IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 20-0297
Filed July 21, 2021
POWESHIEK TOWNSHIP, JASPER COUNTY, IOWA,
Plaintiff-Appellee/Cross-Appellant,
and
JASPER COUNTY, IOWA,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
vs.
ROBERT F. GANNON SEPARATE PROPERTY TRUST DATED
DECEMBER 10, 2015; ROBERT F. GANNON, TRUSTEE OF THE ROBERT F.
GANNON SEPARATE PROPERTY TRUST DATED DECEMBER 10. 2015; and
ROBERT F. GANNON,
Defendants-Appellants/Cross-Appellees.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Jasper County, Brad McCall, Judge.
The defendants appeal and the plaintiffs cross-appeal from the district
court’s rulings in this property dispute. AFFIRMED ON BOTH APPEALS.
Verle W. Norris of the Law Office of Verle W. Norris, Corydon, for appellants.
Jason C. Palmer and Seth R. Delutri of Bradshaw, Fowler, Proctor &
Fairgrave, P.C., Des Moines, for appellees.
Heard by Bower, C.J., and Tabor and Ahlers, JJ.
2
BOWER, Chief Judge.
On January 16, 2018, the district court entered summary judgment for
plaintiffs Poweshiek Township and Jasper County (collectively “the Township”) on
their claim of adverse possession and quieted title to Sams Cemetery. On January
3, 2019, the district court entered summary judgment for the Township on its claim
for an access easement to Sams Cemetery, whether by prescription or necessity.
On January 16, 2020, after a trial on remaining issues, the court determined the
boundary lines of Sams Cemetery and the width and direction of the access
easement. The defendants appeal, asserting genuine issues of material fact
precluded the summary judgment rulings. The Township cross-appeals the court’s
establishing the width of the access easement at sixteen feet rather than twenty
feet.
Because the Township acquired title to Sams Cemetery by adverse
possession at latest by 1995, the court did not err in granting summary judgment
on the Township’s quiet title action and its claim for an access easement to the
cemetery. We discern no reason to modify the court’s ruling as to the boundaries
of the cemetery or the width and description of the access easement. Therefore,
we affirm on both appeals.
I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
Sams Cemetery is approximately two acres in size and situated in
Poweshiek Township, Jasper County, Iowa. Sams Cemetery is named after John
Sams, who acquired the land where the cemetery is located by land patent dated
March 1, 1854. John Sams died in 1891 and was buried in Sams Cemetery. A
memorial written sometime after 1902 about John Sams and his wife Susan
3
Evaline Sams notes, “His funeral was conducted at the home by Chancellor
Carpenter, of Drake University, and he was laid to rest in the burial ground he had
bequeathed to the township and which bears his name.” No deed or conveyance
document can be found officially transferring Sams Cemetery to either Poweshiek
Township or Jasper County.
In 1893, husband and wife Solomon and R.J. Dickey executed a “Right of
Way Deed”—the Dickey Easement—conveying to the Trustees of Poweshiek
Township a
strip of land twenty feet wide commencing at the SE corner of the
NW 1/4 of the NW 1/4 Sec. 16 TP 80 Rng. 21 West 5th P.M. Jasper
County Iowa run thence North to Section Line, thence East 34 rods.
The said strip of land being on the West and North sides of the N.E.
1/4 of the N.W. 1/4 16-80-21[.]
The Dickey Easement expressly conveyed this west-to-east strip of land “for all
purposes incident and necessary to travel to and from the cemetery” from the
public roadway.
Over the next several decades, approximately 200 burials occurred in Sams
Cemetery. The Township sold plots, budgeted and expended monies for
maintenance of the access road from the Dickey Easement to the cemetery and
the cemetery grounds, put up fence around the cemetery, and repaired
monuments.
4
In 1985, Robert Gannon purchased from the heirs of John Sams an acreage
within which lies Sams Cemetery.1 The Dickey Easement terminates at the
southern boundary of Gannon’s property. At
the eastern end of the Dickey Easement is an
access road traveling north on Gannon’s land
to the cemetery. Although a warranty deed
of Gannon’s property describes thirty-five
and one-half acres, Gannon only pays taxes
on thirty-three and one-half acres.
