Steven Noe v. Robert McIntosh ( 2022 )


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  •                   RENDERED: MAY 20, 2022; 10:00 A.M.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
    Commonwealth of Kentucky
    Court of Appeals
    NO. 2020-CA-1013-MR
    AND
    NO. 2020-CA-1085-MR
    STEVEN NOE                                 APPELLANT/CROSS-APPELLEE
    APPEAL AND CROSS-APPEAL FROM ESTILL CIRCUIT COURT
    v.             HONORABLE MICHAEL DEAN, JUDGE
    ACTION NOS. 11-CI-00286, 13-CI-00001, AND 13-CI-00045
    ROBERT MCINTOSH; CATIE
    MCINTOSH; AND CAYLA
    MCINTOSH                                 APPELLEES/CROSS-APPELLANTS
    OPINION
    AFFIRMING IN PART, VACATING IN PART, AND REMANDING
    APPEAL NO. 2020-CA-1013-MR AND REVERSING
    AND REMANDING CROSS-APPEAL NO. 2020-CA-1085-MR
    ** ** ** ** **
    BEFORE: CALDWELL, MCNEILL, AND TAYLOR, JUDGES.
    TAYLOR, JUDGE: Steven Noe brings Appeal No. 2020-CA-1013-MR and
    Robert McIntosh, Cayla McIntosh, and Catie McIntosh bring Cross-Appeal No.
    2020-CA-1085-MR from a July 22, 2020, Order and Amended Final Judgment of
    the Estill Circuit Court rendering judgment in favor of the McIntoshes and against
    Noe for trespass to timber and dismissing Noe’s claims to quiet title and establish a
    boundary line for failure to name indispensable parties.1 We affirm in part, vacate
    in part, and remand Appeal No. 2020-CA-1013-MR and reverse and remand
    Cross-Appeal No. 2020-CA-1085-MR.
    BACKGROUND
    On October 11, 2011, Robert McIntosh filed a complaint against
    Steven Noe in the Estill Circuit Court alleging, inter alia, a timber trespass
    pursuant to Kentucky Revised Statutes (KRS) 364.130. The timber was taken
    from an area known as Tipton Ridge in Estill County, Kentucky. In July of 2011,
    Noe had contracted with Harold Estes to log the Noe property. Estes logged the
    subject property in early August, 2011.
    In his complaint, McIntosh sought treble damages for the wrongful
    cutting of timber on his property but did not seek to establish the boundary line
    between the Noe and McIntosh properties. In a “Response to Verified Complaint,”
    Noe maintained that McIntosh no longer held any legal interest in the real property
    at issue. Noe pointed out that McIntosh and his previous wife, Cynthia McIntosh,
    had deeded the subject property to their minor children, Catie McIntosh and Cayla
    1
    The July 22, 2020, Order and Amended Final Judgment also set aside the original Final
    Judgment that had been entered on February 14, 2020.
    -2-
    McIntosh, by deed dated June 4, 1999.2 Noe also filed a motion to dismiss
    McIntosh’s complaint based upon McIntosh’s lack of legal interest in the property.
    Thereafter, by deed dated November 2, 2011, McIntosh’s daughters,
    Catie and Cayla who were by then adults, deeded a life estate in the subject real
    property to McIntosh and retained the remainder interest. On November 10, 2011,
    an amended complaint was filed by McIntosh, Catie, and Cayla (collectively
    referred to as the McIntoshes) as plaintiffs. Noe filed an amended answer and
    counterclaim seeking, inter alia, a declaratory judgment to establish the boundary
    line between the parties’ property and to quiet title.
    On January 8, 2013, Charles Terry3 filed an action (Action No. 13-CI-
    00001) against McIntosh seeking to quiet title, to establish the boundary line
    between the parties, and to restrain McIntosh from blocking a roadway Terry
    utilized to access his property. Terry was the owner of real property that was
    partly located between the McIntoshes’ property and the Noe property. On
    February 27, 2013, McIntosh, pro se, filed a complaint against Terry (Action No.
