In 1985 the plaintiffs filed a complaint in the Superior Court alleging trespass. The defendants counterclaimed that they had acquired title to the land in dispute through adverse possession. The parties then stipulated that
In reviewing this case, we accept the judge’s findings of fact as true unless they are clearly erroneous. Mass. R. Civ. P. 52 (a),
In his memorandum of decision, the judge found the following facts. The parties own adjoining lots on Staples Street in Lowell. The defendants acquired title on May 31, 1957, and the plaintiffs acquired their title on June 27, 1983. In or about 1960, while Rose H. Crane, the plaintiffs’ predecessor in title, was owner of the parcel, the defendant Vito Selvaggio asked whether she would object if he built a fence between the bushes that ran from the sidewalk area to the rear lot lines of their adjoining parcels. Both Crane and Selvaggio were concerned about the activities of neighborhood children. Crane gave her consent to the project, and Selvaggio subsequently built a fence approximately fifty feet long which he had extended to the back lot line the following year. The location of the proper boundary line between the lots was not discussed. In 1983, the plaintiffs, soon after acquiring the property, obtained an engineering survey which showed that the fence intruded onto the plaintiffs’ lot by approximately eight to nine feet. The results of the survey were undisputed at trial. The plaintiffs immediately requested that the defendants remove the fence.
After reviewing the record, we cannot perceive that any of these findings of fact is clearly erroneous. Moreover, these facts are sufficient to establish a prima facie case of adverse possession under Massachusetts law. “Title by adverse possession can be acquired only by proof of nonpermissive use
Relying on these findings, the judge concluded (1) that both parties were mistaken as to the location of the boundary lines between the lots,
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and (2) there was “permissive possession with consent and understanding on the other side on a mutual mistake of both parties.” In other words, it appears from the record that the judge concluded that the defendants’ use of the land was permissive because there was consent based on a mutual mistake.
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This conclusion is in error. It is well established in Massachusetts that permissive use based on a mutual mistake as to the location of a boundary line will not defeat a claim of adverse possession. See, e.g.,
Wood
v.
Quintin,
Moreover, to the extent that the judgment was based on the mistaken belief that
consent
to build a fence, by itself, vitiates the adverse nature of the use of that land, it was in error. The central inquiry should be whether consent was given to use the
plaintiffs’
land.
Ivons-Nispel, Inc.
v.
Lowe,
Furthermore, Selvaggio’s
intent
in seeking Crane’s consent is irrelevant to a claim of adverse possession. Cf.
Flynn
v.
Korsack,
Despite these earlier cases which explain that the possessor’s intent to recognize the authority of the true owner is established by how he uses the property over the years, the judge failed to consider the defendants’ actions concerning the land after approaching Crane. A judge must examine the nature of the occupancy in relation to the character of the land.
Ryan
v.
Stavros,
We shall not, however, enter judgment for the defendants. The plaintiffs should not be deprived of their right to present evidence which contradicts the defendants’ claim of adverse possession.
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Parties moving for involuntary dismissal of a counterclaim as well as for directed verdict reserve the right to complete their presentation of the evidence in the event their motion is not granted.
8
A party who moves to dismiss a case for insufficient evidence should not be penalized for doing so. See Mass. R. Civ. P. 41 (b) (2),
We defer to the trial court’s special role as the primary fact finder in our judicial system; such obligatory deference is embodied in the- “clearly erroneous” standard of review. .See J.W. Smith & H.B. Zobel, supra at § 52.7, at 246-251.
In summary, we reverse the judgment for the plaintiffs because the judge misapplied the law of adverse possession with regard to mutual mistake, consent, and intent, and we remand the case to restore to the plaintiffs the opportunity to present evidence against the defendants’ counterclaim.
So ordered.
Notes
The plaintiffs erred in moving for a directed verdict in a jury-waived trial. Motions for directed verdicts are proper only when a jury have been empanelled.
Bacon
v.
Federal Kemper Life Assurance Co.,
The judge did not order a directed verdict. In a jury-waived trial the judge is not permitted to do so. See Smith & Zobel,
supra.
Rather, the judge properly made findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Mass. R. Civ. P. 52 (a),
Although Vito Selvaggio testified that he believed he built the fence on his own property, there is no evidence in the record that Rose Crane was similarly mistaken as to the proper boundary line. Therefore, the judge’s conclusion that there was a mutual mistake as to the boundary line is clearly erroneous.
Although the judge did not expressly refer to a mutual mistake in his memorandum, the trial transcript records that it was the basis of his decision. In the memorandum, that decision is derived implicitly from the finding that the owners agreed on the location of the fence yet never discussed the boundary lines.
Plaintiffs assert that they have affirmative evidence to present to rebut the claim of adverse possession.
Rule 41 (b) (2) of the Massachusetts Rules of Civil Procedure,