In 1989, Gannon’s parents purchased burial plots in Sams Cemetery from
the Township for $120. From 1985 to 2016, Gannon did not assert ownership or
possession of the cemetery. And from 1985 to 2016, Gannon did not attempt to
farm any portion of the eastern edge of the cemetery.
On February 17, 2015, Gannon proposed the Township could save money
in maintaining Sams Cemetery by contemporaneously using contractors hired by
Gannon to perform services on his “adjoining ground,” and he requested “approval”
and “permission” from the Township to perform certain tasks related to Sams
Cemetery. Gannon later rescinded his offer to help improve Sams Cemetery “due
to the issue of personal liability [he] would incur for work on public property.”
On March 19, 2015, Gannon advised the Township he had authorized
grading work to be performed on the access road to Sams Cemetery and
1 In January 2016, Gannon transferred Gannon’s land from his individual name to
the Robert F. Gannon Separate Property Trust dated December 10, 2015. We will
refer to Robert Gannon, individually and as trustee, and the trust collectively as
Gannon.
5
requested the Township “put gravel on the regraded road.” On April 28, Gannon
sent an invoice for reimbursement to the Township for the grading work performed
on the access road to Sams Cemetery. On June 5, Poweshiek Township
responded, noting the work performed had not been authorized and the request
for reimbursement was not properly submitted but it would be discussed at the next
meeting of trustees.
Sometime in April 2016, Gannon removed the fence surrounding Sams
Cemetery, plowed over and cultivated the eastern end of the cemetery, and
planted row crops “up to the area where graves were occupied.”
On July 1, 2016, the Township filed a petition to quiet title of Sams Cemetery
in the Township, asked the court to determine the boundaries of Sams Cemetery,
and sought an easement for a twenty-foot wide access road extending from the
Dickey Easement north to Sams Cemetery.
In January 2018, the court granted the Township summary judgment on its
claim of adverse possession. After recounting the ownership and maintenance
history described above, the district court ruled:
The Iowa Cemetery Act contains a specific statutory
prohibition against obtaining title to a cemetery by adverse
possession: “A cemetery or a pioneer cemetery is exempt from
seizure, appropriation, or acquisition of title under any claim of
adverse possession, unless it is shown that all remains in the
cemetery or pioneer cemetery have been disinterred and removed
to another location.” This provision first became a part of the law
relating to cemeteries when it was enacted in 2005 [sic].[2]
When the foregoing legal principles are applied to the facts in
the case at bar, even when the facts are viewed in a light most
2 Iowa Code section 523I.316 (2016), entitled “Protection of cemeteries and burial
sites” was effective July 2005. See 2005 Iowa Acts, ch. 128, § 38. However, the
quoted language is subsection 523I.316(7), which was added in 2009. See 2009
Iowa Acts, ch. 179, § 144.
6
favorable to Gannon, the undisputed facts establish, by clear and
positive proof that Poweshiek Township acquired title to Sams
Cemetery by adverse possession, on or before the date on which the
Iowa Cemetery Act was amended to disallow acquiring title to a
cemetery by adverse possession.
For a period of far more than ten years Poweshiek Township
has exercised hostile, actual, open, exclusive and continuous
possession of the real estate making up Sams Cemetery. While this
use and occupancy has not been under any color of title despite the
reference in John Sams’[s] memoirs, the use and occupancy has
been under claim of right. Poweshiek Township has continuously
maintained and improved the property in a manner entirely
consistent with ownership of the property.
....
The maintenance and improvement of Sams Cemetery by
Poweshiek Township has been actual, open and obvious to all,
including Gannon. Jasper County has abdicated its right to collect
property taxes related to Sams Cemetery. Poweshiek Township has
collected the rents for the real estate, in the form of revenue from the
sales of cemetery lots. All of these indices of adverse possession,
and ownership, existed for more than ten years prior to the passage
of the amendment to the Iowa Cemetery Act prohibiting acquisition
of title by adverse possession.
