Appellants argue that the chancellor erred in ruling that they failed to establish a boundary by acquiescence between their property and appellee’s. They also contend that the chancellor should have enjoined appellee from draining water onto their property. On cross-appeal, appellee argues that the chancellor should have granted him an easement over appellant’s land. We affirm on direct appeal and reverse and remand on cross-appeal.
Appellants own approximately ninety-three acres in Jackson County. Directly south of their property are three contiguous tracts owned by Thaxton on the west, Howard on the east and appellee in the middle. Appellee’s tract contains forty acres. The northern borders of Thaxton’s and Howard’s tracts are marked by levees constructed on their property. Appellants claim that appellee’s northern border, though not marked by a levee or other physical monument, is in line with the Thaxton and Howard levees by virtue of many years of acquiescence. Appellee claims that his northern border lies approximately fifty feet north of the imaginary line that runs between the Thaxton and Howard levees. His claim is supported by two surveys, one conducted in 1993 and the other in 1996.
The total 133 acres, i.e., appellants’ ninety-three acres and appellee’s forty acres, was once owned by Charlie Tubbs and his mother, Lucy Tubbs, as a single tract. In 1969, they sold the southern forty acres to Johnny Tubbs, who conveyed it to his son Tommy in 1990. In 1993, the forty acres was acquired by Mr. John E. Stump, and he conveyed it to appellee in 1995. The northern ninety-three-acre tract was sold to Verlon Spencer of Double S Farms in 1994. Spencer sold it to appellants in 1996. The northern tract is heavily wooded and is often flooded. It is primarily used for duck hunting. The southern tract was also heavily wooded at one time. However, after acquiring the property in 1969, John Tubbs cleared it for farming. During the process, the bulldozer driver cleared an area approximately fifty feet north of the Thaxton-Howard levee line. In 1996, appellee, believing that the newly-formed timber line marked his northern border, constructed a levee along it. Appellants claimed that the levee was on their property and filed suit against appellee asserting that the Thaxton-Howard levee line was a boundary by acquiescence. After a trial, the chancellor found that appellants had not proved a boundary by acquiescence “as there is no road, ditch, levee or fence separating the tracts....” He therefore established the boundary between the tracts in accordance with the 1996 survey, which placed the boundary near the timber line.
Appellants’ first argument is that the chancellor erred in failing to establish a boundary by acquiescence along the invisible line running between the Thaxton and Howard levees. Whenever adjoining landowners tacitly accept a fence line or other monument as the visible evidence of their dividing line and apparently consent to that line, it becomes a boundary by acquiescence. Jennings v. Burford,
Appellant presented the testimony of almost all prior owners of the property in question. Charlie Tubbs, who owned both tracts between 1950 and 1969, said that the line between the Thaxton and Howard levees had always represented the northern border of the southern forty acres. Johnny Tubbs and Tommy Tubbs, owners of the forty acres between 1969 and 1993, also testified that the fine between the levees marked their northern border. Verlon Spencer, who owned the northern tract between 1994 and 1996, confirmed this. Marvin Thaxton, the neighbor to the west, and Calvin Fields, a Tubbs brother-in-law and nearby property owner, testified likewise. All confirmed that no owner of the forty acres had ever claimed north of the invisible fine between the two levees. Leon Hedger, president of the appellant corporations that acquired the northern tract in 1996, testified that he understood from Verlon Spencer and his realty agent that the border between the properties was in line with the levees.
Appellants also presented the testimony of Kenny Fletcher, a surveyor. Fletcher had acquired some old survey notes that were used in preparation for a 1969 survey that was never reduced to paper. Based upon Fletcher’s reconstruction of the notes, there was not a “jog” in the northern border of the forty acres that would cause it to extend north of the fine between the levees.
Despite this testimony, we uphold the chancellor’s ruling that no boundary by acquiescence existed along the levee line The ruling was primarily based upon the fact that there was no actual object lying between appellants’ land and appellee’s land that could serve as a marker for a boundary. A boundary by acquiescence is usually represented by a fence, a turnrow, a lane, a ditch, or some other monument tacitly accepted as visible evidence of a dividing line. See Palmer v. Nelson,
Based upon the foregoing, we cannot say that the chancellor’s ruling on this point was clearly erroneous.
The next issue concerns a drain that appellee put in his levee to divert water from his land onto appellants’ land. Appellants sought an injunction to stop the operation of the drain. However, the chancellor refused to issue the injunction because appellants did not prove they were damaged by the operation of the drain.
The facts, in greater detail, are as follows. After building his northern levee, appeEee instaEed a 16” to 18” pipe in it for the purpose of draining water off his land. The pipe is manuaEy con-troEed and is activated by appeEee six to eight times per year. AppeEants’ land and appeEee’s land are both prone to having standing water, due to the nearby presence of the Cache River, which floods quite often. Water naturaEy drains across appeEants’ property toward the river to the northwest. However, according to Leon Hedger, appeEee’s drain has changed the rate of flow of the water. In other words, while water has always drained across appellants’ land, now, when appellee opens his drain, more water drains at one time. Hedger admitted he doesn’t intend to farm the property, but he worries that the excess water will kill the trees on his land. Appellee testified that the water has always drained across appellants’ land and that the land is always flooded anyway.
A landowner has the right to fend off surface waters so long as he does not unnecessarily damage his neighbors. Solomon v. Congleton,
The final issue on cross-appeal involves appellee’s quest for an easement by necessity over appellants’ land. The chancellor declined to grant appellee an easement because he had other access to his property. The easement sought by appellee is an old road that enters the eastern part of appellants’ property from Highway 18, located to the north. The road extends for some distance to the south, toward appellee’s property. There was testimony at trial that this road had been used in the past to gain access to the south forty and, according to Johnny and Tommy Tubbs, was the only means of access. Other witnesses testified that appellee could gain alternative access by driving across a levee on the western part of appellants’ property, or by using Howard’s levee on the east, or through Thaxton’s property on the west.
To establish an easement by necessity, appellee had to prove 1) that title to the two tracts in question were once held by one person; 2) tha. unity of title was severed by conveyance of one of the tracts; and 3) that the easement is necessary in order for the owner of the dominant tenement to use his land, with the necessity existing both at the time of severance of title and at the time of exercise of the easement. See Riffle v. Worthen,
We believe the chancellor’s ruling was clearly erroneous on this issue. The legal requirements of an easement by necessity have been met in this case. Both tracts were once owned by the same persons. Unity of title was severed in 1969 when the southern tract was conveyed to Johnny Tubbs. Johnny Tubbs testified that the road in question was necessary to transport farm equipment to his property. According to him, the necessity existed at the time he acquired the property and continued during the duration of his ownership and his son’s ownership, a period of nearly twenty-five years. Further, although there was evidence of other means of access to appellee’s property, there was no evidence that appellee had a legal right to use such other means of access. Also, there was considerable evidence that these means were either unsafe or unreasonable for frequent ingress and egress, thus leaving appellee essentially landlocked. An easement is necessary if there can be no other reasonable mode of enjoying the dominant tenement without the easement. Black v. Van Steenwyk,
Based upon the foregoing, we affirm on direct appeal and reverse and remand on cross-appeal for entry of an order consistent with this opinion.
