Lynn v. Kelley
Lynn v. Kelley
Opinion
Judy Lynn and David Lynn filed an action in 2003 in the Cullman Circuit Court against Judy's mother, Blue Bell Kelley, seeking to quiet title in themselves to a parcel of land measuring approximately 1.14 acres that, they claimed, was located adjacent to other property they owned and had been used as a "garden spot" for the preceding 25 years. After an ore tenus proceeding, the trial court entered a judgment determining that Judy and David had failed to demonstrate that they held title to the parcel via adverse possession. Judy and David's appeal from the trial court's judgment was transferred to this court pursuant to §
"It is well settled that where testimony is presented ore tenus, the trial court's findings are to be favored with a presumption of correctness and not disturbed upon appeal unless palpably erroneous, without supporting evidence, or manifestly unjust." *Page 310 Wallace v. Putman,
The record reveals that in 1952 Kelley and her husband were deeded a 28-acre tract of land that included the disputed parcel; the parties agree that that deed rendered Kelley and her husband tenants in common as to the 28-acre tract. In the years following Kelley and her husband's acquisition of the 28-acre tract, but preceding the death of Kelley's husband in August 1988, several parcels of that tract were jointly conveyed by Kelley and her husband to their children and those children's spouses, including a 1-acre parcel conveyed to Judy and David in 1973; a slightly larger parcel west of that 1-acre parcel was later conveyed by Kelley and her husband's heirs to Judy and David soon after Kelley's husband had died. A current county tax map admitted into evidence revealed Kelley's remaining property to be 4.3 acres in the shape of an irregular 11-sided figure that was largely surrounded by parcels held by family members; also, a parallelogram-shaped tract of land inside the 11-sided parcel had similarly been conveyed to David's brother Terry Lynn and his wife Dana Lynn. Judy and David's two parcels were located to the southeast and to the southwest of Kelley's land; the land in dispute lies within the 11-sided parcel claimed by Kelley, to the north of the 1-acre parcel held by Judy and David that is southeast of the 11-sided parcel but to the south of the parallelogram-shaped tract of land conveyed to Terry and Dana.
At the May 2006 trial, Judy was asked how she had acquired the disputed property, and she replied that her father (Kelley's husband) had given the property to her and David between 30 and 32 years beforehand; that testimony indicated, at most, a parol gift dating to no earlier than 1974, 14 years before the death of Kelley's husband. Kelley testified that her husband had never told her of any such gift. According to Judy, she and David had laid septic-tank lines across the disputed property and had used that property as a garden. During cross-examination, Judy admitted that she and David had been permitted by Kelley to use any property in that area that belonged to her; that she had never told Kelley to stay off the disputed property; and that she had never paid taxes on the disputed property except in order to help Kelley during her husband's lifetime. David admitted during cross-examination that Kelley had "never been ousted from" the disputed property and that when he and Judy had requested that Kelley deed them the disputed property, Kelley had responded by saying that "she wasn't going to give nobody nothing." There was also testimony from other witnesses indicating that Kelley's husband and Judy's siblings had used the disputed property for gardening up to the death of Kelley's husband in 1988 without seeking permission from Judy or David.
Alabama law recognizes two types of adverse possession: "statutory" adverse possession (see generally §
Judy and David rely principally on Pendley v.Pendley,
Further, in this case, there was substantial evidence tending to show that Judy and David's use of the disputed property was permissive rather than exclusive and hostile. The trial court could properly have concluded from the evidence that other members of Kelley's family, including Kelley and her husband, had used the disputed "garden spot" even after the alleged parol gift of that property by Kelley's husband and that Judy and David had not asserted a claim of a right to the disputed property superior to Kelley or her husband's other heirs before suing Kelley in 2003.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
AFFIRMED.
THOMPSON, P.J., and BRYAN and MOORE, JJ., concur.
THOMAS, J., recuses herself.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.