In January 2019, the Township was granted summary judgment on its claim
for an access easement to the cemetery: “Precisely the same facts upon which the
court concluded the [Township] acquired legal title to the cemetery itself by
adverse possession lead to the inescapable conclusion [the Township] acquired a
prescriptive access easement connecting the expressly granted Dickey Easement
to the cemetery.” In the alternative, the court noted “there is clearly an easement
by necessity between the Dickey Easement and the cemetery.”
On November 11 and 14, 2019, a trial was held to determine the boundaries
of the cemetery and the dimensions and location of the access easement. On
January 16, 2020, the court issued its findings:
In this case the boundary line for the cemetery was definitely marked
by a fence from at least the early 1980s until 2016, when Gannon
removed it.
7
That fence was long recognized and acquiesced in as a
boundary between the farmland and the cemetery. As to all of the
property within the fence, including the portion at the east end which
was not mowed, the evidence establishes [the Township] exercised
hostile, actual, open, exclusive and continuous possession. The
fence became the true boundary. Gannon had notice of and
acquiesced in this fence as a boundary beginning at the time he
purchased the property in 1985. As shown by the evidence, it was
not until March 2016, when he received the title opinion from attorney
Norris, that he believed he was the owner of any portion of the land
within the fence.
Unfortunately, before a survey could be done, Gannon
removed the fence. Plaintiffs were thus faced with trying to establish
where the fence was located before he removed it.
A preponderance of the evidence proves the amended Plat of
Survey prepared by [Larry] Hyler . . . establishes the location of the
fence before it was removed, to a reasonable degree of surveying
certainty.
...
In the ruling on [the Township’s] motion for summary
judgment, filed January 16, 2018, this court concluded “the
[Township is] entitled to have title to Sams Cemetery quieted by
reason of adverse possession.” Title to that portion of land described
in [Hyler’s amended plat] is hereby quieted in Plaintiffs.
By necessity, an easement by prescription exists over and
across Gannon’s property, leading from the Dickey Easement north
to the southwest corner of the cemetery.
....
Considering both the evidence as to the historic use of the
easement, as well as the current necessity for its use as an access
from the Dickey Easement to the cemetery, the court finds a
preponderance of the evidence establishes the width of the access
easement should be limited to [sixteen] feet. Contrary to Gannon’s
contention, Exhibits C and F do not illustrate the historic width of the
access easement; both photos were taken after Gannon removed
the fence surrounding the cemetery and started farming closer to the
access easement. Gannon’s seven foot measurement of the actual
width of the easement also occurred following those events.
[Township clerk Debbie] Sage testified she historically mowed
on either side of the tire tracks using a [fifty-four inch] mower. This
adds a total of nine feet to the seven foot width measured by Gannon,
for a total of [sixteen] feet. This conclusion as to width of the access
easement is supported by the photos that show the comparative
width of both the Dickey Easement and the access easement.
Gannon testified the curve from the Dickey Easement into the
south end of the access easement has become more and more
rounded and now encroaches more and more on his field located
8
immediately northwest of the curve. In keeping with the notion that
an easement by prescription should be only as wide as is necessary
for its purpose, any “curve” necessary to transition from the east-west
Dickey Easement onto the north-south access easement should be
on the Dickey Easement and should not encroach onto Gannon’s
property.
The court concluded, “Defendants may use the property covered by the easement
for any purpose not inconsistent with the purpose of said easement to provide a
means of ingress and egress to Sams Cemetery from the Dickey Easement.”
Gannon appeals the grants of summary judgment as well as the court’s
ruling following the trial. The Township cross-appeals, contending the district court
should have granted an easement twenty feet in width.
