[¶ 1] Brendan K. and Marion L. Donovan appeal from the summary judgment entered in the Superior Court (York County, Fritzsche, J.) in favor of Anchorage Realty Trust. The court determined, based on the parties’ statements of material facts, that Anchorage has established by acquiescence the legal boundary line between the Donovan and Anchorage properties. Because we agree with the Donovans that, pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 56(c), there are genuine issues of material fact as to the elements of boundary by acquiescence that remain in dispute, and that a finding that those elements have been established by clear and convincing evidence is not compelled by the parties’ statements of material facts, we vacate the summary judgment.
I. BACKGROUND
[¶ 2] The facts in this boundary dispute case, as outlined by the parties’ statements of material facts and other documents referred to within the statements, reveal the following:
[¶ 3] In November of 1959, Ronald and Elaine DiCesare purchased property known as the Anchorage Inn, which they operated as a commercial inn. The DiCe-sares later conveyed the property to Anchorage Realty Trust.
[¶ 4] At the time of the purchase, a white picket fence stood between the DiCesares’ property and the adjacent property, now owned by the Donovans. The DiCesares assert that they treated the location of the fence as the boundary between the two properties. This fence was in the same location for the entire time the DiCesares owned the property and from at least 1958, when the adjacent property was owned by the Wakelings. An old photograph on a postcard of the property, taken in the 1920s or 1930s, shows the fence in the same or a similar location. The fence remained in the same location until it was removed by the Donovans in October of 2002.
[¶ 5] In 1982, the Wakelings sold their property to the Donovans. A land survey done for the Donovans in 1988 revealed that the white picket fence was located on the Donovans’ property. The Donovans assert that Ronald DiCesare had approached the surveyor “to attempt to dissuade him from identifying our common boundary line in its location as set forth in the two deeds.” DiCesare told the survey- or that the white picket fence had been located in the same spot for about thirty years. The surveyor noted on the survey plan that DiCesare claimed a boundary line different than that recorded on the deed.
[¶ 6] In July of 1988, the Donovans’ attorney sent the DiCesares a letter notifying them of the encroachment of the fence on the Donovan property and asking the DiCesares to remove the portion of the fence located on the Donovans’ property. The Donovans further assert that sometime after the letter was delivered, Brendan Donovan and Roland DiCesare agreed
[¶ 7] In August of 2000, the Donovans’ dog was attacked and injured by the DiCe-sares’ dog. After the incident, Brendan Donovan wrote to Elaine DiCesare informing her of the attack and stating that if she failed to keep her dog “under strict control,” he would erect a fence. In the summer of 2002, the Donovans began to erect a high fence along their common property line, and in doing so, removed a portion of the white picket fence.
[¶ 8] Anchorage filed a complaint on November 25, 2002, which it later amended seeking a declaratory judgment and other relief.
[¶ 9] On September 29, 2003, the parties filed a stipulation dismissing Counts II, IV, and V of Anchorage’s amended complaint, as well as the Donovans’ counterclaim “without prejudice and without costs to either party.”
[¶ 10] The Donovans filed this appeal.
II. ANALYSIS
[¶ 11] We review an entry of summary judgment de novo, Benton Falls Assocs. v. Cent. Me. Power Co.,
(1) possession up to a visible line marked clearly by monuments, fences or the like;
(2) actual or constructive notice to the adjoining landowner of the possession;
(3) conduct by the adjoining landowner from which recognition and acquiescence not induced by fraud or mistake may be fairly inferred;
(4) acquiescence for a long period of years such that the policy behind the doctrine of acquiescence is well served by recognizing the boundary.
Dowley v. Morency,
[¶ 12] The establishment of a boundary by acquiescence requires proof by clear and convincing evidence. Id. Evidence is considered to be “clear and convincing” when it “place[s] in the ultimate fact[-]finder an abiding conviction that the truth of [the party with the burden of proofs] factual contentions are ‘highly probable.’ ” Taylor v. Comm’r of Mental Health and Mental Retardation,
[¶ 14] Contrary to the contention of the Donovans, “[a] boundary by acquiescence may be proven even where the deed description is clear and the legal boundary is known.” Id. Moreover, “[t]he distinguishing feature of acquiescence is that proof of an agreement to locate and fix a boundary on a certain line is not required,” as the Donovans assert. Calthorpe v. Abrahamson,
[¶ 15] This case, however, is not on appeal from a trial court decision following an evidentiary hearing, nor from a decision based on an agreed statement of facts. This is an appeal from a summary judgment entered pursuant to Rule 56 in favor of Anchorage, the plaintiff, whose burden it is to convince a fact-finder by clear and convincing evidence, i.e., to a high probability, the truth of the elements necessary to establish a boundary by acquiescence are highly probable. Taylor,
The entry is:
Judgment vacated. Case remanded to the Superior Court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Ronald DiCesare is deceased.
. Count I of Anchorage’s complaint seeks a declaratory judgment that the boundary between the parties had been established at the location of the white picket fence; Count II alleges trespass and conversion for Brendan Donovan's removal of the fence; Count III seeks injunctive relief against the Donovans; Count IV asserts intentional infliction of emotional distress by the Donovans; and Count V, added by amendment, asserts that Anchorage established title to the property by adverse possession.
