Leo and Maxine Warren (collectively, “the Warrens”) filed suit against siblings Dewayne and Juanita Dunlap (collectively, “the Dunlaps”) alleging, among other things, that the Warrens had acquired title to a triangular-shaped parcel of real estate (“the triangular parcel”) through adverse possession and had also acquired a ten-foot-wide prescriptive easement over another parcel of real estate.
Standard of Review
“We are required to affirm the judgment of the trial court in this non-jury case, ‘unless there is no substantial evidence to support it, it is against the weight of the evidence, or unless it erroneously declares or applies the law.’ ” Williams v. Frymire,
Factual and Procedural Background
“We view the evidence and permissible inferences drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to the judgment.” In re Marriage of Scrivens,
The Dunlaps acquired title by deed in 1998 from their mother, Mary Dunlap, to an adjacent 259-acre tract (“the Dunlap farm”), sitting just west of the Warren farm. Mary Dunlap and her husband David bought the farm, in 1963 and began living there with their children in 1968.
In 2007, Juanita Dunlap acquired an additional 40-acre parcel of land (“the Price traсt”) from Doug Price (“Price”). Most of the Price tract is situated below Highway EE, but the triangular parcel, consisting of 1.76 acres, extends above Route EE and borders the southwest corner of the. Warren farm and the southeast corner of the Dunlap farm. Surveys commissioned in 2009 by Juanita Dunlap disclosed that the triangular parcel was. within her deed to the Price tract. The Warrens thereafter filed suit for adverse possession of the triangular parcel. They also claimed they had obtained the right via prescriptive easement tó use what the Warrens described as a ten-foot-wide roadway running along the eastern boundary of the Dunlap farm which the Warrens used to access the western boundary of the Warren farm. After a bench trial on the issues, the trial court entered a judgment finding that the Warrens had failed to meet their burden of proof as to either claim. This timely appeal followed.
Points 1 and 2-Against-the-Weight-of-the-Evidence Review
Point 1 claims “the trial court erred in denying [the Warrens’] claim to the triangular parcel, because [the Warrens’] adverse title vested long prior to Price’s sale to Juanita Dunlap, in that the undisputed evidence showed that Price never used or maintained the triangle and was aware that Honeycutts and Warrens used and maintained it.” Point 2 claims “the trial court erred in finding that [the Warrens’] use of the driveway was permissive, because the undisputed evidence showed that Roscoe Honeycutt installed two gates from the driveway into the Honey-cutt/Warren pastureland in the 1960s, which remained in place and in use until Juanita Dunlap fenced them out in 2009, and this permanent installation is irreconcilable with occasional permissive use.”
To establish title to a tract of land by adverse possession, a claimant must prove by a preponderance of evidence that his or her possession of the land was “(1) hostile and under a claim of right; (2) actual; (3) open and notorious; (4) exclusive; and (5) continuous for a period of ten years.” Flowers v. Roberts,
The Warrens’ argument under each pоint relies on testimony not mentioned in the judgment which they claim satisfies their burden of proof, The Warrens argue this testimony- was “relevant, competent, material, undisputed, and not self-destructive” and must be considered probative by this court because the judgment made no explicit finding that the testimony was not credible or worthy of belief. We disagree.
When the burden of proof is placеd on a party for a claim that is denied, the trier of fact has the right to believe or disbelieve that party’s uncontradicted or un-controverted evidence. If- the trier of fact does not bqliéve the evidence of the party bearing the burden, it properly can find for the other party. Generally, the party not having the burden of proof on an issue need not offer any evidence concerning it.
White v. Dir. of Revenue,
The Warrens’ burden of proof has two components: (1) a burden to produce evidence, and (2) the burden to persuade, or convince the court as fact-finder to view the facts in the Warrens’ favor. See Nicholson v. Surrey Vacation Resorts, Inc.,
. Credible, believable, even uncon-tradicted proof of evidentiary facts may not prove a contested issue of ultimate fact to the fact-finder’s satisfaction. A party with the burden of proof cannot merely offer a submissible case; it must convince the fact-finder to view the facts favorably to that party. This is because evidence never proves any element until the fact-finder says it does.
The existence of the five elements of adverse . possession to establish the Warrens’ title to the triangular parcel and the existence of the five elements of a prescriptive easement to establish the Warrens’ right to use the alleged roadway were all fact questions that were contested at trial. All of the evidence presented at that trial consisted of witness testimony. The Warrens presented five witnesses (two of which were via deposition) and the Dunlaps presented seven, all of whom were cross-examined. See White,
No findings of fact were requested in ‘this case, so' we consider all fact issues upon which no specific findings were made as having been found in accordance with the result reached per Rule 73.01(c).