II. Summary Judgment.
A. Scope and standard of review.
We review a district court ruling on a motion for summary
judgment for correction of errors at law. Summary judgment is
proper when the moving party has shown there is no genuine issue
as to any material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment
as a matter of law. Summary judgment is appropriate if the record
reveals only a conflict concerning the legal consequences of
undisputed facts. We review evidence in the light most favorable to
the nonmoving party.
EMC Ins. Grp., Inc. v. Shepard, ___ N.W.2d ___, ___, 2021 WL 2384828, at *5
(Iowa 2021) (altered for readability).
B. Adverse possession results in the Township’s title to Sams Cemetery.
Gannon asserts the court erred in granting summary judgment to the Township on
the adverse possession claim. He attacks the ruling on several fronts, contending:
(1) the Township’s action to quiet title is absolutely barred by Iowa Code section
523I.316(7) because the Township did not file its petition to quiet title before 2016,
(2) because the Township’s possession began permissively, it could never become
9
adverse, and (3) genuine issues of material fact concerning requisite elements of
an adverse possession remained, precluding summary judgment.
In response, the Township maintains it has adversely possessed the
cemetery for more than 100 years, and once the elements of adverse possession
are satisfied for a period of ten years the record titleholder is precluded from
asserting a claim to recover the property. Because title in fee simple passed by
adverse possession long before section 523I.316(7) was enacted, the provision is
of no consequence.
“A party claiming title by adverse possession must establish hostile, actual,
open, exclusive and continuous possession, under claim of right or color of title for
at least ten years.” C.H. Moore Tr. Est. v. City of Storm Lake, 423 N.W.2d 13, 15
(Iowa 1988). “Proof of these elements must be ‘clear and positive.’” Id. (citation
omitted). “[T]he doctrine of adverse possession is strictly construed” because “the
law presumes possession is under regular title.” Mitchell v. Daniels, 509 N.W.2d
497, 499 (Iowa Ct. App. 1993).
“[T]o constitute adverse possession, or to set in operation the statute
of limitations, does not necessarily require the claimant to live upon
the land, or to enclose it with fences, or to stand guard at all times
upon its borders, to oppose the entry of trespassers or hostile
claimants. It is enough if the person pleading the statute takes and
maintains such possession and exercises such open dominion as
ordinarily marks the conduct of owners in general, in holding,
managing, and caring for property of like nature and condition.”
C.H. Moore, 423 N.W.2d at 15 (first emphasis added) (citation omitted).
We begin with the hostile, actual, open, and exclusive elements, which we
will consider together. The summary judgment record establishes the Township—
since at least the late 1800s—has taken all actions necessary and attendant to the
10
ownership, management, and maintenance of a cemetery, including constructing
a fence around the cemetery, mowing, clearing brush, repairing monuments, and
selling plots. It also obtained the Dickey Easement to gain access to the driveway
to the cemetery in 1893. Moreover, until 2016, Gannon himself treated the
Township as the owner of the cemetery.
In an email dated February 17, 2015, Gannon sought the Township’s
approval to allow him to “do the improvements to Sams Cemetery that I discussed
with you two years ago,” including trash removal, disposal of a dying tree, and
leveling of “[t]he road leading to the cemetery that crosses my property.” Gannon
stated in part:
What I need from the township committee is the approval to
do the work described above that involves the cemetery in particular.
I am requesting the payment of $2500 that the township offered to
me in the Aug. 7, 2012 e-mail from Ed Parker. This money will pay
for the removal of the dead tree and other trees in the cemetery and
their disposal, the removal of the fence, the removal of the debris pile
and its disposal and the grading of the road that is on my property. I
am willing to offer personally the earth and the reshaping of the
cemetery as well as dressing it up with Spruce trees.
This is the most economical choice in my mind for the
township. I am only able to offer this up to the time that Huber will
be arriving to tear down and burn the small forest that is on my
property. Huber may be in to do this task within the month. Once
Huber removes the small forest on my land I am unable to offer the
removal or disposal of the dead trees or debris pile.
In this communication Gannon differentiates the cemetery from his own
property. He seeks permission from the trustees to do work on cemetery grounds.
