Eckman v. Ramunno , 2010 Ohio 4316 ( 2010 )


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  • [Cite as Eckman v. Ramunno, 
    2010-Ohio-4316
    .]
    STATE OF OHIO, MAHONING COUNTY
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    SEVENTH DISTRICT
    ROSEMARIE ECKMAN,                              )
    )      CASE NO.    09 MA 162
    PLAINTIFF-APPELLEE,                     )
    )
    - VS -                                  )      OPINION
    )
    SAMUEL RAMUNNO, et al.,                        )
    )
    DEFENDANTS-APPELLANTS.                  )
    CHARACTER OF PROCEEDINGS:                          Civil Appeal from Common Pleas Court,
    Case No. 07CV3883.
    JUDGMENT:                                          Reversed and Remanded.
    APPEARANCES:
    For Plaintiff-Appellee:                            Attorney Andrew George
    Attorney Steven Elder
    731 Fife Avenue
    Wilmington, Ohio 45177
    Attorney Damian DeGenova
    42 North Phelps Street
    Youngstown, Ohio 44503
    For Defendant-Appellee:                            Attorney Matthew Fekete
    725 Boardman-Canfield Road, Unit L-1
    Youngstown, Ohio 44512
    JUDGES:
    Hon. Joseph J. Vukovich
    Hon. Cheryl L. Waite
    Hon. Frank D. Celebrezze, Jr., Judge of the Eighth District
    Court of Appeals, Sitting by Assignment.
    Dated: September 10, 2010
    VUKOVICH, P.J.
    ¶{1}   Defendant-appellant Samuel Ramunno appeals the decision of the
    Mahoning County Common Pleas Court which granted summary judgment in favor of
    plaintiff-appellee Rosemarie Eckman on her adverse possession claim and thus
    quieted title of a portion of Ramunno’s property to Eckman. Ramunno argues that
    Eckman and her predecessors’ use of his property was permissive. Eckman contends
    that the use was adverse. For the following reasons, there exists a genuine issue of
    material fact as to whether the use was adverse or permissive. Consequently, the trial
    court’s grant of summary judgment for Eckman is reversed, and the case is remanded
    for further proceedings.
    STATEMENT OF THE CASE
    ¶{2}   On October 17, 2007, Rosemarie Eckman filed suit against her neighbor,
    Samuel Ramunno.         Her complaint disclosed that she purchased her Lowellville
    property in 1992 at which time a survey incorrectly showed that her attached garage
    was well off the neighbor’s property line. A 2006 survey revealed that a small corner
    of her garage and nearly half of a twenty-two foot long sidewalk (that she installed)
    rest on Ramunno’s property. Eckman’s complaint asked to be granted quiet title over
    the property underlying the encroaching portions of her garage and sidewalk on the
    grounds of adverse possession. She attached the surveys to her complaint.
    ¶{3}   Ramunno filed his answer denying the elements of adverse possession
    and a counterclaim seeking an injunction ordering Eckman to remove the
    encroachments from his property. Eckman responded by asserting a claim under the
    Occupying Claimant’s Law in case that her adverse possession case fails and she is
    ordered to vacate.     See R.C. 5303.07 and R.C. 5303.08 (dealing with eviction of
    occupying claimant after owner pays for improvements); R.C. 5303.14 (dealing with
    owner’s tendering of title to the occupier in return for the unimproved value of the
    land).
    ¶{4}   Eckman filed a partial motion for summary judgment only as to whether
    she acquired title to the land underlying the garage by way of adverse possession,
    expressly omitting the issue of the sidewalk from her motion. She attached the two
    surveys and the affidavit of a prior landowner stating that the garage existed for more
    than twenty-one years. She alleged that there was no genuine issue of material fact
    that she had established by clear and convincing evidence that the use of the property
    underlying the garage was open, exclusive, notorious, adverse, and continuous for a
    period of at least twenty-one years.
    ¶{5}   Ramunno opposed this motion and filed his own motion for summary
    judgment. In seeking summary judgment, he first alleged that twenty-one years had
    not passed since the sidewalk had been put in, requiring summary judgment for him
    on Eckman’s adverse possession claim in her complaint regarding the sidewalk. He
    attached his own affidavit noting that he inherited his property in 1993 from his father
    and stating that Eckman installed the sidewalk after she purchased the property in
    1992. He also stated that an easement had never been granted for the sidewalk.
    ¶{6}   Regarding the garage, he contested only the element requiring that the
    use be adverse or hostile, insisting that the use was permissive. He then cited law for
    the proposition that permissive use cannot ripen into adverse use merely due to the
    passage of time. In support, he attached the affidavit of the original owner of the
    garage, Mr. Innocenzi, who had purchased the property in the early 1950’s from
    Ramunno’s father, who owned both lots at the time. Mr. Innocenzi stated that while
    his garage was being built in the late 1950’s or early 1960’s, Ramunno’s father
    advised him that the corner of it rested on Ramunno’s property. Mr. Innocenzi said
    that they were good neighbors and that he had no intent to encroach on his neighbor’s
    land. His affidavit disclosed:
    ¶{7}   “We talked over the situation and I offered to pay for the property, but Mr.
