NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING
MOTION AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL
OF FLORIDA
SECOND DISTRICT
MICHAEL BATTERBEE, )
)
Appellant, )
)
v. ) Case No. 2D18-2037
)
MERRI L. RODERICK, as trustee for the)
Wilma L. Hinkley Trust, )
)
Appellee. )
________________________________ )
Opinion filed August 30, 2019.
Appeal from the Circuit Court for
Highlands County; Larry Helms, Judge.
Clifford R. Rhoades of Clifford R.
Rhoades, P.A., Sebring, for Appellant.
James V. Lobozzo, Jr., of James V.
Lobozzo, Jr., Sebring, for Appellee.
NORTHCUTT, Judge.
Michael Batterbee filed suit against Merri Roderick, trustee of the Wylma
L. Hinkley Trust, seeking to quiet title to real property based on a claim of adverse
possession. Following a bench trial, the trial court rejected the claim, holding that
Batterbee failed to prove that he and his predecessors in interest had held the property
in a hostile manner for the requisite statutory period. We disagree and reverse.
The material facts are largely undisputed. At issue is a mobile home and
its associated plot in a mobile home park in Sebring, Florida. In 1993 the owner of the
property, Wylma Hinkley, transferred it to the Wylma L. Hinkley Trust, for which she
served as trustee. In 2008 she asked her son, Scott Hinkley, to move into the home.
Scott and his then-girlfriend, Suzann Batterbee, then took exclusive possession. In
2009, shortly after Scott and Suzann were married, Wylma executed a quitclaim deed
conveying the property to Scott. Scott also signed the deed. As written, however, the
deed did not state that Wylma executed it in her capacity as trustee of the trust that
owned the property. Wylma died in 2011, whereupon Scott's sister, Merri Roderick,
succeeded Wylma as trustee of the trust.
The parties agree that the 2009 deed conveying the property to Scott
without reference to Wylma's capacity as trustee was legally ineffective. The evidence
suggests that no one was aware of that problem. The trial court found that Scott took
delivery of the deed in good faith. Scott recorded the deed, and he and Suzann lived on
the property openly and exclusively, improved the property, and paid all applicable
taxes; they possessed the property as if they were its true owners.
When Scott and Suzann began divorce proceedings in 2014, they both
listed the home as an asset on their financial affidavits. At some point during the
divorce, Merri first learned that Scott and Suzann claimed to own the property. In
response to this discovery, in 2015 Merri recorded a corrective quitclaim deed
purporting to convey the property back to the trust. Apparently, the court hearing Scott
and Suzann's divorce was unaware of Merri's deed; its 2016 final judgment dissolving
the marriage awarded the property to Suzann. She continued to occupy the property
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until later that year, when she died. Upon Suzann's death, her interest in the property
passed to her brothers, Michael and Dennis Batterbee. Dennis then conveyed his
interest to Michael, the appellant here.
Section 95.16(1), Florida Statutes (2016), provides that
[w]hen the occupant, or those under whom the occupant
claims, entered into possession of real property under a
claim of title exclusive of any other right, founding the claim
on a written instrument as being a conveyance of the
property, or on a decree or judgment, and has for 7 years
been in continued possession of the property included in the
instrument, decree, or judgment, the property is held
adversely.
To support an adverse possession claim, "the possession must have been for the full
statutory period [of seven years], under claim of right or color of title, and must have
been actual, open, visible, notorious, continuous, and hostile to the true owner and to
the world at large." Douglass v. Aldridge, 105 So. 145, 146 (Fla. 1925). The only
element at issue in this appeal is hostility.
The trial court concluded that Michael failed to prove that his predecessors
in interest held the property in a hostile manner for the full statutory period of seven
years.1 The court reasoned that because Scott took possession in 2008 with Wylma's
permission, his possession was not hostile until Merri, as successor trustee, learned of
Scott and Suzann's claim of ownership during the divorce proceedings in 2014. Indeed,
"[p]ermission to occupy the land, as given by the true title owner to the claimant, will
1Florida
law has recognized that a person claiming ownership of property
through adverse possession may satisfy the durational requirement by including the
previous possession of the property by his or her predecessors in interest. See, e.g.,
Coogler v. Rogers, 7 So. 391, 397 (Fla. 1889); Porter v. Lorene Inv. Co., 297 So. 2d
622, 624 (Fla. 1st DCA 1974).
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negate the hostility element." Herrin v. O'Hern, 275 P.3d 1231, 1234 (Wash. Ct. App.
2012); see also Turner v. Wheeler, 498 So. 2d 1039, 1042 (Fla. 1st DCA 1986) ("It is
essential to a finding of adverse possession that the possessor's use not be permissive.