Why would he ask the Township for payment unless he acknowledges the
Township owns the cemetery?
“Hostility of possession does not imply ill will, but only an assertion of
ownership by declarations or acts showing a claim of exclusive right to the land.”
11
Johnson v. Kaster, 637 N.W.2d 174, 178 (Iowa 2001). As was the case in C.H.
Moore, the precise dates are of little moment, because we agree with the district
court here “there was no genuine issue of fact as to the passage of the requisite
ten-year period.” 423 N.W.2d at 16. Even if we assume the Township’s
possession was not hostile to the titleholder until Gannon purchased his land from
Sams’s descendants in 1985, the ten-year period ran at latest by 1995, and the
Township acquired title of the cemetery in fee simple by adverse possession. See
Belding v. Huttenlocher, 159 N.W. 191, 193 (Iowa 1916) (“It may be conceded,
and is conceded, that adverse, actual, visible, notorious, continuous, and hostile
possession of real estate for ten years, or more than ten years, under color of title
or claim of right, gives fee-simple title to the person so in possession.”); Fagan v.
Hook, 105 N.W. 155, 157 (Iowa 1905) (noting good title “may be acquired by
adverse possession,” but the contract before the court required more—it was not
“enough that the title was in fact good” but whether it “so appeared on the
abstract”); Hohl v. Osborne, 92 N.W. 697, 698 (Iowa 1902) (holding defendant
proved an indefeasible title to land by exclusive occupancy for seventeen years
under a claim of right despite record title in another).
Turning to a claim of right, “claim of right” does not require a writing. Council
Bluffs Sav. Bank v. Simmons, 243 N.W.2d 634, 636 (Iowa 1976). It requires a
person to use land “openly and notoriously, as owners of similar lands use their
property, to the exclusion of the true owner.” I–80 Assocs., Inc. v. Chi., Rock Island
& Pac. R.R. Co., 224 N.W.2d 8, 11 (Iowa 1974). In C.H. Moore, a party asserted
ownership of land formed when the city dredged a lake. 423 N.W.2d at 15. The
State argued “initial ownership is immaterial[,] since the State had exercised a
12
claim of right to the land for over ten years” and maintained the land as a park. Id.
Our supreme court agreed:
Use of the Storm Lake park by the public is consistent with the
State’s claim of right; . . . the city’s allowance of public access is such
use as “ordinarily marks the conduct of owners in general, in holding
. . . property of like nature and condition.” The very purpose of
owning or maintaining a park is to allow its use by the public.
Id. at 15–16 (citations omitted).
Here, the Township has claimed the cemetery of right, selling plots and
maintaining the grounds and access to the cemetery. The Township also obtained
an easement along neighboring land to the access drive, and Gannon is not taxed
on the cemetery acres. See Louisa Cnty. Conservation Bd. v. Malone, 778 N.W.2d
204, 208 (Iowa Ct. App. 2009) (finding more than “mere use” of trail established
the requisite hostility, noting the board or its predecessors in interest “brought in
and spread gravel, cleared brush, mowed, and trimmed trees—in general
maintaining the property as a developed nature trail,” “placed a sign near where
the right-of-way met the road,” and paid property taxes on the land).
Gannon’s assertion that Iowa Code section 523I.316(7)3 is an absolute bar
is stymied by the same running of the adverse possession clock. This section was
not enacted until 2009, long after the Township obtained title by adverse
possession.
3Section 523I.316 generally requires a governmental subdivision to preserve and
protect cemeteries. Subsection 7 provides, “A cemetery or a pioneer cemetery is
exempt from seizure, appropriation, or acquisition of title under any claim of
adverse possession, unless it is shown that all remains in the cemetery or pioneer
cemetery have been disinterred and removed to another location.” In light of the
governmental subdivision’s duty to protect a cemetery, the court is not at all
convinced this provision applies to a governmental subdivision.