    Ramunno said it wasn’t necessary and it wasn’t a problem and that was the way the
    matter was left.
    ¶{8}   “Based on our discussion, I feel that Mr. Ramunno gave me his
    permission to leave that garage corner on his land.”
    ¶{9}   Eckman replied by arguing that Ramunno cannot claim permissive use
    now because his answer and counterclaim admitted that the use was not permissive.
    Eckman quoted portions of these filings, which she claimed supported her waiver
    argument. In the alternative to this waiver argument, Eckman claimed that even if the
    use was originally permissive, Mr. Innocenzi’s affidavit only covers the period from the
    original use until 1968, when he moved. Eckman urged that there must be evidence of
    permissive use in the past twenty-one years.
    ¶{10} Eckman attached a letter she received from Ramunno in February of
    2007, prior to the filing of the lawsuit. This was written in response to a threat from her
    lawyer that she would sue Ramunno if he did not sign over an easement. Regarding
    the sidewalk, the letter asks her to remove it. Regarding the garage, the letter does
    not seek removal and instead refers to his “family’s generosity and tolerance over the
    last 50 years to the half dozen owners” of her property and advises her to disclose the
    encroachment to any new buyers.
    ¶{11} As to the waiver argument, Ramunno replied that his answer’s denial of
    the portion of Eckman’s complaint stating that the use was adverse is the same as
    saying that the use was permissive.         He also urged that his use of the word
    encroachment in his counterclaim did not admit that the use was not previously
    permissive.   In response to Eckman’s claim that Mr. Innocenzi’s affidavit was not
    relevant to the past twenty-one years, he reiterates his position that permissive use
    cannot ripen into adverse use merely due to the passage of time.
    ¶{12} In the alternative, he stated that permission was expressed to each new
    neighbor that occupied the encroaching garage. In support, he submitted his own
    affidavit stating that he lived on his property most of his life as he grew up there and
    then inherited it from his father. He reiterated that it was no secret that his father had
    given Mr. Innocenzi permission to finish constructing the encroaching garage on his
    property. He revealed that his father always pointed out the encroachment to new
    occupiers and let them know that he was permitting them to keep it there. Ramunno
    stated that when he inherited the property, he continued his father’s practice and
    advised Eckman that the garage encroached upon his property, that he was permitting
    her to maintain its position, but that she could not further encroach onto his property.
    His affidavit also pointed to a letter he wrote, which Eckman had attached to her last
    filing, as evidence that the use was permissive.
    ¶{13} On March 6, 2009, a magistrate granted summary judgment to Eckman,
    quieting title to Eckman over her garage encroachment. Notably, her motion only dealt
    with the land underlying the garage. However, in describing the land taken by adverse
    possession, the decision refers to land circled and labeled in a survey attached to
    Eckman’s motion for summary judgment; this includes not only the small garage
    corner but also the encroaching portion of the sidewalk and seemingly a small strip of
    land surrounding these encroachments.
    ¶{14} In support of its adverse possession decision, the magistrate first ruled
    that Ramunno waived the right to argue permissive use by failing to plead it in his
    answer.    The magistrate also construed various statements in his answer and
    counterclaim as admissions. In the alternative, the magistrate set forth three reasons
    why Ramunno allegedly failed to meet his burden to prove by the preponderance of
    the evidence that the use was permissive. First, the magistrate held that Ramunno
    was required to show permission within the relevant twenty-one-year period, not
    merely at the origination of the use.     Second, the magistrate stated that even if
    permissive use at the origination is sufficient, there is no evidence of permissive use
    here because mere allowance of use through laziness, indifference, or neighborly
    accommodation is not sufficient to invoke the permissive use doctrine. Third, the
    magistrate stated that adverse possession could be imposed in any event due to the
    equities involved.