    2
    The June 4, 1999, deed conveyed the subject property from Steven and Cynthia McIntosh to
    their minor children Catie McIntosh and Cayla McIntosh. As the conveyance was made
    pursuant to the Kentucky Uniform Transfer to Minors Act, the transferors obligation expired
    upon the minor children reaching the age of majority. When this action was commenced both
    Catie and Cayla had reached the age of majority.
    3
    Charles Terry died on April 7, 2019, before the bench trial in this case was conducted.
    Additionally, no motion to substitute a personal representative of Terry’s estate was filed, and no
    order was entered substituting a personal representative. His case was effectively dismissed and
    otherwise not adjudicated. Terry’s case is not relevant to this appeal.
    -3-
    13-CI-00045) alleging that “a controversy exists over [Terry’s] property and
    roadway and division line between the parties’ property.” February 27, 2013,
    Complaint at 1. Terry filed an answer and counterclaim seeking, inter alia, to
    quiet title in the property. By docket order entered February 12, 2016, Action Nos.
    13-CI-00001 and 13-CI-00045 were consolidated with Action No. 11-CI-00286.
    There was little activity of record over the next couple of years. Then,
    on August 7, 2018, the McIntoshes filed a motion in limine to prevent Noe from
    arguing that any fault related to the timber trespass could be apportioned to Harold
    Estes, a nonparty. As noted, Estes was the logger Noe had contracted with to cut
    and remove timber from the subject property. Noe subsequently moved to dismiss
    Action No. 11-CI-00286 on the basis that Estes was an indispensable party to the
    litigation. By order entered August 10, 2018, the circuit court denied Noe’s
    motion to dismiss the action and ordered that Estes be joined as a party defendant.
    Noe eventually asserted a claim against Estes for contribution, indemnity, and
    apportionment of any damages. By docket order entered February 7, 2019, Estes
    was dismissed from the action based on statute of limitations grounds.
    A bench trial was conducted on November 8, 2019, and by Order and
    Amended Final Judgment entered July 22, 2020, the court made the following
    findings of fact, conclusions of law, and judgment:
    -4-
    II. FINDINGS OF FACT
    Robert McIntosh holds a life estate in the property
    described in DB 288, P 300, recorded in the Estill County
    Clerk’s Office. His daughters, Cayla and Catie, hold the
    remainder interest. The Defendant Steve Noe owns a life
    estate in an adjoining property which shares a common
    boundary with the McIntosh property below the cliff.
    Noe’s daughters[,] Letisha and Stephanie[,] own the
    remainder interest. The McIntoshes and the Noes do not
    share a common boundary line above the cliff where the
    trespass occurred. The Court finds that of the 11 acres
    logged above the [c]liff as determined by Surveyor
    Oliver, 8 acres belonged to the McIntoshes.
    The Court finds that 350 trees were cut on the 11
    acres above the cliff, and that the value of this timber on
    the stump was $17,770.80. Because the McIntoshes
    owned 8 of the 11 acres logged, 8/11th of the value on
    the stump is attributed to the McIntoshes, for a timber
    value on the stump of $12,924.22. Based on the
    testimony of the McIntosh’s [sic] forester, [Gavin
    Wilson] the Court finds the cost to reclaim the property is
    $20,000, which would have included among other things,
    removing the remaining timber to allow for uniform
    regrowth. Adjusting this amount to the ratio (8/11th),
    gives $14,545.45 in reclamation costs on the McIntosh
    land.
    III. MEASURE OF DAMAGES
    ....
    No experts were called by Steve Noe to rebut the
    McIntosh’s [sic] timber expert, but Defendant Steve Noe
    did disagree with the amount of timber that the Plaintiffs
    and their experts determined to be cut on the McIntosh
    land. Nor did Steve Noe call a land surveyor to rebut the
    testimony of Michael Oliver. However, Steve Noe
    testified that he gave [Harold] Estes a survey and his
    -5-
    deed. The fact that the Defendant Noe commissioned a
    survey indicates at least a good intention of respecting
    adjoining property lines. Penix [v. Delong, 
    473 S.W.3d 609
     (Ky. 2015)]. The Court is unable to find that
    Defendant Noe acted with the intent to convert the
    Plaintiffs’ timber, thus under the statute, the Plaintiffs are
    not entitled to treble damages, but are entitled to recover
    the reasonable value of the timber, actual damages to
    their property, and any legal costs incurred by the
    Plaintiffs.
