Tom Bonnell v. Ruby A. Cotner, Douglas Wayne Cotner, Arthur J. Johnson, Jimmy J. Johnson, and Jerry L. Johnson

50 N.E.3d 361, 2016 Ind. LEXIS 123, 2016 WL 614107
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 16, 2016
Docket66S03-1509-PL-530
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 50 N.E.3d 361 (Tom Bonnell v. Ruby A. Cotner, Douglas Wayne Cotner, Arthur J. Johnson, Jimmy J. Johnson, and Jerry L. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tom Bonnell v. Ruby A. Cotner, Douglas Wayne Cotner, Arthur J. Johnson, Jimmy J. Johnson, and Jerry L. Johnson, 50 N.E.3d 361, 2016 Ind. LEXIS 123, 2016 WL 614107 (Ind. 2016).

Opinion

On Petition to Transfer from the Indiana Court of Appeals, No. 66A03-1410-PL-372.

MASSA, Justice.

Tom Bonnell purchased a 35-foot-wide strip of land from the Pulaski County Board of Commissioners, and Ruby and Douglas Cotner brought this action to quiet title, claiming that they had previously acquired ownership of a section of that land via adverse possession. The trial court disagreed, finding that the prior sale of the Strip by tax deed extinguished any interest the Cotners may have had. Nevertheless, the trial court awarded the Cot-ners a prescriptive easement on certain outbuildings erected on the Strip, and both parties appealed. We affirm the denial of the Cotners’ adverse possession claim, and reverse the grant of a prescriptive easement, finding that the sale of the Strip by tax deed extinguished any and all interest the Cotners previously possessed.

Facts and Procedural History

In 1948, Leo and Ruth Cottingham subdivided their seven-acre parcel in Pulaski County, Indiana into eleven residential *363 lots. Lot 1 consisted of a two-acre block on the south end of the parcel, while the remaining ten lots were all equal half-acre rectangles, defined as “One hundred (100) feet by Two hundred Fourteen and One-half (214⅜) feet.” Plaintiffs Ex. G at 20; Defendant’s Ex. 2. The original survey accompanying the subdivision also accounts for State Highway 119, and it marks the western boundary of these lots as being at the center of the State’s right of way. There is also an ancient farm fence 214 feet from the eastern edge of the State’s right of way. There is thus a 35-foot gap in between the edge of the parcels, and the fence on the eastern edge (“the Strip”), which was not a part of the official parcel division; nevertheless, the owners of Lots 2 through 11 treated their respective portions of the Strip as part of their property, and they believed the ancient farm fence marked the property line. Ruby Cotner purchased Lot 8 in 1997. 1 The previous owners of Lot 8 constructed a barn in 1968, and the Cotners expanded upon it with a lean-to in 2010; a portion of these buildings encroaches some distance onto the Strip.

The Strip was originally included by title with the larger farm field to, the east; however, it was divided off via quitclaim deed in 1985. The State, subsequently sold the Strip twice via tax sale; the first in 1993 to Jeff Kopkey, and the second in 2011 to the Pulaski County Board of Commissioners, who then sold the Strip to Bonnell in 2012. When he bought it, Bon-nell believed the Strip was located on the eastern side of the ancient fence. Upon a subsequent survey, however, he discovered the Strip was located effectively in the backyards of the Cottingham Subdivision owners. Bonnell then proposed a sale of each section of the Strip to the property owner who had been occupying the land, at $890 apiece. All the owners eventually reached an agreement with Bonnell except the Johnsons and the Cotners, who asserted ownership of their section of the Strip by adverse possession, and filed this suit to quiet title. Bonnell defended on the grounds the Cotners had not demonstrated they paid taxes on the disputed portion of the Strip and thus could not perfect their adverse possession claim under Indiana law. And in any event, the Indiana Tax Deed Statutes, Ind.Code chs. 6-1.1-24 and -25 (2014), mandate that the sale of any property by tax deed severs all prior claims of ownership, including ownership by adverse possession.

The trial court agreed with Bonnell, finding since title to the Strip ran separately at all times, the Cotners could not reasonably believe they were paying taxes on their portion of the Strip, and thus had not perfected their claim of adverse possession. The trial court went on to find, as a matter of first impression, that even if the Cotners’ adverse possession claim had been perfected, the subsequent tax sales of the Strip divested the Cotners of their interest. However, the trial court also determined sua sponte that the Cotners should receive a prescriptive easement for use of their outbuildings encroaching onto the Strip.

Both parties appealed, and a unanimous panel of our Court of Appeals reversed and remanded. Bonnell v. Cotner, 35 N.E.3d 275, 284 (Ind.Ct.App.2015). The panel found the Cotners showed they paid taxes on the outbuildings that encroached upon the Strip, which was sufficient to *364 establish good faith, and the subsequent tax sales could not divest an adverse possessor of their interest, because otherwise “vested adverse holders may become divested of their property for failing to pay taxes despite reasonably believing in good faith that they are paying the appropriate taxes due.” Id. at 283 (emphasis in original).

We granted transfer, thus vacating the Court of Appeals opinion below. Bonnell v. Cotner, 37 N.E.3d 493 (Ind.2015) (table); Ind. Appellate Rule 58(A). We now affirm the trial court with respect to the denial of title to the Cotners by adverse possession, but reverse as to granting them a prescriptive easement. . .

Standard of Review

The parties’ claims were tried without a jury; therefore, we “shall not set aside the findings or judgment unless clearly erroneous.” Ind. Trial Rule 52(A). “Findings of fact are.only clearly erroneous if there is no factual support for them in the record whatsoever, either directly or by inference.” Johnson v. Wysocki, 990 N.E.2d 456, 460 (Ind.2013), “A judgment is clearly erroneous if it applies the wrong legal standard to properly found facts.” Woodruff v. Ind. Family & Soc. Servs. Admin., 964 N.E.2d 784, 790 (Ind.2012) (quoting Nichols v. Minhick, 885 N.E.2d 1, 3 (Ind.2008)).

The Cotners Established Their Claim of Adverse Possession of the Disputed Portion of the Strip.

As we explained in great detail in Fraley v. Minger, there are four traditional elements to adverse, possession at common law: control, intent, notice, and duration. 829 N.E.2d 476, 486 (Ind.2005). Bonnell does not dispute that the Cotners have established all of these elements with respect to the disputed portion • of the Strip. Rather, Bonnell relies on our holding in Fraley that, pursuant to Indiana Code section 32-21-7-1 (2008), an adverse possessor is required' to pay taxes on the property claimed in order to perfect his or her interest,' although substantial compliance is sufficient, so long as “the adverse claimant has a reasonable and good faith belief that the claimant is paying the taxes during the period of adverse possession.” Fraley, 829 N.E.2d at 493. 2

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50 N.E.3d 361, 2016 Ind. LEXIS 123, 2016 WL 614107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tom-bonnell-v-ruby-a-cotner-douglas-wayne-cotner-arthur-j-johnson-ind-2016.