    ¶{15} Ramunno filed timely objections responding to each of the reasons set
    forth by the magistrate. On August 27, 2009, the trial court overruled Ramunno’s
    objections and upheld the magistrate’s decision. Specifically, the court opined that
    Eckman met her burden to show that the use by her and her predecessors was
    adverse and that Ramunno failed to meet his reciprocal burden of demonstrating that
    there was a genuine issue of material fact, finding that there was no evidence of
    permissive use in the twenty-one years prior to the proceedings. In the alternative, the
    court held that Ramunno failed to raise the affirmative defense of permissive use in his
    answer and thus waived the defense. The trial court granted quiet title over the same
    land as did the magistrate.
    ¶{16} Ramunno filed timely notice of appeal. Ramunno’s brief sets forth the
    following assignment of error:
    ¶{17} “THE TRIAL COURT ERRED, AS A MATTER OF LAW, IN GRANTING
    APPELLEE’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT UPON HER CLAIMS FOR
    ADVERSE       POSSESSION        AND    QUIETING       OF   TITLE,   AND   IN   DENYING
    APPELLANT’S CROSS MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT UPON HIS CLAIMS
    TO QUIET TITLE.”
    ¶{18} As there are various distinct lines of analysis existing herein, we shall
    divide our analysis of the threshold issues for clarity.
    GENERAL LAW
    ¶{19} Pursuant to Civ.R. 56(A) and (B), a party seeking to recover on a claim
    or a party defending against a claim, may move with or without supporting affidavits for
    summary judgment. Summary judgment can be granted only where there remains no
    genuine issue of material fact for trial and where, after construing the evidence most
    strongly in favor of the nonmovant, reasonable minds can only conclude that the
    moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Byrd v. Smith, 
    110 Ohio St.3d 124
    , 
    2006-Ohio-3455
    , ¶10, citing Civ.R. 56(C).
    ¶{20} The burden of showing that there is no genuine issue of material fact
    falls upon the party who files for summary judgment. 
    Id.,
     citing Dresher v. Burt (1996),
    
    75 Ohio St.3d 280
    , 294.         Thereafter, the nonmovant may not rest upon mere
    allegations or denials of the party's pleadings but must respond by setting forth specific
    facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial. 
    Id.,
     citing Civ.R. 56(E). “If the
    party does not so respond, summary judgment, if appropriate, shall be entered against
    the party.” Civ.R. 56(E).
    ¶{21} “[T]o acquire title by adverse possession, a party must prove, by clear
    and convincing evidence, exclusive possession and open, notorious, continuous, and
    adverse use for a period of twenty-one years.” Grace v. Koch (1998), 
    81 Ohio St.3d 577
    , 580. The elements are stringent, and the ancient doctrine is currently disfavored
    due to the uncompensated loss of property rights of the landowner. 
    Id.
     A failure of
    any element defeats a claim for adverse possession. Id at 579. The only element
    contested regarding the land underlying the garage is the adversity element.
    ¶{22} Possession is not adverse if it is done with the owner's permission (or
    license). Mosesson v. Rach (Mar. 28, 2001), 7th Dist. No. 99CA321; Willett v. Felger
    (Mar. 29, 1999), 7th Dist. No. 96CO40; Coleman v. Pendello (1997), 
    123 Ohio App.3d 125
    , 130 (7th Dist.). See, also, Pavey v. Vance (1897), 
    56 Ohio St. 162
    , ¶1 of syllabus
    (use without permission is adverse even if the use is known to the owner). In Grace,
    the Supreme Court held that where the claimant previously had permission to mow the
    neighbor’s strip, his adverse possession claim cannot be based on such act of
    mowing. Grace, 81 Ohio St.3d at 582.
    ¶{23} It has been stated that if the occupying claimant has set forth a prima
    facie case that the use is adverse, then the landowner has the burden of showing by a
    preponderance of the evidence that such a grant of permission was actually made.
    See Goldberger v. Bexley Props. (1983), 
    5 Ohio St.2d 83
    , 84; Pavey v. Vance (1897),
    
    56 Ohio St. 162
    , 174 (placing the burden on the landowner to prove permission on the
    grounds that the burden is rarely placed on the party holding the negative in civil suits);
    Gulas v. Tirone, 
    184 Ohio App.3d 143
    , 
    2009-Ohio-5076
    , ¶23; Willett, 7th Dist. No.
    96CO46 (all dealing with prescriptive easements).1
    ¶{24} However, notwithstanding the First District’s statement in Grace that the
    burden shifts to the landowner to prove permissive use, the Supreme Court did not
    reiterate this holding upon reviewing the appellate decision. Instead, the Court only
    spoke of the occupant’s burden by clear and convincing evidence to prove all the
    elements, even though there were claims of permissive use and even though the
    Court specifically found that the landowner’s permission given to the occupier to mow
    did not ripen into an adverse use. Grace, 81 Ohio St.3d at 582.