13
Gannon contends issues of fact remain because the Township’s
maintenance and repair was not done under a claim of right “but rather a statutory
obligation.” Gannon asserts the “actions of the Township trustees as they relate
to Sams Cemetery and Robert Gannon were wholly consistent with Robert
Gannon’s ownership and statutory duties.” This statement is belied by Gannon’s
own conduct and communications with the trustees, which acknowledged the
Township’s ownership of the cemetery from 1985 to 2016.
Moreover, Gannon’s appellate counsel argued the duty to maintain
cemeteries is enabled by the township trustees’ authority to tax property pursuant
to Iowa Code section 359.33. Section 359.33 provides: “[Township trustees] may
levy a tax not to exceed six and three-fourths cents per thousand dollars of
assessed value of taxable property to improve and maintain any cemetery not
owned by the township, provided the [cemetery] is devoted to general public use.”
Here, the trustees did not tax Sams Cemetery because they presumed the
township owned it.
We find no error in the district court’s grant of summary judgment to quiet
title of Sams Cemetery to the Township.4
C. Access easement by necessity. “There are four ways to create an
easement: (1) by express grant or reservation, (2) by prescription, (3) by necessity,
and (4) by implication.” Nichols v. City of Evansdale, 687 N.W.2d 562, 568 (Iowa
4 This conclusion makes it unnecessary to address the Township’s alternative
claim of ownership by public dedication. See generally Sons of the Union Veterans
of the Civil War v. Griswold Am. Legion Post 508, 641 N.W.2d 729, 734 (Iowa
2002) (listing elements of dedication).
14
2004). Here, the district court granted summary judgment on the basis of
easement by prescription or necessity.
An easement by prescription is akin to adverse possession.
Yet, instead of acquiring title to the property, the putative easement-
holder acquires the right to legally use the property. “Under Iowa
law, an easement by prescription is created when a person uses
another’s land under a claim of right or color of title, openly,
notoriously, continuously, and hostilely for ten years or more.” . . . .
An easement by necessity is a form of implied easement, but
it “is separate, and we have always recognized it as such.” “One
significant difference is that an easement by implication requires a
showing the parties intended such a right to exist. An easement by
necessity involves no such intent.” In order to establish an easement
by necessity, the putative easement-holder must establish: (1) unity
of title to the dominant and servient estates at some point prior to
severance, (2) severance of title, and (3) necessity of the easement.
The doctrine of easement by necessity is most commonly applied
when a landowner parcels out a landlocked portion of his or her land
and conveys it to another. Under these circumstances, courts may
imply an easement by necessity across the seller’s land to provide
the purchaser of the landlocked parcel with access to a public road.
Id. (internal citations omitted).
The facts establishing the existence of “a prescriptive easement ‘must be
strictly proved. They cannot be presumed.’” Brede v. Koop, 706 N.W.2d 824, 828
(Iowa 2005) (quoting Simonsen v. Todd, 154 N.W.2d 730, 736 (Iowa 1967)).
Whether the evidence supports the requirements of an easement is determined on
a case-by-case basis. Johnson, 637 N.W.2d at 179.
We need not address whether the Township established an easement by
prescription. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Gannon, no
genuine issues of material fact exist with respect to the Township’s claim of
easement by necessity: (1) legal title to Sams Cemetery and Gannon’s
surrounding farmland were commonly held by the Sams family and then Robert
Gannon, (2) the Township’s adverse possession of Sams Cemetery for a period
15
of ten years severed unity of title, and (3) an easement is necessary for the pubic
to access Sams Cemetery. See JP Morgan Chase Bank v. Nichols, No. 12-0301,
2013 WL 85779, at *2–5 (Iowa Ct. App. Jan. 9, 2013) (discussing elements of
easements by necessity).
III. Legal Description of Cemetery and Easement.
When the district court granted summary judgment to the Township in its
quiet title action, it stated:
[W]hile there are no material facts in dispute to overcome the
conclusion the Plaintiffs are entitled to have title to Sams Cemetery
quieted by reason of adverse possession, a legal description for
Sams Cemetery must be ascertained. In the event the parties are
able to agree as to the legal description, this litigation may end.
