Case Information
*1 #26950-a-DG
IN THE SUPREME COURT
OF THE
STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA
* * * *
BRADLEY GARTNER, Plaintiff and Appellee,
v. MERLE TEMPLE, Defendant and Appellant.
* * * *
APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SIXTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT JACKSON COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA * * * *
THE HONORABLE PATRICIA J. DEVANEY
Judge
* * * *
HAVEN L. STUCK
Lynn, Jackson, Shultz
& Lebrun, PC
Rapid City, South Dakota Attorneys for plaintiff and
appellee.
JAMES P. HURLEY
Bangs, McCullen, Butler,
Foye & Simmons, LLP
Rapid City, South Dakota Attorneys for defendant and
appellant. * * * *
CONSIDERED ON BRIEFS ON OCTOBER 6, 2014 OPINION FILED 10/29/14 *2 GILBERTSON, Chief Justice
[¶1.] Appellant, Merle Temple (“Temple”), appeals the Sixth Judicial Circuit Court’s judgment ordering the partition in kind of 3,374.9 acres of land located in Jackson County, South Dakota, owned with Appellee, Bradley Gartner, as tenants in common. Temple argues that the property cannot be partitioned without causing great prejudice, that the circuit court undervalued permanent structures on the land, and that the court should have reduced the amount of the ordered compensatory payment in favor of allocating additional land to Temple. We affirm.
Facts and Procedural History
[¶2.] In 2007, Gartner and Doug Temple—Merle Temple’s father—entered into a joint venture and purchased a ranch (the Ranch) for $788,000 from Barry and Rita Barber—Gartner’s aunt and uncle. The Ranch consists of 3,374.9 acres located in Jackson County, South Dakota. Gartner held an undivided one-fourth interest in the Ranch, and Doug Temple held an undivided three-fourths interest. The Ranch includes pastures, hay land, and several permanent structures including a house, machine shop, livestock sheds, calving barn, and corrals. After the purchase of the Ranch, Gartner and his wife sold their previous residence and moved into the house on the Ranch. Although Doug Temple and Gartner each kept the same number of cows on the Ranch, Gartner and his wife served as the Ranch’s caretakers. Gartner received half of Doug Temple’s calves in exchange for his services.
[¶3.] The White River divides the Ranch. Approximately 60% of the land is located to the north of the river and the remaining 40% is located to the south. The Ranch’s headquarters—including the house in which Gartner and his wife reside— *3 is located on the southern parcel. Both parcels are accessible by county roads, and the northern parcel is bordered on the north by a county road located approximately ten miles from Interstate 90. Electricity and water resources are available on both parcels, but the northern parcel offers no winter protections for cattle, restricting its use to fair-weather grazing.
[¶4.] Doug Temple died in May 2009, at which time Temple inherited his three-fourths undivided interest in the Ranch. At that time, the Ranch was appraised at a value of $1,130,000. Thereafter, relations between Temple and Gartner deteriorated. In February 2012, Gartner brought an action for partition and subsequently asked the circuit court to appoint three referees. The court held an evidentiary hearing on June 19, 2012, and heard testimony from Temple, Gartner, and three expert witnesses—Lyndell Peterson and Bryce Nelson for Temple, and Ronald Ensz for Gartner. The court granted Gartner’s motion and appointed Peterson, Nelson, and Ensz to prepare a Referee’s Report (the Report). [¶5.] The referees met with the parties and their attorneys, inspected the property, viewed aerial photographs, examined the 2009 appraisal, and prepared the Report on June 25, 2013. The Report recommended dividing the Ranch into two parcels along the White River, with Temple receiving the northern parcel and Gartner receiving the southern parcel, including his home and accompanying structures. The Report resulted in an allocation of 920 acres to Gartner and 2,454.90 acres to Temple. Because Gartner only held a one-fourth interest in the Ranch, but received almost 40% of the land, the circuit court ordered Gartner to make a compensatory payment to Temple of $102,337. Temple asked the circuit *4 court to increase the value of the permanent structures according to their replacement cost—rather than their market value—and to award more land to Temple instead of the large compensatory payment. The circuit court denied Temple’s request and he now appeals.
