THE EMPIRE DISTRICT ELECTRIC COMPANY v. DOUGLAS L. COVERDELL, and CITY OF BRANSON

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 2019
DocketSD35226
StatusPublished

This text of THE EMPIRE DISTRICT ELECTRIC COMPANY v. DOUGLAS L. COVERDELL, and CITY OF BRANSON (THE EMPIRE DISTRICT ELECTRIC COMPANY v. DOUGLAS L. COVERDELL, and CITY OF BRANSON) 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
THE EMPIRE DISTRICT ELECTRIC COMPANY v. DOUGLAS L. COVERDELL, and CITY OF BRANSON, (Mo. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

THE EMPIRE DISTRICT ELECTRIC ) COMPANY, ) ) Respondent, ) ) v. ) No. SD 35226 ) Filed: December 5, 2019 DOUGLAS L. COVERDELL, ) ) Appellant, ) ) and ) ) CITY OF BRANSON, ET AL., ) ) Respondents. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF TANEY COUNTY

Honorable Timothy W. Perigo, Special Judge AFFIRMED

The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of HCW Development

Company, LLC; HCW Private Development, LLC; and HCW North, LLC (collectively,

HCW) and against Douglas Coverdell (Coverdell) on his claim for adverse possession of

approximately 27 acres of property, which includes portions of the Branson Landing in Branson, Missouri.1 Following entry of summary judgment in favor of HCW, a joint

motion seeking to have the ruling on Coverdell’s adverse possession claim reduced to a

final judgment was filed by three other parties also involved in the underlying dispute with

Coverdell: the City of Branson (Branson); Empire District Electric Company (Empire);

and Central Bank of Branson (Central). The trial court granted the joint motion and entered

a final judgment disposing of all claims against all parties. Coverdell appealed from that

judgment, raising four points of alleged error. For the reasons stated below, we affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

This is the third time the underlying dispute has been before us on appeal. See

Empire Dist. Elec. Co. v. Coverdell, 344 S.W.3d 842, 844 (Mo. App. 2011) (Empire I);

Empire Dist. Elec. Co. v. Coverdell, 484 S.W.3d 1, 4 (Mo. App. 2015) (Empire II). By

way of overview, the underlying dispute originated from a 2003 action in which Coverdell

prevailed against Empire in quieting title to an initial 3.36-acre tract located north of the

property at issue. The purported property description of that 3.36-acre tract submitted by

Coverdell, however, included a large tract of property south of the initial tract, together

totaling 27 acres and encompassing portions of the Branson Landing. That property

description was incorporated into the 2010 judgment. Empire and Branson appealed from

that judgment. Empire I, 344 S.W.3d at 844.

In Empire I, this Court reversed the judgment in that civil case on the ground of

plain error. Based on Coverdell’s judicial admissions at trial that the dispute concerned

only the 3.36 acres “up north,” our opinion in Empire I held that the 2010 judgment

1 The judgment against Coverdell was also against Coverdell Enterprises, Inc. (CEI). CEI filed a separate notice of appeal, so its points of alleged error are not addressed in this opinion. 2 quieting title in Coverdell “in what appears to be a 27 acre tract of land was in error” and

the judgment affected Branson’s substantial rights, resulting in a manifest injustice. Id. at

851-52. We reversed the 2010 judgment and remanded the cause. We instructed the trial

court to permit Branson to amend its pleadings and to freely permit amendment of the

pleadings of Empire and Coverdell, without prejudice to the rights of third parties to

intervene in the litigation as the Rules of Civil Procedure might provide. Id. at 853.

Following remand, pursuant to the opinion and mandate in Empire I, Coverdell

took the position that his claims were not limited to the 3.36 acres that were the subject of

his judicial admissions. Instead, he asserted that he had always been claiming the full 27

acres, which he referred to as “Properties A and B.” Property A includes Property B, which

Coverdell alleged that he conveyed by deed to Coverdell Enterprises, Inc. (CEI). Because

Property A includes the entirety of Property B, we use the phrase “Property A” to refer to

the full 27-acre tract at issue in this appeal.2 Coverdell claimed ownership of this entire

tract by deed (Count I) and by adverse possession (Count II). Consistent with this Court’s

mandate in Empire I, additional interested parties sought and were granted intervention.

2 The property description of Property A was included in the appendix of Empire II. To be very clear, because this entire 27-acre tract of Property A is at issue in this appeal, we repeat its description here:

All that part of the SE¼ of the NW¼ situate on the right bank of Roark Creek and that part of the NE¼ of the SW¼ in Section 33, Township 23, Range 21, EXCEPT a tract of land more particularly described as beginning at the NE corner of Park Addition to the City of Branson, Missouri thence North 2º 19’ West to the Southerly bank of Roark Creek; thence in a Southerly direction with the Easterly and Southerly bank of said Roark Creek to the Northerly line of said Park Addition, thence Easterly to the point of beginning all bearings being referenced to the centerline of Sycamore Street as being due North and South.

Empire II, 484 S.W.3d at 34; see also Empire I, 344 S.W.3d at 847 (reciting the same property description when tracing the history of Coverdell’s deed). 3 These included lienholders U.S. Bank and Arvest Bank. Thereafter, Branson, U.S. Bank

and Arvest Bank filed motions for summary judgment against Coverdell and CEI. They

both failed to timely respond. The trial court entered summary judgments in favor of

Branson, U.S. Bank and Arvest Bank, and against Coverdell and CEI on the Count I deed-

based claims. The trial court also dismissed the Count II claim of Coverdell for adverse

possession. Coverdell and CEI appealed, resulting in our opinion and mandate in Empire

II, 484 S.W.3d at 1.

In Empire II, we held that the entry of summary judgment on the deed-based claims

of Coverdell and CEI was proper. This Court reversed, however, as to the dismissal of

Coverdell’s claim for adverse possession. We based the reversal on the inability to

determine, from the property description of Property A, whether it “matched up with or

overlapped specific portions” of other property described in the motions for summary

judgment:

We cannot tell from the face of the summary judgments whether a claim by Coverdell that he had acquired [Property A] by adverse possession would be precluded by the uncontested facts set forth in the summary judgment motions that were constructively admitted by him due to his failure to controvert them.

Empire II, 484 S.W.3d at 34. We remanded the matter to the trial court “for further

proceedings limited to the resolution of Coverdell’s claim for adverse possession of

[Property A.]” Id.3

On the same day this Court decided Empire II, we decided a companion case

brought in 2011 by lienholders U.S. Bank and Arvest Bank to quiet title to certain tracts of

3 Coverdell could not convey title to property he did not own. Because CEI’s deed to Property B came from Coverdell, CEI’s purported ownership interest in Property B would be determined by whether Coverdell could prove he owned Property B by adverse possession. 4 land included in the 2010 judgment. See U.S. Bank, N.A. v. Coverdell, 483 S.W.3d 390

(Mo. App. 2015). After the lienholders obtained judgments as to certain lots, Coverdell

appealed. Id. at 394. This Court reversed and remanded, directing the trial court to stay

the 2011 case, pending a final resolution of the instant case. Id. at 404.

HCW was among the parties involved in the 2011 companion case, but not in the

instant case. HCW first became involved in late 2003 when HCW Development Company,

LLC began leasing land from Branson to be developed as the Branson Landing. Following

remand of Coverdell’s adverse possession claim in Empire II, HCW requested and was

granted leave to intervene in this case.

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THE EMPIRE DISTRICT ELECTRIC COMPANY v. DOUGLAS L. COVERDELL, and CITY OF BRANSON, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-empire-district-electric-company-v-douglas-l-coverdell-and-city-of-moctapp-2019.