    ¶{25} Due to this and the mere fact that permissive is the opposite of the
    adversity element of the plaintiff’s case, there may no longer be a burden on the
    landowner to prove permissive use.           That is, the 1998 Grace holding may have
    abrogated the prior case law imposing such a burden. However, until the Supreme
    Court expressly abrogates its Goldberger and Pavey cases, we maintain our post-
    Grace position set forth in Gulas that the landowner has the burden to prove
    permissive use by a preponderance of the evidence after the occupier has set forth a
    prima facie case of adverseness.
    1
    A prescriptive easement does not require exclusivity, as does adverse possession, but the
    remaining elements are the same. See Pennsylvania RR Co. v. Donovan (1924), 
    111 Ohio St.3d 341
    ,
    349-350. As such, various holdings regarding the remaining elements in prescriptive easement cases
    have been extended to adverse possession cases.
    ¶{26} In any event, it is merely a burden of proof by preponderance of the
    evidence after the occupier has set forth a prima facie case. Goldberger, 5 Ohio St.3d
    at 84 (landowner’s burden under Pavey to prove that a use was permissive does not
    arise until burden initially satisfied by occupier to prove legally adverse use of land).
    Further, it appears that once some evidence of permission is presented, the landowner
    will have rebutted the prima facie case and transferred the burden of persuasion by
    clear and convincing evidence back to the occupier. See, e.g., Cyrus Investors, Inc. v.
    Huffman (Nov. 26, 1991), 10th Dist. Nos. 91AP-373, 91AP-451, fn.7 (there is a
    rebuttable presumption of adversity if all elements are shown to have existed for a
    required time, which shifts the burden of going forward to the owner to present some
    evidence of permission but leaves the ultimate burden of persuasion on the occupier).
    See, also, Grace, 81 Ohio St.3d at 582 (burden on adverse possession claimant to
    show adversity by clear and convincing evidence).
    ¶{27} Still, it must be pointed out that these are burdens applicable to trial,
    whereas this case is at the summary judgment stage, at which point there must merely
    exist a genuine issue of material fact on the elements in order defeat a request for
    summary judgment. As will be discussed there is a genuine issue of material fact for
    trial here which preclude summary judgment for either party regarding the land
    underlying the garage.
    ¶{28} The occupier can meet his initial burden on the adversity element by
    merely showing that a permanent structure was built on his neighbor’s land. See, e.g.,
    Board of Edn. v. Nichol (1942), 
    70 Ohio App. 467
    , 473 (7th Dist.) (stating that in the
    absence of a license, the building of a permanent structure on another’s land shows
    adversity or hostility).   Contrary to Ramunno’s view then, his admission that the
    disputed portion of Eckman’s garage occupied his land was sufficient evidence for
    Eckman to meet her initial burden to show adversity and to raise a genuine issue of
    material fact to avoid summary judgment herself. The landowner can rebut this by
    presenting evidence that the use was permissive, shifting the ultimate burden back to
    the occupier to prove its case by clear and convincing evidence. As will be shown
    below, Ramunno did this.
    WAIVER
    ¶{29} Eckman alleges that there exist two reasons why Ramunno waived the
    right to claim permissive use. First, Eckman quotes portions of Ramunno’s answer
    and counterclaim, which she construes as admissions by Ramunno that the use was
    hostile. For instance, she asks why Ramunno would seek quiet title or an injunction if
    the use was permissive and why Ramunno would say the encroachment was unlawful
    or illegal if it was permissive. As Ramunno points out, merely because the use has
    always been permissive for purposes of her adverse possession claim, this does not
    mean that he did not rescind the permission after she threatened to sue him and that
    he now only seeks to enjoin her free use of his property in order to defend himself
    against her claim on his title. Moreover, Ramunno does not claim that he ever gave
    permission to construct the sidewalk, which would further explain his terminology.
    ¶{30} Eckman also states that paragraph 7 of Ramunno’s answer admits the
    adversity element.     To the contrary, this paragraph denies paragraph 7 of the
    complaint, which claimed that the encroachment was “open, notorious, exclusive,
    continuous and adverse to the interest of Defendant Samuel Ramunno and has been
    for a period greater than 21 years.” By denying this paragraph, Ramunno sufficiently
    denied all elements, including the adversity element. See Civ.R. 8(B) (regarding the
    contents of an answer).      Thus, his answer and counterclaim do not admit to the
    twenty-one years of adversity.
