DocketNumber: 8 Div. 639
Judges: Simpson, Livingston, Goodwyn, Clayton
Filed Date: 1/14/1954
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/2/2024
The appellee and the appellant are coterminous landowners in the city of Tuscumbia, each, according to their record title, owning one-half of lot numbered 160. The appellee filed a bill in equity to settle” and determine a boundary line dispute. From the decree of the trial court finding that' the appellee acquired title by adverse possession to- all that portion of lot 160 lying south of a line where an old fence stood, the appellant has appealed. The pertinent recital in the decree reads as follows:
“The pivotal issue of fact is the location of an old fence between the approximate north half and the approximate south half of Lot 160 in the City of Tuscumbia, Alabama. The Court finds from the testimony that from the conveyances of record, the complainant and the respondent respectively own one-half of said Lot 160, but that many years ago the complainant and her predecessors in title established an old fence in the vicinity of a line which would divide the north and south halves of said lot; further the old fence has been removed for several years, but it appears to the Court, and the Court does so find from the. testimony that the complainant, Chapman, acquired title by more than twenty years adverse possession to all that portion of Lot 160 lying south of line where the old fence stood.”
On the evidence it appears that' al’fn6f lot 160 was once owned by one • Éf-ifest Troy. In 1894 Mr. Keys, father of app'efe lee and predecessor in title, purchased the south half of the lot from Troy.- From the time of his purchase in 1894 until the date of his death in 1913 Keys occupied this lot as residence property. Upon the death of her father; the appellee /inherited an interest in the lot and subsequently purchased the interest of the other heirs; she has since that time occupied the lot as her home. Keys, as early; gs. 1894, or his predecessors, had theretofore built a fence on the north side of his property,...extending the entire length of the lot. This fence was maintained until approximately 1914 when a portion of this old fence at the front was removed and replaced by a wire fence. The front portion ' of' thé later fence was removed in 1917. ' There wa.s
When one of two adjoining landowners erects a fence as the dividing lin,e and'holds actual and exclusive possession to it as such, his possession is hostile. Guy v. Lancaster, 250 Ala. 226, 34 So.2d 10; Brantley v. Helton, 224 Ala. 93, 139 So. 283; Smith v. Cook, 220 Ala. 338, 124 So. 898.
Openness, notoriety and exclusiveness are shown by acts which at' the time, considering the state of the land, comport with ownership,' i. e., such act as would ordinarily be done by an owner in appropriating the land to his own use and to the exclusion of others. Kidd v. Browne, 200 Ala. 299, 76 So. 65. Those possessory acts by the appellee and her predecessor— gardening and planting up to the fence— and the absence of any acts of possession by the appellant, would, upon a consideration of the state of the land, sufficiently meet the requirements of this test.
It is argued that the line as fixed •by the trial court (sixty inches north of the northernmost arrow mark cut into the sidewalk by the appellant’s surveyor) is not supported by the evidence. Here also, however, we find ourselves in disagreement with learned counsel. In -determining the location of the old fence, the trial court in its decree found the boundary line to be on a straight line with an old fence post. There was evidence that the fence post was a part of the original old fence, and a straight line extended westwardly from the old post would be the true line as claimed by the appellee and as determined by the trial court in its decree. There was evidence also that if the appellant claimed all the land lying north of the northernmost arrow, the area in dispute would be five feet. A witness for the appellant testified that said arrow was located at a point in close proximity to a pecan tree stump; appellee’s husband testified that the pecan tree' stump was five feet south of 'the line made by the old fence; clearly, therefore, a point five feet north of said arrow — the line determined by the trial court — is supported by the aforementioned testimony. Counsel for appellant gives much weight to a statement by the appellee that the pecan tree stump was “I imagine about two feet- — not very far” south of the line made by the old fence. In other parts of the appellee’s testimony, however, she indicated that the fence line was in fact five feet' north of the northernmost arrow, thereby justifying the conclusion of the trial court on the issue.
We cannot say that the decree determining the boundary line was palpably erroneous or against the great weight of-the ev
Affirmed.