Otherwise, the remaining task at the scheduled trial will be to
establish the legal description for Sams Cemetery.
And in granting the Township summary judgment on the access easement,
the court noted:
It is certainly true that Gannon’s conduct in removing the fence
that previously surrounded the cemetery has contributed greatly to
difficulty in ascertaining the boundaries for the cemetery. On the
other hand, in ruling on these motions for summary judgment the
court is required to view the evidence in a light most favorable to
Gannon. When the evidence is viewed in this light, there are material
facts in dispute which make the court unable to determine the true
legal description for both the cemetery and the access easement.
Thus, while this court has concluded an access easement exists, by
reason of both prescription and necessity, the court is not able to rule
as a matter of law the legal descriptions contained in the Plat of
Survey are the true legal descriptions for the two parcels.
Thus, the matters remaining for trial were the determination of a legal
description for both the cemetery and the access easement. A trial in equity was
held on November 14 and 15, 2019, at which both parties presented evidence.
16
The court filed its ruling on January 16, 2020. Gannon appeals and the Township
cross-appeals.
A. Scope and standard of review. Actions to quiet title are tried in equity.
See Iowa Code § 649.6. Our review is de novo. See Iowa R. App. P. 6.907. We
examine all the facts and the law to decide the issues anew. See Brede, 706
N.W.2d at 826. “[W]e are not bound by the trial court’s findings of fact, but give
them weight in our decision because of the trial court’s opportunity to view the
evidence and witnesses firsthand.” Kolb v. City of Storm Lake, 736 N.W.2d 546,
553 (Iowa 2007).
B. Positions of the parties. As to the boundaries of the cemetery, the
Township relied on a revised plat prepared by Larry Hyler, a certified land surveyor
with Bishop Engineering. The plat, also known as the Plat of Survey, is shown
below:
17
Gannon, however, on March 21, 2018, filed a motion for trial regarding true
corners and boundaries pursuant to Iowa Code section 650.6, asserting the photo
below shows the true borders:
18
The trial court found there had been a fence surrounding the cemetery since
at least the mid-1980s, which was confirmed by Gannon’s own testimony that a
fence surrounded the cemetery when he purchase the land in 1985. At the east
end of the cemetery was an area that was not mowed. Township trustees and the
clerk referred to that area as native prairie grass, which was intentionally not
mowed but sprouting trees were removed. Gannon testified he considered the
mowed area, not the fence, the boundary for the cemetery. The photo submitted
by Gannon above was taken after he removed the fence, removed the grasses on
the east end, and planted up to the occupied graves in 2016. The court impliedly
rejected Gannon’s testimony, finding the “fence was long recognized and
acquiesced in as a boundary between the farmland and the cemetery.” See Iowa
Code § 650.14 (“If it is found that the boundaries and corners alleged to have been
19
recognized and acquiesced in for ten years have been so recognized and
acquiesced in, such recognized boundaries and corners shall be permanently
established.”). We agree with the trial court, “The fence became the true
boundary.”
The trial court found:
Because the fence had been removed before Bishop
Engineering personnel could visit the site, it was not possible to
simply use the fence to plot the legal description. Instead, Hyler
utilized a March 2016 Google Earth photograph and overlaid it onto
field measurements taken at the site. Hyler testified that although
this is not a commonly-used method of determining the location of a
fence that has been removed, it was his opinion that the position of
the fence using this method was accurate to a reasonable degree of
surveying certainty. The initial Plat of Survey he prepared using this
method appears as Plaintiffs’ Exh[ibit] 18 [which is depicted above].
Hyler subsequently modified his original Plat of Survey by
moving the north boundary to the south, based upon photographic
evidence showing a tree located to the north of the cemetery was
outside of the original fence. His modified Plat of Survey appears as
Plaintiffs’ Exh[ibit] 38. The area enclosed by the boundaries on
Plaintiffs’ Exh[ibit] 38 is 2.06 acres. The boundaries determined
using this method also correlated fairly closely to stakes that were
placed at the site by [clerk Debbie] Sage, [trustee] Frank
Holdemeyer, and [trustee] Eric Sage.