    IV. APPORTIONMENT OF FAULT
    ....
    Considering the nature of the conduct of Harold
    Estes, the logger, and that of Defendant Steve Noe, who
    contracted with him, as well as the extent of the causal
    relationship between the conduct and the damages
    claimed, the Court finds from a preponderance of the
    evidence that the McIntosh’s [sic] would be entitled to
    recover $12,924.22 stumpage value of the timber, plus
    $14,545.45 damages to the land, for a total of $27,469.67
    in actual damages if contributory fault is disregarded.
    The Court further finds that 75% of the total fault is
    allocated to logger Harold Estes, and 25% is allocated to
    Defendant Steve Noe, who contracted to have the timber
    cut.
    V. CHARLES TERRY CLAIMS AND DEFENSES
    No proof as to the boundary line of Dr. Charles
    Terry having been presented, other than what is shown
    on the Oliver Plat, and no personal representative having
    ever been substituted for Charles Terry’s Estate, the
    Court finds that it does not have jurisdiction to grant
    relief for or against the Terry Estate. E.g., Hardin
    County v. Wilkerson, 
    255 S.W.3d 923
     (Ky. 2008).
    -6-
    VI. DECLARATION OF RIGHTS
    Defendant Steve Noe sought a declaration of rights
    as to the boundary line between the parties. Michael
    Oliver, the only expert land surveyor who testified,
    established the common boundary line as being that
    shown on his survey plat, Exhibit 2 to Oliver’s testimony.
    The preliminary version of this Plat was authenticated
    and introduced. In this Court’s original Judgment in this
    case, it found that the common boundary line between
    the McIntoshes and the Noes was as shown by the
    Survey Plat of Oliver. However, it was determined that
    Steve Noe only owned a life estate in the tract which
    adjoins the McIntosh tract, and that the remainder interest
    was owned by his two daughters, Letisha and Stephanie,
    who were never joined as parties to this litigation.
    Despite filing an action seeking a declaration of rights
    without joining his two daughters, Noe now argues they
    were indispensable parties and a judgment in their
    absence is invalid. Regardless, in as much as Noe’s
    daughters own the remainder interest in the subject
    property, the Court believes them to be indispensable
    parties as to the declaration of rights claim, which seeks
    to establish the boundary line between the parties and
    which directly affects their remainder interest. Because
    they were not joined in this action, the claim for
    declaration of rights as to the boundary line between the
    parties must be dismissed. See Gilland v. Dougherty,
    
    500 S.W.3d 217
     (Ky. App. 2016). While the failure to
    join Noe’s daughter[s] requires dismissal of the
    declaration of rights claim, they are not necessary parties
    to the timber trespass claim against Steve Noe, since no
    allegations of trespass were made against them.
    JUDGMENT
    The original Judgment entered in this case on
    February 14th, 2020[,] is set aside and replaced by this
    Judgment.
    -7-
    The Declaration of rights claim seeking to quiet
    title and establish the boundary line between the
    McIntoshes, Steve Noe, and Charles Terry [is] dismissed
    for failure to join indispensable parties.
    Judgment is entered in favor of the McIntosh
    Plaintiffs against Defendant Steve Noe for trespass to
    timber and the McIntoshes are awarded judgment in the
    amount of $6,867.41 in damages against Steve Noe,
    being 25% of the total damages, plus post judgment
    interest at the legal rate from the date of the original
    judgment, and court costs incurred.
    July 22, 2020, Order and Amended Final Judgment at 5-9. These appeals follow.
    APPEAL NO. 2020-CA-1013-MR
    Noe initially contends that the circuit court erred in its determination
    of the location of the boundary lines between the McIntoshes, Noe, and Terry.
