Tutor v. Pannell

809 So. 2d 748, 2002 WL 265837
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedFebruary 26, 2002
Docket2000-CA-01488-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 809 So. 2d 748 (Tutor v. Pannell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tutor v. Pannell, 809 So. 2d 748, 2002 WL 265837 (Mich. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

809 So.2d 748 (2002)

Naomi TUTOR, Appellant,
v.
Bobby PANNELL, Edward L. Medders and Wife, Martha J. Medders, Appellees.

No. 2000-CA-01488-COA.

Court of Appeals of Mississippi.

February 26, 2002.

*749 Michael N. Watts, Oxford, J. Mark Shelton, Tupelo, Walter Alan Davis, Oxford, Attorneys for Appellant.

Bradford L. Henry, Phillip L. Tutor, Pontotoc, Attorneys for Appellees.

Before SOUTHWICK, P.J., IRVING, and MYERS, JJ.

IRVING, J., for the Court.

¶ 1. Naomi Tutor appeals from a judgment rendered by the Chancery Court of Pontotoc County which purported to settle a boundary line dispute in favor of appellees, Bobby Pannell, Edward Medders and Edward's wife, Martha. Tutor asserts six issues for review which are: (1) whether the chancellor made any final determination with regard to the property lines in this case, (2) whether the chancellor's decision in this matter is self-contradictory, (3) whether the chancellor improperly considered evidence not presented at the trial of this matter, (4) whether the chancellor manifestly erred by finding that the "Pannell" deed controlled over the "Tutor" deed, (5) whether the chancellor's finding regarding the north property line of the "Medders" property is supported by substantial evidence, and (6) whether the chancellor was in manifest error in determining that the appellant, Ms. Tutor, did not acquire any property in this matter by adverse possession. We find merit in issues one, two, four and five; therefore, we reverse and remand.

FACTS

¶ 2. This case involves a boundary line dispute between adjacent property owners in northern Pontotoc County, Mississippi. Bobby Pannell, Edward Medders and Edward's wife, Martha, filed a complaint seeking to quiet title to their respective tracts of property against Naomi Tutor. Tutor counterclaimed on the same ground, along with other claims not at issue. The dispute centers primarily around the western boundary line of the Medderses' property in relationship to Tutor's property and the northern and western boundary line of Pannell's property in relationship to Tutor's property. Tutor owns approximately 60.87 acres that adjoin Pannell's tract to the north and west. The Medderses own a 1.24 acre tract to the south of Pannell's land which adjoins Tutor's property on the Medderses' west property line. A fence runs along the north boundary line of the Pannell tract, and the conflict revolves *750 around the fence. In addition, a field road runs south of the fence.

¶ 3. During the hearing before the chancellor, several lay and two expert witnesses gave testimony. The lay witnesses were Jack Savely, tax assessor for Pontotoc County, Mike Sappington, Tutor, Tutor's son, Rex, Pannell, and Edward Medders. The two expert witnesses, James Akins and Rex Smith, are both surveyors who surveyed the disputed areas. Both of these surveys were admitted into evidence. The Akins survey was offered by Pannell and the Medderses, and the Smith survey was offered by Tutor. According to the Akins survey, the fence diagonally crossed the actual boundary line. On the other hand, according to Smith's survey, the boundary line was south of the fence.

¶ 4. Sappington, the grandson of the predecessors in title to Bobby Pannell, testified that the Pannell and Tutor properties were sold from his grandmother's estate. More importantly, his parents once resided on the Pannell property when Tutor's husband was alive. Sappington testified that his family claimed property to the width of the field road.

¶ 5. Medders testified that he had observed Tutor's lessee using the field road for ingress, egress and has witnessed the lessee performing work on the road. Medders also testified that he was purchasing Pannell's property and that he was told by a realtor that the property line extended to the fence. Yet, Medders stated that he did not know if the realtor had the property surveyed.

¶ 6. Pannell and Savely testified that Pannell's and the Medderses' tracts included the fence. Savely also testified that the tax apportionment for Pannell's and the Medderses' tracts extended to the fence.

¶ 7. Tutor testified that she did not know where the lines were, that she had never told anyone to get off her land, that she had used the field road for twenty-one years and that she had never mowed or bush-hogged the property. Furthermore, Tutor testified that the fence had been built in 1987. Rex Tutor testified that his father built the fence. He also testified that his family's property included the field road. Rex explained that, when the fence was built, his father had to leave the space for the field road in order to access the Tutor property.

¶ 8. After Pannell and the Medderses rested their case, the chancellor stated in the presence of both attorneys, "The Court will hold this in abeyance until I have a deraignment of title and.... I would ask both lawyers to present any finding of fact and conclusions of law that they would like for me to consider in making my decision." Both attorneys agreed. At some later point, the attorney for Pannell/Medders presented the chancellor with a deraignment of title.

¶ 9. Following the submission of the deraignment of title, the chancellor issued a memorandum opinion and judgment wherein she found that neither Tutor nor Pannell had adversely possessed the property which encompasses the field road because neither could satisfy the six elements necessary to claim adverse possession. Absent adverse possession, the court concluded that the northern boundary of the Pannell tract was established by the Akins survey because it was the most credible. Additionally, the chancellor found the factual dispute regarding the western boundary line of Pannell's and the Medderses' properties to be insignificant. The reason for this was Tutor's failure to offer any evidence which would indicate that the fence which runs north and south along the western boundary of the Pannell's and Medderses' tracts is not the boundary line. Consequently, *751 the chancellor found that the western boundary line of Pannell's and the Medderses' tracts was the fence line as it existed the day of the trial. Thus, title as to both the northern boundary and western boundary was quieted in favor of Pannell and the Medderses. Tutor's other claims were dismissed.

¶ 10. Tutor filed a motion to reconsider. The chancellor denied the motion but modified her previous findings as follows:

[T]he Court does not find the survey of James Akins, Rex Smith or Dean McCrae[1] to conclusively establish the boundary lines at issue. Any language in the original Memorandum Opinion and Judgment to the contrary is hereby set aside. Rather than solving the issue, however, this only makes it harder to the extent that there now exists an overlap of the boundaries between the two tracts of property. Therefore, this Court must determine which party actually owns the property contained in the overlap.

The chancellor then determined that the Pannell and Medders tracts were deeded from a common source prior in time to the conveyance of the Tutor tract, and therefore, the earlier deeds took precedence in determining the property lines in issue.

ANALYSIS OF ISSUES PRESENTED

1. Determination of the Property Lines and Evidence in Support Thereof

¶ 11. Issues one, two, four and five are interrelated. Therefore, for purposes of discussion and resolution, we have collapsed these three issues into this reformulated heading.

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Bluebook (online)
809 So. 2d 748, 2002 WL 265837, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tutor-v-pannell-missctapp-2002.