, in April, 1967, purchased the property lying east of, and adjoining, the property owned by appellants and after acquiring the lot, surveyed the land including lots on both sides of the property purchased. His survey, which was made in accordance with the legal description contained in the deed conveying to him, revealed that there was a concrete retaining wall encroaching on his lot by some 7.3 feet on the north end and some 8.3 feet on the south.2 The description in the deed received by Mahaffey had as a beginning a point 104 feet east of “the NW corner of Block 30 to the Masonic Addition to the City of Fayetteville”, and this was the point used by Mahaffey, a registered engineer himself, in making the survey. He testified that though the original plat of Masonic Addition was dim and somewhat indefinite, based upon that plat and the deeds and records of the adjoining properties (on each side), he felt that the proper starting point had been used. The property leased by Sunray gives the legal description, and then, in parentheses refers to Appellants’ eastern boundary as “Jackson’s lot”, this lot being the property that Mahaffey purchased in 1967. The legal descriptions of both the Sunray lot and the lot east of appellee’s land (McDonald’s lot) had starting points tied to the quarter section line and appellee’s survey of these lots conformed to the legal description of all three properties. Mahaffey stated that the beginning point in the description of appellants’ property which was “15 feet east of the quarter section line” and the beginning point of his description, which is “the NW corner of Block 30” are the same points expressed differently.

The conclusions reached by Mahaffey are disputed by Don Kemp, not an engineer, but a registered land surveyor, who had trained under Mahaffey, and who testified on behalf of appellants. Kemp made his first survey in 1964, when the retaining wall was built by appellants, and in fact, the wall was placed in its location (as the boundary line) on the basis of this survey.

Mr. Kemp’s testimony is confusing as to whether he used the legal description furnished by Sunray, or another legal description he obtained by checking the courthouse records, or, a composite of both, though it appears that the last is nearer correct. Taking this description, Kemp arrived at a point on the ground which he considered to be the NW corner of Block 30. He considered this point to be the same as Mahaffey’s “apparent NW corner of Block 30 of Masonic Addition”.

Using his description, Kemp started at the SW corner of the quarter section and proceeded to run the lines out. He testified that he went 690 feet north of the SW corner and then went east 15 feet for the beginning point. He then ran 104 feet east according to the description and came to a point on the ground which is some 7.3 feet west of where he ultimately located the eastern boundary of the property. Noticing a difference in the boundary as located on the ground, and the way it is surveyed, Kemp checked extensively on the boundary lines throughout the entire block. Surveying the block, he decided there was a persistent 7 foot error between the apparent physical boundaries and the boundaries called for in the legal descriptions, with the exception of the last two properties on the block. At the NE corner of the block, the witness testified that he found an iron pin monument. Starting with this monument and surveying back to the Sunray property on the NW corner of the block, Kemp concluded that the disputed boundary line was 7.3 feet east of the point he had arrived at prior to conducting this survey of the entire block. It was this boundary that the witness considered as being the true boundary.3 The testimony reveals a rather unusual circumstance. The witness testified that, when requested to make the survey, Sunray furnished him with a legal description of the property being leased in order to accomplish that assignment. Though he decided that the description was incorrect, and went beyond his instructions to the extent of locating the descriptions of the property all along the block to ascertain if those persons had all the property coming to them, and though furnishing Sunray with a plat that did not coincide with the legal description that he had been furnished by that appellant — Kemp never mentioned the matter to his employer (Sunray).

. Kemp admitted that if he had followed the legal description of appellants’ property, his survey would have come out exactly the same as the Mahaffey survey. He also admitted that if he had begun at the beginning point described in appellants’ legal description, and proceeded east 104 feet, he would have arrived at a point approximately 7.3 feet short of where he subsequently put the pins. This point marked the boundary line surveyed by Mahaffey.

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Bluebook (online)
474 S.W.2d 119, 251 Ark. 632, 1971 Ark. LEXIS 1193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sunray-dx-oil-co-v-john-e-mahaffey-associates-inc-ark-1971.