[¶6.] Temple raises three issues in this appeal:
1. Whether the circuit court erred in refusing to order a partition by sale.
2. Whether the circuit court erred in adopting the Referee’s Report.
3. Whether the circuit court erred in ordering Gartner to make a compensatory cash payment to Temple instead of awarding more land to Temple.
Standard of Review
[¶7.]
“[P]artition is a proceeding in equity and the court has the inherent
jurisdiction to adjust all the equities in respect to the property.”
Eli v. Eli
, 1997
S.D. 1, ¶ 8,
[¶8.]
“Pursuant to an abuse of discretion standard of review, factual
determinations are subject to a clearly erroneous standard.”
State v. Guthrie
, 2002
S.D. 138, ¶ 5,
The question is not whether this Court would have made the same findings that the trial court did, but whether on the entire evidence we are left with a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed. This Court is not free to disturb the lower court’s findings unless it is satisfied that they are contrary to a clear preponderance of the evidence. Doubts about whether the evidence supports the court’s finding of fact are to be resolved in favor of the successful party’s version of the evidence and of all inferences fairly deducible therefrom which are favorable to the court’s action.
Estate of Olson
,
Analysis and Decision
[¶9.] 1. Whether the circuit court erred in refusing to order a partition by
sale. Temple principally asserts that partition in kind cannot be made without causing great prejudice because neither resulting property would be capable of functioning as an economic unit. He further asserts that the referees incorrectly valued the permanent structures located on land allocated to Gartner, further prejudicing Temple. Finally, Temple asserts that the circuit court’s order to Gartner to make a compensatory payment to Temple in the amount of $102,337 is *6 evidence that the partition is “grossly unequal.” Consequently, Temple concludes that the circuit court should have ordered a sale of the entire property, that the court should have modified the Report to award him a larger compensatory payment or additional land, and that the court should have converted the compensatory payment actually awarded into additional acreage taken from Gartner’s allotment. The partition of real estate is authorized and governed by SDCL
chapter 21-45. In particular, SDCL 21-45-1 defines a cotenant’s statutory right to the partition or sale of jointly owned property.
When several cotenants hold and are in possession of real property as partners, joint tenants, or tenants in common, in which one or more of them have an estate of inheritance or for life or lives or for years, an action may be brought by one or more of such persons for a partition thereof according to the respective rights of the persons interested therein and for a sale of such property or a part thereof, if it appear that a partition cannot be made without great prejudice to the owners.
In an action for partition, a court normally “must order partition of the property in
kind according to the respective rights of the parties[.]” SDCL 21-45-15. “Unless
great prejudice is shown, a presumption prevails that partition in kind should be
made. Forced sales are strongly disfavored.”
Eli
,
[¶12.] Temple claims that the circuit court’s order is “grossly unequal, clearly unfair, contrary to law, and causes great prejudice to Temple[.]” Temple testified that dividing the Ranch into two units would devalue both because the resulting northern parcel would not have any buildings or improvements and the southern parcel would not have enough land to function as an economic unit. However, great prejudice is not established merely because the resulting post-partition parcels are less productive than the pre-partition whole, or even because the resulting parcels function dissimilar to the whole.
In determining if great prejudice would result from a partition,
the question is not which alternative would provide optimal
economic value or maximum functional use. The resultant
parcels need not be the economic, functional or aesthetic
equivalent of the original parcel. Rather, great prejudice exists
when “the value of the share of each in case of a partition would
be materially less than his share of the money equivalent that
could probably be obtained from the whole.”
Schnell
,
implications of partition. We examine the totality of the circumstances to
determine whether a partition in kind would cause great prejudice to the owners.
Eli
,
related, they each have a family connection to the Ranch’s previous owners. While
the Barbers are Gartner’s aunt and uncle, Rita Barber and Doug Temple were first
cousins. According to Temple’s testimony, the Ranch has existed as a family
operation for several generations, and the circuit court found that the Barbers were
“happy to see it stay within the family.” Gartner and his wife sold their previous
home and have resided in the house on the Ranch since Gartner and Doug Temple
purchased it in 2007. Since that time, the Gartners have also been the “caretakers
of the ranch and cattle operation[.]” “Given the duration of [Gartner’s] involvement
with the ranch and [his] sentimental attachment to the land, [his] resistance to a
partition and sale is logical.”