    ¶{31} Second, Eckman claims that permissive use is a landowner’s affirmative
    defense to an occupier’s adverse possession claim, which must be affirmatively set
    forth in the answer or it is waived. Civ.R. 8(C) provides in pertinent part:
    ¶{32} “In pleading to a preceding pleading, a party shall set forth affirmatively
    accord and satisfaction, arbitration and award, assumption of risk, contributory
    negligence, discharge in bankruptcy, duress, estoppel, failure of consideration, want of
    consideration for a negotiable instrument, fraud, illegality, injury by fellow servant,
    laches, license, payment, release, res judicata, statute of frauds, statute of limitations,
    waiver, and any other matter constituting an avoidance or affirmative defense.”
    ¶{33} An affirmative defense is in the nature of a confession and avoidance as
    it admits the plaintiff has a claim but asserts a legal reason why the plaintiff cannot
    recover on it. State ex rel. Plain Dealer Pub. Co. v. Cincinnati (1996), 
    75 Ohio St.3d 31
    , 33 (holding that exceptions to the Public Records Act are not in the nature of
    confession and avoidance because the assertion of an exception does not admit the
    allegations are true, i.e. it does not admit that the requested records are “public”). An
    affirmative defense attacks the legal right to bring a claim but does not attack the truth
    of the claim. RC Olmstead, Inc. v. GBS Corp., 7th Dist. No. 08MA83, 2009-Ohio-
    6808, ¶41.
    ¶{34} It is more than a mere denial or contradiction of evidence but is a
    substantive or independent matter which the defendant claims exempts him from
    liability even if the facts of the complaint are conceded. 
    Id.,
     citing State v. Poole
    (1973), 
    33 Ohio St.2d 18
    , 19. Thus, where a defendant claims that an element of the
    plaintiff’s case is lacking, an affirmative defense is not asserted. Id. at ¶38, 40-42
    (holding that the defense that one’s signature was forged merely denies the element of
    the contract’s existence), citing e.g. Schneider v. Schneider, 
    178 Ohio App.3d 264
    ,
    
    2008-Ohio-4495
     (gift defense is not affirmative defense as it merely denies plaintiff’s
    contract claim).
    ¶{35} Here, Ramunno is not saying that the adversity or hostility element is
    satisfied (confession) and that there is another reason why he should not lose his
    property (avoidance). Rather, he is disputing the element of adversity or hostility.
    Adversity requires a lack of permission because if the use was permissive, then the
    use was not adverse. See Grace, 81 Ohio St.3d at 582 (where the claimant previously
    asked permission to mow the neighbor’s strip, his adverse possession claim cannot be
    based on such act of mowing). See, also, Mosesson, 7th Dist. No. 99CA321; Willett,
    7th Dist. No. 96CO40; Coleman, 
    123 Ohio App.3d 125
    , 130 (7th Dist.) (possession is
    not adverse if it is done with the owner's permission).
    ¶{36} Thus, a claim that permission exists for the use is not an affirmative
    defense but is a regular defense that is sufficiently raised by the denial of the plaintiff’s
    claim that the use was adverse (an element of the plaintiff’s case). As such, the trial
    court erroneously granted summary judgment to Eckman on this basis. We now turn
    to the alternative reasons given by the trial court in granting summary judgment to
    Eckman.
    ORIGINAL PERMISSION TO USE
    ¶{37} Appellant complains that the magistrate failed to recognize that Mr.
    Innocenzi’s affidavit showed that the original use was permissive. That is, this affidavit
    states that during construction, the landowner advised the occupier that a corner of the
    garage was on his land. They were “good neighbors,” and the occupier offered to buy
    the small portion of land as he did not wish to encroach. However, the landowner said
    “it wasn’t necessary and it wasn’t a problem and that was the way the matter was left.”
    Mr. Innocenzi characterized this discussion of the unintentional encroachment as the
    landowner’s grant of “permission to leave that garage corner on his land.”
    ¶{38} Contrary to the magistrate’s characterization, this is not the failure of the
    landowner to act out of “indifference, laziness, acquiescence, or neighborly
    accommodation.” See Shell Oil Co. v. Deval Co. (Sept. 24, 1999), 1st Dist. No. C-
    980783. Rather, Ramunno presented evidence of actual or express permission. See
    Gulas, 
    184 Ohio App.3d 143
     at ¶25 (implied neighborly accommodation is different
    than expressly made neighborly accommodation). See, also, EAC Prop. Ltd. v. Hall,
    10th Dist. No. 08AP-251, 
    2008-Ohio-6224
    , ¶8. Thus, appellant has a valid complaint
    about the magistrate’s suggestion that no reasonable person could find that the
    original use was permissive.
    ¶{39} However, the trial court did not grant summary judgment on this basis.