Point 3—Survey Expense Erroneously Taxed as Court Cost
The Warrens’ final point alleges the trial court “erred in assessing half of Juanita Dunlap’s survey costs against” the Warrens “because such award was unauthorized by law, in that the survey was neither ordered by the court nor its cost pled [sic] as damages to be recovered by timely counterclaim.”
Juanita Dunlap confronted Leo Warren in September 2009 when she saw him cutting timber on what she believed to bе her property. Leo told Juanita that he “never was sure where the borderline ran[.]” Juanita said she would “have it surveyed and put up a fence” and Leo responded, “[W]ell that’s okay, you do what you feel you need'to do.” Thereafter, Juanita commissioned a survey of the triangular parcel for $3,600 and a survey of another piece of disputed land for $4,200. Shortly after this survey was completed, the Warrens initiated this litigation. The Dunlaps filed a motion asking the trial court to award them the costs of those surveys as court courts. The trial court took that motion up with the case, taxed all costs to the Warrens in its judgment, and employed the following reasoning in classifying the survey expenses as costs:
[The Dunlaps] were forced to incur these costs by the aсts of [the Warrens] in cutting timber owned by [the Dun-laps] and located on [the Dunlaps’] lands, and [the Warrens] attempts to claim lands owned by [the Dunlaps]. In essence, [the Warrens] cut [the Dun-laps’] timber and then told [the Dunlaps] to “get a survey and prove it is yours” which [the Dunlaps] did. One-half of [the Dunlaps’] survey costs totaling $7,800.00 are taxed as court costs herein. The Court may apportion such costs. The sum оf $3,900.00 of such amount is taxed as costs herein. See Gieselmann v. Stegeman,470 S.W.2d 522 (Sup. Ct. 1971).
“The award of costs is a matter within the circuit court’s sound discretion, and we will not disturb the award absent a showing of an abuse of discretion.” Sasnett v. Jons,
“ ‘Costs’ are a creature of statute, and courts have ‘no inherent power to award costs, which can only be granted by virtue of express statutory authority.’” State ex rel. Merrell v. Cаrter,
The Dunlaps do not cite any . statute that authorizes the trial court to classify these survey expenses as court costs. Instead, they claim that because there were equitable issues triеd in this case, the trial court had inherent equitable power to classify the surveys as court costs. In support, the Dunlaps rely on two cases. Neither aids their claim. In Chapman v. Schearf,
Unlike those cases, the issue here is not whether the trial court had discretion to apportion court costs between the parties; the issue is whether the trial court had legal authority to classify the survey expenses as a court cost. In that regard, we find no support for the Dunlaps’ claim that a court sitting in equity may classify these pre-litigation survey expenses as court costs. Missouri courts have consistently held that, absent statutory authorization or an agreement between litigants, courts have no authority to сlassify a particular expense as a court cost. Carter,
Decision
We reverse and remand that portion of the judgment that taxes $3,900 in survey expenditures as a court cost against the Warrens and direct that such language be stricken from the judgment. See Architectural Resources, Inc.,
Notes
. Title to other property in dispute at trial and quieted in the judgment is not at issue in this appeal.
. We use first names where necessary for clarity due to multiple parties having the same last name. No familiarity or disrespect is intended.
. As an appeal from a court-tried case, the applicable standard of review is set forth in Murphy v. Carron, 536 S,W.2d 30, 32 (Mo. banc 1976), but points 1 and 2 fail to specify which Murphy ground the Warrens rely on for reversal. See Smith v. Great Am. Assur. Co.,
, Rule references are to Missouri Court Rulés (2017).
. Requiring the trial court to issuе written findings when it finds evidence not credible would be contrary to Rule 73.01(c). White,
. The Warrens' points and supporting arguments suffer other dispositive flaws. For example, the Warrens’ oрening brief, although acknowledging the requirements of Houston v. Crider,
. As with points 1 and 2, point 3 does not specify which Murphy ground is relied on for reversal, but it is apparent from the Warrens’ argument that they raise a misapplication-of-law challenge.
. We recognize that a trial court “has inherent power and authority to order a survey in order to' establish a proper legal' description in a case where land boundaries are in issue.” McNear v. Rhoades,