    More particularly, Noe asserts that the testimony of the McIntoshes’ land surveyor,
    Mike Oliver, should have been excluded. In support thereof, Noe asserts the
    following: (1) Oliver’s plat was marked as a “preliminary” and a final plat was not
    produced until the day of trial, (2) Oliver was unable to testify to exactly where the
    timber had been cut; and, (3) Oliver “guessed” as to the total number of acres that
    were timbered.4
    4
    Other reasons asserted by Steven Noe to exclude Michael Oliver’s testimony included that
    Oliver was owed money by Robert McIntosh for his work and that given the plat was not final, it
    violated various Kentucky Administrative Regulations regarding land surveying.
    -8-
    Oliver was retained by McIntosh in late 2011 to survey the
    McIntoshes’ property located on Tipton Ridge in Estill County, Kentucky. Oliver,
    who had over 30 years’ surveying experience, surveyed the property and prepared
    a plat which he marked as “preliminary.” Oliver testified that initially marking a
    survey as “preliminary” was his standard practice if there was a disagreement
    between the parties. Oliver stated that he did this to prevent either party from
    recording the plat in hopes that the parties could reach an agreement. Oliver
    further testified at trial that he would not make any changes to the plat, would
    remove the word “preliminary,” and would sign the plat as final.
    In response to Oliver, Noe introduced a recorded survey plat of the
    property prepared by Jay Webb. However, Webb was not called as a witness at
    trial. The Webb recorded plat was not referred to on Oliver’s plat. The circuit
    court relied on Oliver’s plat and testimony in its opinion.5
    It is well-established that weight and credibility of a witness’s
    testimony is a question of fact for the finder of fact. See Moore v. Asente, 
    110 S.W.3d 336
    , 354 (Ky. 2003). It is also clear that Oliver’s testimony concerning the
    plat goes to the weight and credibility that should be given to Oliver’s testimony.
    5
    As an appellate court, we are cognizant that a trial court, as a fact-finder, may choose between
    “conflicting opinions of surveyors so long as the opinion relied upon is not based upon erroneous
    assumptions” or the opinion does not ignore established factors. Webb v. Compton, 
    98 S.W.3d 513
    , 517 (Ky. App. 2002) (quoting Howard v. Kingmont Oil Co., 
    729 S.W.2d 183
    , 184-85 (Ky.
    App. 1987)). Noe does not raise any arguments on appeal in this regard.
    -9-
    See 
    id.
     Noe’s assertions of error do not provide a basis for exclusion of Oliver’s
    testimony. As such, we do not believe the circuit court erred by admitting Oliver’s
    testimony regarding the plat he prepared.
    Regarding Noe’s contention that Oliver’s testimony should have been
    excluded due to his inability to identify upon whose property the timber was cut,
    we also find no error. Oliver testified that he was hired to locate and mark the
    property boundary line, which he did. Oliver further testified that after he
    identified the property boundary line, it was the task of a timber expert to establish
    where the cut trees were located. Again, these issues go to weight and credibility
    of Oliver’s testimony and not to its admission. See 
    id.
    And, as to Noe’s contention that it was erroneous to admit Oliver’s
    testimony concerning the amount of acreage timbered, we likewise find no error.
    Upon direct examination, Oliver stated he was not a timber expert and did not offer
    an opinion as to the amount of acreage timbered. However, upon cross-
    examination, Noe’s counsel led Oliver to believe that he had previously testified in
    a deposition that three to five acres had been cut from the McIntoshes’ property.
    But, the record is clear that Oliver’s deposition had never been taken by any party.
    In response to a question by Noe’s counsel, Oliver testified he believed 16 acres on
    top of the cliff belonged to the McIntoshes and six acres on top of the cliff
    belonged to Terry. More specifically, Oliver testified:
    -10-
    I believe there’s 16 acres up on top of the cliff that
    belong to Mr. McIntosh and there’s about six acres that
    belong to Dr. Terry. That’s the area between cliff to cliff
    and the property lines. Whether the entire area was cut
    or not and, if I did in my deposition say 6 acres, then I’m
    going to guess half of that [inaudible] but that would just
    be a guess. I did not measure.
    Video Record at 10:49:48.