    Rather, the court granted summary judgment based upon its belief that the use by
    Eckman and her predecessors was open, adverse, continuous, and in existence for
    greater than twenty-one years and that Ramunno presented no evidence of a
    permissive use in the relevant twenty-one years.
    EXPIRATION OF PERMISSION
    ¶{40} In response to Eckman’s claim that original permission to the first
    occupier is not everlasting where the occupier changes, Ramunno relies upon the
    following holding: “Permissive use cannot ripen into an easement by prescription no
    matter how long continued.” Coleman, 123 Ohio App.3d at 131 (7th Dist.), citing
    Monroe Bowling Lanes v. Woodsfield Livestock Sales (1969), 
    17 Ohio App.2d 146
    ,
    152 (7th Dist.), citing Elster v. Springfield (1892), 
    49 Ohio St. 82
    , 97 (where the
    Supreme Court held that if a use is permissive, no permanent right could be acquired
    through long continuance).
    ¶{41} We note here that in order to show that the adversity element existed for
    twenty-one years, the occupier may “tack” his adverse use with the adverse use of his
    predecessors in privity. Willett v. Felger (Mar. 29, 1999), 7th Dist. No. 96CO40, citing
    Zipf v. Dalgarn (1926), 
    114 Ohio St. 291
    , 296.         Ramunno adopts a tacking-like
    argument and argues that the landowner’s original grant of permission to the first
    occupier applies to every subsequent occupier, precluding all successors from using
    the garage corner adversely.
    ¶{42} However, we refuse to adopt such a broad premise, and we are not cited
    to any authorities holding that express permission to the first occupier extends to the
    successor occupiers by implication so that all subsequent occupiers do so
    permissively.   This conclusion is supported by the holding, discussed supra, that
    permission is not implied through mere knowledge and indifference. See Gulas, 
    184 Ohio App.3d 143
     at ¶25 (7th Dist.).
    ¶{43} We recognize that the Supreme Court’s Elster case involved a city’s
    original grant of permission to the plaintiff’s predecessor to build a water line under a
    street from a spring to a building. The Court generally stated that if the use was
    permissive, then it could not change to adverse use by passage of time. Elster, 490
    Ohio St. at 97. Yet, that case did not mention whether the plaintiff himself occupied
    the premises for twenty-one years.       If not, then the reason behind the court’s
    statement could merely be that the beginning of the twenty-one year period was
    permissive. In addition, there was mention of some type of renewal after the original
    1849 pipe installation.
    ¶{44} In our Coleman case, there was no issue with permission to a prior
    occupier as the plaintiff was the original occupier (who had deeded the disputed land
    away). Coleman, 123 Ohio App.3d at 131. See, also, Monroe, 17 Ohio App.2d at 152
    (although this court mentioned that plaintiff’s predecessor was permitted to hook onto
    the water line, plaintiff’s continued use was also with permission as plaintiff exchanged
    the use of the water line for parking spaces). In another case cited by Ramunno, there
    was also no issue of permission to a predecessor of the occupier. See Manos v. Day
    Cleaners & Dryers, Inc. (1952), 
    91 Ohio App. 361
    , 365. Likewise, a Third District case
    cited by Ramunno did not involve multiple occupiers but only multiple landowners and
    dealt with an original landowner who gave permission and who sold his land less than
    twenty-one years prior to trial. See Biegel v. Knowlton (June 20, 1989), 3d Dist. No. 1-
    87-45. See, also, Shell Oil Co. v. Deval Co. (Sept. 24, 1999), 1st Dist. Nos. 980783,
    980809 (involving multiple owners but only one occupier).
    ¶{45} If permission to one occupier remained for all successors of the original
    occupier, then there would appear to be no meaning to the premise that use with
    permission interrupts a stream of adversity prior and subsequent thereto. See, e.g.,
    J.F. Gioia, Inc. v. Cardinal American Corp. (1985), 
    23 Ohio App.3d 33
    , 37-38
    (speaking of extinguishing a maturing prescriptive right by the intervening grant of a
    license to use).   As Eckman’s brief points out, the Ninth District has opined that
    permission to an occupier’s predecessor does not carry forward to protect the
    landowner from a subsequent occupier’s adverse use.          See Vanasdal v. Brinker
    (1985), 
    27 Ohio App.3d 298
    . The Eighth District has similarly held:
    ¶{46} “If the permission once granted expires by its terms, or is otherwise
    revoked, or if a new owner neither seeks nor obtains permission, adversity is
    triggered.”   Brandt v. Daugstrup (Nov. 18, 1999), 8th Dist. No. 75065 (emphasis
    added).