Cf. Schnell
,
[¶16.] Further, the size and use of the property also support the circuit court’s decision. The court noted that both parties owned other cattle operations and that all three experts agreed that “[t]he [R]anch at issue in this case may be too small to constitute a feasible economic unit to support a ranching operation in and of itself.” This testimony acknowledges the possibility—perhaps the likelihood— that partitioning the property will not change its nature as supplemental agricultural land. If Temple cannot establish that the Ranch—in its entirety—is a feasible economic unit in the first place, then he cannot demonstrate great prejudice by arguing that the resulting parcels are not feasible economic units. Regardless of the actual probability that the Ranch is capable of functioning as an economic unit, we cannot conclude that the circuit court’s finding of fact on this matter, based on the testimony of three experts, is clearly erroneous. Based on the totality of the circumstances discussed above, we are not
convinced that the circuit court abused its discretion in ordering a partition in kind. Temple’s experts established that there was a market for smaller tracts and that selling the land as smaller tracts could bring the same, a lower, or a higher price than selling the property as one unit. Similarly, because all three experts also agreed that even the pre-partition Ranch may not be an economic unit, Temple has not proven that the use of the property will necessarily change after partition. In fact, it is possible that the only change that will occur is that one noneconomic unit will become two noneconomic units. Thus, considering the presumption against forced sales and the heightened protection afforded to family-owned agricultural *11 land, we cannot say that the circuit court abused its discretion in concluding that Temple failed to show that a partition would result in great prejudice.
[¶18.]
2. Whether the circuit court erred in adopting the Referee’s Report.
[¶19.]
Temple also claims the circuit court erred in adopting the referees’
valuation of the permanent structures located on the property allocated to Gartner.
Although the Report estimates the market value of those structures at $48,750,
Ensz testified that the replacement cost of those structures would likely be
$202,120. Consequently, Temple concludes, the partition is a “huge loss to Temple
of $153,370”—the difference between the market value and the replacement cost of
the structures. Citing this Court’s decision in
Johnson v. Hendrickson
, where we
said that “a sale may be ordered if it appear[s] to the satisfaction of the court that
the value of the share of each cotenant, in case of partition, would be materially less
than his share of the money equivalent that could probably be obtained for the
whole[,]”
appoint three referees unless the parties file written consent for one, in which case
one only shall be appointed[.]” SDCL 21-45-15. The appointed referees “must make
a report of their proceedings, specifying therein the manner in which they executed
their trust, and describing the property divided and the share allotted to each party,
with a particular description of each share.” SDCL 21-45-20. In response to this
report, “[t]he court may confirm, change, modify,
or
set aside the report, and if
necessary, appoint new referees.” SDCL 21-45-22 (emphasis added). Thus, a
*12
referees’ report constitutes only a “proposal for the court’s consideration.”
Englehart
,
modify the Report, and because the Report—according to Temple—undervalued the
permanent structures on the Ranch, “[t]he trial court . . . clearly made reversible
error in adopting the Referee’s Report without adjustment or change.” However,
Temple does not cite any authority to support his use of the replacement cost of the
permanent structures awarded to Gartner, rather than their market value. Indeed,
the use of such a value would make little sense and would be contrary to prior
procedure.
See Englehart
,
[¶22.] 3. Whether the circuit court erred in ordering Gartner to make a
compensatory cash payment to Temple instead of awarding more land to Temple.
[¶23.]
Finally, Temple argues that the circuit court should have awarded him
more land in order to minimize the compensatory payment. Temple asserts that
the compensatory payment constitutes a forced sale of approximately 200 additional
acres of land. In support of his theory, Temple cites
Englehart
for the proposition
that a compensatory payment should be kept to a minimum. However, in
Englehart
, we made no such conclusion; rather, we simply held that the circuit
court did not abuse its discretion in approving a referees’ recommendation that
“equally divided the property with respect to the quality and quantity of the
property with a minimum amount of owelty.”
Conclusion “[A]lthough a court must occasionally order a sale in an appropriate
case, it is obnoxious to compel a person to sell his property.”
Eli
,