    The Kentucky Supreme Court has held that “opening the door to
    otherwise inadmissible evidence is a form of waiver that happens when one party’s
    use of inadmissible evidence justifies the opposing party’s rebuttal of that evidence
    with equally inadmissible proof.” Graham v. Commonwealth, 
    571 S.W.3d 575
    ,
    582 (Ky. 2019) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). And, a trial court’s
    decision to admit or exclude evidence is reviewed for abuse of discretion. B.B. v.
    Commonwealth, Cabinet for Health and Family Servs., 
    635 S.W.3d 802
    , 807 (Ky.
    2021) (citing Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. v. Thompson, 
    11 S.W.3d 575
    , 576 (Ky.
    2000)). An abuse of discretion occurs where the trial court’s decision is “arbitrary,
    unreasonable, unfair, or unsupported by sound legal principles.” B.B., 635 S.W.3d
    at 807 (quoting Commonwealth v. Padgett, 
    563 S.W.3d 639
    , 645 (Ky. 2018)). As
    Noe opened the door to this line of questioning upon cross-examination, we find
    no abuse of discretion in the admission of Oliver’s testimony.
    Noe next asserts that the circuit court erred by admitting or by giving
    too much weight to the testimony of the timber expert, Gavin Wilson. Noe states
    -11-
    that Wilson’s testimony “was not based on sufficient facts or data, and its
    admission would violate KRE [Kentucky Rules of Evidence] 702.” Noe’s Brief at
    17. Noe does not, however, lend much support for such assertion.
    Wilson is a forester with thirty years’ experience, and he was retained
    by McIntosh as a timber expert to give an opinion regarding the amount and value
    of timber cut from the McIntosh property. Wilson went to Tipton Ridge in March
    of 2012, several months after Oliver had conducted his survey in late 2011.
    Wilson testified that he found stumps of 350 cut trees in the area. Wilson stated
    that he had physically numbered the cut trees with spray paint, identified the type
    and size of each cut tree, and assigned a value based upon market price. Wilson
    estimated that the cut timber had a total value of $17,770.80. Wilson also
    estimated that damage remediation cost for the land would be $20,000. Wilson
    testified that he could not say where the cut trees he observed were located in
    relation to the parties’ boundary lines. Wilson acknowledged that he had not seen
    a survey of the property and also stated that he did not observe any boundary
    markers or stakes upon the property when he was there. Rather, Wilson based his
    opinion upon McIntosh’s representations regarding where the boundary lines were
    located. Again, the issue raised by Noe regarding the admission of Wilson’s
    testimony goes to the weight and credibility of Wilson’s testimony and not the
    -12-
    admission or exclusion of same. See Moore, 110 S.W.3d at 354. As such, we do
    not believe the circuit court erred in its admission of Wilson’s testimony.
    Noe next contends that the circuit court erred when it determined the
    amount of damages that resulted from the timber trespass. More particularly, Noe
    contends there is a complete absence of proof in the record regarding the actual
    location of the timber cut in relation to the boundary lines of the parties’ property.
    In its July 22, 2020, Order and Amended Final Judgment, the circuit
    court found that 11 acres had been logged and 350 trees were cut. The court
    additionally believed the total value of the cut timber was $17,770.80. The circuit
    court found that “the McIntoshes owned 8 of the 11 acres logged, 8/11th of the
    value on the stump is attributed to the McIntoshes, for a timber value on the stump
    of $12,924.22.” July 22, 2020, Order and Amended Final Judgment at 5-6.
    At the hearing, Oliver testified that there were approximately 22 acres
    above the cliff and of the 22 acres, 16 acres were owned by the McIntoshes and 6
    acres were owned by Terry. Oliver also testified that half of the 22 acres had been
    logged – 11 acres. Additionally, Wilson determined that 350 trees had been cut in
    the disputed area. So, the court’s findings that 11 acres had been logged and that
    350 trees had been cut was supported by substantial evidence of a probative value.