    ¶{47} Thus, we hold that the landowner’s permission needs to be renewed for
    new occupants, who otherwise could begin establishing an adverse claim on the land
    when they begin occupation. Although it is true that permission cannot ripen into
    adversity by mere lapse of time, this concept applies only to those persons to whom
    the permission was given. Where, for instance, the invited occupier leaves and a
    wholly new occupier begins possession, the original permissive use is not
    automatically extended. Rather, the landowner must renew his permission (license) to
    subsequent occupiers in order to avoid adverse possession and to maintain the
    express permission. In other words, although prior permissive use of a predecessor is
    relevant to erase the adversity element for periods within the relevant twenty-one year
    period, it does not make a current occupier’s use permissive.
    SUBSEQUENT PERMISSIVE USE
    ¶{48} Regardless, in this case, Ramunno did present evidence that
    subsequent permission was granted to subsequent occupiers after the original
    permission was given to Mr. Innocenzi. As aforementioned, evidence established (for
    purposes of avoiding summary judgment) that the garage builder was given express
    permission and that he left the property in 1968.         The next landowner was Mr.
    Hvisdak, who occupied the property from 1968 until 1971. In support of her claim that
    the garage existed in the same position for more than twenty-one years, Eckman
    submitted Mr. Hvisdak’s affidavit.    This affidavit made no mention of whether Mr.
    Hvisdak was expressly permitted to occupy the encroachment by Ramunno’s father or
    whether Rammuno’s father was silent on the issue.
    ¶{49} Eckman also attached a letter from Ramunno to her summary judgment
    material, which was written after her attorney threatened to sue him but before the
    lawsuit was filed. In this letter, Ramunno made reference to his “family’s generosity
    and tolerance over the last 50 years to the half dozen owners” of Eckman’s property. It
    expressed that the newest survey correctly shows “what we have been telling you all
    along - that is ‘your garage is on my property’.” The letter then stated that she had no
    permission to construct the sidewalk and asked that she remove it, noting that it was
    not there when the garage was owned by the Innocenzis, the Hvisdaks, the Hubers, or
    the Blinskys.
    ¶{50} An affidavit of Ramunno himself states that he lived on his property for
    most of his life starting at age five and that he inherited the property from his father in
    1993. He stated that it was no secret that the neighbor’s garage corner was on their
    property because the family talked about it over the years. He disclosed that as the
    property changed hands, his father always told the new owners that the garage corner
    was on his property and that he was permitting them to leave it there with no charge.
    The affidavit stated that this was told to many different neighbors who lived there
    before Eckman including the Hvisdaks, the Hubers, and the Blinskys. He explained
    that this is what he meant in his letter to Eckman about his family’s generosity.
    Ramunno then stated that after his father passed away in 1993, he continued the
    same tradition by telling Eckman, as his father told the other neighbors, that the
    garage corner was on his property, that it could stay there, but that she could not build
    anything else on his land without his permission.
    ¶{51} Eckman did not submit an affidavit claiming that she was not given
    permission by Ramunno.       In fact, her submission of Ramunno’s letter allows an
    inference to be drawn that he told her from the beginning that the garage corner was
    on his land and (since he only asked her to remove the sidewalk) that she could keep
    the garage there. Thus, for purposes of summary judgment, none of the time after
    1993 counts toward the required twenty-one years of adverse use.
    ¶{52} There is a twenty-five year period between the 1968 expiration of the
    original permission given to Innocenzi (when he moved out) and the permission
    allegedly given to Eckman in 1993. As Hvisdak moved out in 1971, any permission
    given to him would not break the twenty-one year period prior to Ramunno’s 1993
    grant of permission. Thus, it is irrelevant that Eckman did not ensure that Hvisdak’s
    affidavit mentioned express permission or the lack thereof.
    ¶{53} However, viewing the evidence in light most favorable to Ramunno and
    considering the fact that adverse possession is highly disfavored by the Supreme
    Court, a reasonable person could find that permission was granted by his father to the
    various occupier’s within the twenty-one year period existing prior to the 1993
    permission Ramunno himself granted to Eckman.         That is, the year after Hvisdak
    moved out would begin the twenty-one year period.             There is evidence that
    Ramunno’s father gave express permission to two sets of neighbors, the Hubers and
    the Blinskys, who occupied the property between Hvisdak and Eckman, during the
    relevant twenty-one-year period. Thus, there exists a genuine issue of material fact as
    to whether the use was permissive as opposed to adverse for the proper twenty-one
    year period. As such, the grant of summary judgment to Eckman regarding her claim
    for quiet title to the garage based upon adverse possession is reversed.
