Shirey v. Pittman
Decision Date | 30 November 2007 |
Docket Number | 2060574. |
Citation | 985 So. 2d 484 |
Parties | Charles E. SHIREY v. Charles H. PITTMAN and Shelby Pittman. |
Court | Alabama Court of Civil Appeals |
William W. Talley and Charles E. Shirey of Tally & Tally, Scottsboro, for appellees.
Gary W. Lackey, Scottsboro, for appellees.
This is a boundary-line dispute between adjoining landowners whose deeds indicate that the United States government section line dividing Section 22 and Section 21, Township 5 South, Range 7 East of the Huntsville Meridian is the boundary line between their properties. Charles E. Shirey owns property in section 21; Charles H. Pittman and Shelby Pittman own the property immediately to the east of Shirey's property in section 22. The evidence was undisputed that sometime between 1985 and 1987, a fence was constructed between the parties' lands ("the Pittmans' fence"). The circumstances surrounding the erection of the fence, however, were highly disputed.
After an ore tenus proceeding and two views of the properties, the trial court determined that the boundary line was located slightly to the west of the section line, pursuant to an agreement between the parties concerning "the 1985 fence," i.e., the Pittman's fence. The trial court's judgment includes the following extensive findings of fact:
The [Pittmans] and Rena Lee [the Pittmans' employee] testified that the parties agreed to fix the line and erect a fence thereon in 1985. They testified further that [Shirey] himself participated in this project by selecting the location for the fence along the line; by helping erect the fence; by paying for fifty [percent] (50%) of the materials; and that he `shot' the line with a transit, in order to place it in a straight line, which line was intended by the parties to constitute the property line between them. [Shirey] denied all this, except for the testimony that he shot the line with a transit, which he admits.
From a judgment determining the boundary line to be the Pittmans' fence, Shirey appealed to the Alabama Supreme Court, which transferred the appeal to this court pursuant to § 12-2-7(6), Ala.Code 1975.
"Where a trial court hears ore tenus testimony [in a boundary-line case], ... its findings based upon that testimony are presumed correct, and its judgment based on those findings will be reversed only if, after a consideration of all the evidence and after making all inferences that can logically be drawn from the evidence, the judgment is found to be plainly and palpably erroneous." Bearden v. Ellison, 560 So.2d 1042, 1043 (Ala.1990). The presumption of correctness accorded to the trial court's findings based on evidence presented ore tenus Bell v. Jackson, 530 So.2d 42, 44 (Ala. 1988).
Shirey first argues that the Pittmans' possession of the property that is west of the section line and enclosed by the 1985 fence was permissive rather than hostile and, therefore, that it could not have ripened into title by adverse possession. In support of that argument, Shirey points out the following unrefuted testimony:
The general rule with respect to permissive possession of land was stated in Moss v. Woodrow Reynolds & Son Timber Co., 592 So.2d 1029, 1031 (Ala.1992):
The Alabama Supreme Court has long recognized that a boundary-line dispute between coterminous landowners is subject to "`a unique set of requirements that is a hybrid of the elements of adverse possession by prescription and statutory adverse possession.'" See McCallister v. Jones, 432 So.2d 489, 491 (Ala.1983) (quoting Kerlin v....
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