    However, the circuit court’s finding that the McIntoshes owned 8 of the 11 acres
    logged is without any evidentiary support. Rather, it appears that the circuit court
    -13-
    merely estimated that of the 11 acres logged above the cliff, 8 acres were owned by
    the McIntoshes. The court arrived at this estimation by taking the total number of
    acres owned by the McIntoshes above the cliff (16 acres) and the total number of
    acres of real property above the cliff (22 acres) to arrive at a percentage of acres
    owned by the McIntoshes (16/22 or 73 percent). The court then extrapolated this
    percentage (73 percent or 16/22) to arrive at the estimation that 8 of the 11 acres
    logged were owned by the McIntoshes.
    As there was no evidence to support the circuit court’s finding that the
    McIntoshes owned 8 of the 11 acres actually logged, we are compelled to conclude
    that this finding of fact was clearly erroneous. The circuit court based its award of
    damages to the McIntoshes upon its erroneous finding of fact that they owned 8 of
    the 11 acres logged. Again, we can find no evidence in the record to support this
    finding. We thus vacate the circuit court’s award of $6,867.41 to the McIntoshes
    against Noe and remand for the circuit court to reconsider its award of damages to
    the McIntoshes.
    Noe also maintains that “[t]he McIntoshes failed to mitigate their
    damages.” Estes testified that he left four or five loads of logs that he had cut on
    the ground after he left the McIntoshes’ property. Noe identified the actions he
    believed that McIntosh failed to take in order to mitigate damages, but he did not
    make any specific allegation of error as to the circuit court’s ruling in this regard.
    -14-
    Rather, as to the circuit court’s purported error, Noe makes only a one sentence
    assertion in his brief that the court’s “failure to consider the duty to mitigate is a
    clearly erroneous application of the law. . . .” Noe’s Brief at 24. Additionally,
    Noe does not direct this Court to the record as to where this error was raised or
    how it was preserved at trial for our review. Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure
    (CR) 76.12(4)(c)(v). If the error was not raised before the court at trial, it is not
    preserved for review. Sneed v. Univ. of Louisville Hosp., 
    600 S.W.3d 221
    , 228
    (Ky. 2020). And, KRS 364.130, which sets out statutory damages for a timber
    trespass, does not provide for a mitigation offset except as provided in Section (2),
    which is not relevant to this case.6 Accordingly, we decline to address this
    contention of error.
    Noe finally asserts that the McIntoshes’ claims for timber trespass
    should have been barred by champerty. More particularly, Noe maintains that
    McIntosh had previously deeded the property to his daughters to avoid his
    judgment creditors. However, Noe fails to recognize that a life estate in the
    property was eventually deeded to McIntosh and then an amended complaint was
    filed by McIntosh and his daughters.
    6
    This Court can find no authority that requires the mitigation of damages in a timber trespass
    case, nor can this Court fathom that a landowner would owe a duty to mitigate his damages for
    timber cut on his land by a trespasser.
    -15-
    The doctrine of champerty is set forth in KRS 372.070(1), which
    provides:
    Any sale or conveyance, including those made under
    execution, of any land, or the pretended right or title
    thereto, of which any other person has adverse possession
    at the time of the sale or conveyance, is void; but this
    section does not render void any devise of land in
    adverse possession.
    Pursuant to KRS 372.070(1), the doctrine of champerty is utilized as a
    defense by an adverse possessor of land when there has been a sale from one
    unrelated party to another. Coblentz v. Day, 
    540 S.W.3d 384
    , 387 (Ky. App.
    2018). In the case sub judice, there was not a claim of adverse possession as to any
    of the parcels of land involved. And, the owners of the property were all plaintiffs
    in the amended complaint. Therefore, we believe Noe’s contention of error
    regarding champerty was without merit.
    CROSS-APPEAL NO. 2020-CA-1085-MR
    The McIntoshes assert on cross-appeal that the circuit court erred by
    joining Estes as an indispensable party, and then, despite Estes’ dismissal before
    trial, subsequently erred by apportioning fault to Estes for McIntoshes’ damages.