    ¶{54} Contrary to Ramunno’s other argument, however, he was not entitled to
    judgment as a matter of law regarding the garage either. As aforementioned, the
    affidavit of the original owner of the garage concerning original permission was not
    dispositive, nor was the failure of the second owner to mention permission dispositive
    as neither person’s occupation of the land was within the relevant twenty-one year
    period. Eckman’s failure to supply an affidavit regarding whether Ramunno gave her
    express permission to maintain her garage’s position merely stopped the time from
    running past 1993, a year after she purchased the property. Furthermore, as she
    could not deny grants of which she had no knowledge, she could not state in her
    affidavit that permission had not been given to her predecessors within the proper time
    period.
    ¶{55} Contrary to Eckman’s suggestion at oral argument, the fact that there is
    a structure does not prohibit the landowner from defending against the adversity
    element with a claim of permission. See, e.g., Hamons v. Caudill, 6th Dist. No. H-07-
    020, 
    2008-Ohio-248
    , ¶15-16. Rather, the presence of the structure merely allows the
    occupier to meet their initial burden on adversity by establishing that the nature of the
    use is inconsistent with the landowner’s rights.             See 
    id.
         See, also, Bowlander v.
    Mapes, 6th Dist. No. OT-08-033, 
    2009-Ohio-664
    , ¶15 (“In order to be deemed
    “adverse” for evidentiary purposes, the nature of the non-owner occupier's use of the
    property must be sufficient to clearly manifest an intention to claim title such that it
    gives notice to the owner of both the claim itself as well as the extent of the claim.”),
    citing Humphries v. Huffman (1878), 
    33 Ohio St. 395
    , 402. The location of a corner of
    a structure such as this garage on the neighbor’s land accomplishes this for purposes
    of defeating Ramunno’s summary judgment motion. See 
    id.
     As such, both parties
    established genuine issues of material fact for trial. In accordance, we reverse the
    grant of summary judgment to Eckman and remand the case for further proceedings.2
    OTHER ENCROACHMENTS
    ¶{56} Lastly, it is important to point out that where Eckman merely sought
    summary judgment regarding the garage corner, and specifically stated that she was
    not seeking summary judgment regarding the sidewalk, it was improper to grant
    Eckman the portion of her survey which included the encroaching portion of the
    sidewalk and the land surrounding it.                This is especially true considering the
    uncontradicted evidence at the summary judgment stage that Eckman constructed the
    2
    In doing so, we disregard Eckman’s alternative suggestions in her appellee’s brief (such as
    estoppel) as to why she should be granted the property as they were not raised in the summary
    judgment motion which was only concerned with whether there existed a genuine issue of material fact
    on the elements of adverse possession. As for Eckman’s reference to a “claim of right,” in Ohio, this is
    merely the opposite of permissive use as it is a type of adverse use (another being knowing trespass).
    See, e.g., Kimball v. Anderson (1932), 
    125 Ohio St. 241
    , 244.
    sidewalk, she began occupying the property in 1992, and thus the sidewalk was in
    existence for less than twenty-years.
    ¶{57} On the subject of this uncontradicted evidence, Ramunno states that he
    was entitled to summary judgment regarding the sidewalk (and a certain landscaped
    area). However, the Supreme Court’s position is forgiving to a party who fails to
    adequately factually respond to a motion for summary judgment if that party proves
    their case at trial, making the denial of summary judgment moot or harmless. See
    Continental Ins. Co. v. Whittington (1994), 
    71 Ohio St.3d 150
    , 156, 158. Here, the
    issue is factual, and there were not cross-motions for summary judgment on this issue.
    The Civ.R 54(B) language, which made the grant of summary judgment on the garage
    appealable at this time, does not change the fact that the denial of summary judgment
    on other matters is not appealable. See Hubbell v. City of Xenia, 
    115 Ohio St.3d 77
    ,
    
    2007-Ohio-4839
    , ¶9; State ex rel. Overmeyer v. Walinski (1966), 
    8 Ohio St.2d 23
    .
    See, also, R.C. 2505.02.      Thus, we refuse to consider Ramunno’s request for
    summary judgment on these other encroachments at this point. See Allen v. Johnson,
    9th Dist. No. 01CA46, 
    2002-Ohio-3404
    , ¶10-11, 13 (accepting appeal granting
    summary judgment but refusing to address, among other things, the denial of plaintiff’s
    motion for summary judgment even where cross-motions existed). Cf. Bush v. Roelke
    (Sept. 19, 1990), 9th Dist. No. 90CA4800.
    ¶{58} For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the trial court is hereby
    reversed and this case is remanded for further proceedings.
    Waite, J., concurs.
    Celebrezze, J., concurs.