Actual use is presumed permissive and the user has the burden to demonstrate that his
use was without permission." (citations omitted)). Michael does not appear to contest
the court's finding that Scott and Suzann's initial use of the property, beginning in 2008,
was with Wylma's permission, and the evidence supports the trial court's finding on that
point. The key issue, then, is when that permissive use ended.
"Permissive use can become adverse, but only upon clear, positive and
distinct notification of the owner by the permissive user that he is claiming the property
other than by permission." Turner, 498 So. 2d at 1042. Stated another way,
[f]or a permissive use to become adverse possession there
must be proof that the permissive user utilized the property
in a manner inconsistent with the dedicated/permissive use,
or, alternatively, that the permissive user notified the
dedicator in a clear, positive and distinct way that it claimed
title or ownership other than by dedication [or permission].
Hollywood, Inc. v. Zinkil, 403 So. 2d 528, 537 (Fla. 4th DCA 1981); see also Miller v.
Anderson, 964 P.2d 365, 369 (Wash. Ct. App. 1998) ("Generally, the party claiming
adverse possession bears the burden of proving that permission terminated either
because (1) the claimant has asserted a hostile right, or (2) the servient estate has
changed hands through death or alienation."); Herrin, 275 P.3d at 1236 ("Whether the
December 1993 conveyance terminated permissive use of the farmhouse property is
undisputed. It did, by operation of law. That is because permissive use cannot extend
beyond ownership.").
In its commendably thorough "Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law in
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Support of Final Judgment for Defendant," the trial court cited each of the above cases
concerning permissive use, but it ruled that the permissive use in this case did not end
upon the attempted conveyance of the property to Scott in 2009:
[Michael] Batterbee now seeks to convince the court that the
mere execution of an invalid deed provides sufficient hostility
to render the possession of the property adverse. Such an
argument flies in the face of the fact that the true record
owner, Wylma Hinkley as trustee of her trust[,] granted
permission and authority for the possession of the property.
The court therefore seemed to conclude that the permissive use could be
terminated only by the trustee's revocation of that permission. We disagree. The issue
here is not whether Wylma, as trustee, revoked Scott's permission to use the property.
Rather, it is whether Scott "asserted a hostile right," Miller, 964 P.2d at 369, or
expressed a "clear, positive and distinct notification [to] the owner . . . that he is claiming
the property other than by permission," Turner, 498 So. 2d at 1042. Clearly, he did so:
He accepted delivery of and recorded a deed in the good faith belief that it conveyed
ownership to him; he occupied the property, improved it, paid the taxes assessed on it,
and otherwise openly treated the property as his. With hostile occupation commencing
with the August 27, 2009, deed, Scott and his successors in interest had held the
property adversely for more than seven years by the time Michael filed the complaint in
this case on March 1, 2017.
The trial court pointed out that Merri was unaware that the property had
been taken out of the trust until 2014 and therefore had no reason to object before then.
But it was unnecessary for Merri to know of or suspect Scott's claim of ownership in
order for his possession to be adverse and hostile. As explained above, when Scott
took delivery of Wylma's deed, the requirement that he notify his grantor of the adverse
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claim had been satisfied, and his heretofore permissive occupation ended. From then
on, Scott and his successors had no duty to notify Wylma or Merri that they were
possessing the property as exclusive owners. Their exclusive, open, and notorious use
of the property satisfied the traditional definition of hostility and was constructive notice
to Merri:
[I]n order to perfect title by adverse possession it is not
necessary that the true owner should have had actual
knowledge or notice of the claim. If the claimant's
possession is open and notorious under claim of title it is
sufficient in its character, whether the true owner knew the
facts or not. The claimant need not otherwise repudiate the
title of others claiming the land, or notify them of his claim of
title. . . . Such possession is the equivalent of actual notice
of the claim under which it is held, and if the owner fails to
look after his interests until the title of the adverse claimant
grows into maturity he has no one but himself to blame for
the loss of his estate.
Harrison v. Speer, 114 So. 515, 517 (Fla. 1927) (emphasis added) (quoting 2 C. J. p.
77, § 59); see also Birtley v. Fernandez Co., 392 So. 2d 291, 293 (Fla. 5th DCA 1980)
("This use was also hostile because it was inconsistent with and contrary to the use and
rights of the owners of the property.").
The evidence demonstrated that Michael Batterbee and his predecessors
in interest possessed the subject property in an adverse and hostile manner for the full
seven-year statutory period. We therefore reverse the judgment for Roderick and
remand for entry of a judgment in Batterbee's favor, quieting and vesting fee simple title
to the property in him.
Reversed and remanded with instructions.
SLEET and BADALAMENTI, JJ., Concur.
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