    On August 8, 2018, Noe moved to dismiss the action for failure to
    join Estes as an indispensable party. The court determined Estes was an
    indispensable party and ordered that he be joined as a party to the action. Noe
    subsequently asserted claims against Estes for contribution, indemnity, and
    -16-
    apportionment. The McIntoshes did not pursue any claims against Estes but did
    file a motion, in limine, to prevent any apportionment of fault to Estes. The court
    denied the McIntoshes’ motion. Estes was subsequently dismissed as a party prior
    to trial based upon statute of limitations grounds. However, by Final Judgment
    entered July 22, 2020, the circuit court apportioned 75 percent of the fault in the
    timber trespass to Estes and 25 percent to Noe.
    It is well-established that an indispensable party is “one whose interest
    would be divested by an adverse judgment.” Liquor Outlet, LLC v. Alcoholic
    Beverage Control Bd., 
    141 S.W.3d 378
    , 387 (Ky. App. 2004).
    In the case sub judice, Estes did not have an interest that would be
    divested by a judgment in this case. The action did not adjudicate any interest as to
    Estes. The plaintiffs in the underlying action, the McIntoshes, chose to pursue a
    trespass action against only Noe. And, the McIntoshes chose not to pursue a
    trespass claim or any other claim against Estes. There are myriad reasons why the
    McIntoshes may have chosen not to pursue a claim against Estes but the decision
    to do so was their choice.
    If, on the other hand, Noe believed that Estes was wholly or partially
    at fault, the proper procedure would have been for Noe to pursue a third party
    complaint against Estes under CR 14.01.7 For reasons unknown, Noe failed to do
    7
    CR 14.01 provides, in relevant part:
    -17-
    so after the amended complaint was filed. And, we must be cognizant of the fact
    that Noe employed Estes to cut the timber, not McIntosh, for which Noe must bear
    responsibility. Estes is a nonsettling nonparty and we believe the law is clear that
    the failure of a party to assert any claim they have against another constitutes a
    waiver of their ability to apportion fault. Baker v. Webb, 
    883 S.W.2d 898
    , 899
    (Ky. App. 1994).
    In this instance, Estes should not have been joined as an indispensable
    party to the lawsuit. Rather, the proper course of action would have been for Noe
    to have filed a third party complaint against Estes under CR 14.01. Noe’s failure
    to do so precludes any apportionment of fault to Estes. 
    Id.
     In sum, we believe that
    A defendant may move for leave as a third-party plaintiff to assert
    a claim against a person not a party to the action who is or may be
    liable to him for all or part of the plaintiff’s claim against him. If
    the motion is granted, summons and a copy of the third-party
    complaint, with a copy of the original complaint attached as an
    exhibit, shall be served on such a person, who shall be called the
    third-party defendant. . . . The third-party defendant may assert
    against the plaintiff any defenses which the third-party plaintiff has
    to the plaintiff’s claim. The third-party defendant may also assert
    any claim against the plaintiff arising out of the transaction or
    occurrence that is the subject matter of the plaintiff’s claim against
    the third-party plaintiff. The plaintiff may assert any claim against
    the third-party defendant arising out of the transaction or
    occurrence that is the subject matter of the plaintiff’s claim against
    the third-party plaintiff, and the third-party defendant thereupon
    shall assert his defenses as provided in Rule 12 and his
    counterclaims and cross-claims as provided in Rule 13. A third-
    party defendant may proceed under this rule against any person not
    a party to the action who is or may be liable to him for all or part
    of the claim made in the action against the third-party defendant.
    -18-
    the circuit court erroneously apportioned fault to Estes and reverse that portion of
    the circuit court’s judgment so doing.
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, in Appeal No. 2020-CA-1013-MR we
    vacate the circuit court’s damage award of $6,867.41 to McIntosh and remand to
    the circuit court for proceedings consistent with this Opinion. And, in Cross-
    Appeal No. 2020-CA-1085-MR we reverse the circuit court’s allocation of fault to
    Estes and also remand for proceedings consistent with this Opinion.
    ALL CONCUR.
    BRIEF AND ORAL ARGUMENT                    BRIEF AND ORAL ARGUMENT
    FOR APPELLANT/CROSS-                       FOR APPELLEES/CROSS-
    APPELLEE:                                  APPELLANTS:
    Rodney G. Davis                            Brooks Stumbo
    Richmond, Kentucky                         Richmond, Kentucky
    -19-