....
A preponderance of the evidence proves the amended Plat of
Survey prepared by Hyler, Plaintiffs’ Exh[ibit] 38, establishes the
location of the fence before it was removed, to a reasonable degree
of surveying certainty. While the particular method used by Hyler is
not an often-used method for determining the location of fences that
have been removed, his rationale and method was supported by
sound, scientific reasoning and is the best evidence as to the
location. Furthermore, the conclusions he reached in preparing the
Plat of Survey are supported and corroborated by other evidence in
the record. It is more than just coincidence that the size of the plot
of land contained within the fence is 2.06 acres, nearly identical to
the amount of land for which Gannon and his predecessor of title
have not been taxed.
(Footnotes omitted.)
20
With respect to the driveway, the Township asserts the driveway should be
the same width as the Dickey Easement, twenty feet. It argues, “This width is
critical to ensure sufficient space to perform maintenance at the cemetery and
allow access for emergency vehicles.” But the Township cites to this testimony by
trustee Ed Palmer:
Q. Do you believe the access easement that’s shown on
Exhibit 13 should be [twenty] feet wide? A. Yes.
Q. Why? A. Well, if you look at Bishop Engineering’s initial
plat, it put a strip in there of approximately [twenty] feet wide,
designated it as such. Proportionally, that looks correct in terms of
how wide the easement needs to be, both in terms of access to the
cemetery and in comparison to the Dickey easement. If you make it
any less than that, you run the risk of running into problems in the
future violating that area.
Q. What type of problems would you anticipate as a trustee in
terms of violating the easement if it only is seven or eight feet? A.
Well, clearly, if you only have seven or eight feet—if you look at the
Dickey easement, the Dickey easement is basically one car length.
It’s [twenty] feet. But there aren’t two cars that go back and forth
there. So it takes, basically, [twenty] feet to make sure everyone
feels comfortable being able to navigate the easement and stay on
path.
Clearly, Mr. Gannon and the trustees do not have a good
relationship. We’d just as soon not have to repeat circumstances as
we have currently.
Nothing in the testimony establishes a twenty-foot wide easement is “critical.”
Rather, Parker’s testimony noted below assesses that width as “within reason”:
Q. I’m assuming as a Poweshiek trustee that you want the
public to be able to access the cemetery by vehicle? A. Yes.
Q. I’m assuming you want the public to access it safely? A.
Yes.
Q. Do you want the trustees or the county to be able to move
snow, if necessary, on that easement? A. Yes.
Q. Do you want them to be able to move snow safely? A. Yes.
Q. If needed, do you want emergency response vehicles to be
able to access Sams Cemetery? A. Yes.
Q. Do you want those emergency response vehicles able to
access it safely and as quickly as possible? A. Yes.
21
Q. Do you think that it is within reason to have the width of that
access easement comport with the [twenty]-feet width of the Dickey
easement? A. Yes.
On the other hand, Gannon argues the driveway to the cemetery has
historically been one car-width, seven feet.
The court disagreed with both parties, noting:
Hyler determined the legal description for the access
easement by taking site measurements of the center line of the path
leading from the Dickey Easement to the cemetery. In his Plat of
Survey Hyler drew the access easement [twenty] feet wide. He
testified he made the decision to draw the easement [twenty] feet
wide simply to make it consistent with the width of the Dickey
Easement.
The court, considering “both the evidence as to the historic use of the
easement, as well as the current necessity for its use as an access to the Dickey
Easement to the cemetery,” found the width of the access easement should be
sixteen feet. The court noted Gannon’s seven-foot measurement of the width of
driveway occurred after he removed the fence and started farming closer to the
driveway. The court then considered Debbie Sage’s testimony that when she did
the mowing, she “historically mowed on either side of the tire tracks using a [fifty-
four inch] mower.” The court added the additional nine feet to Gannon’s seven
foot measurement and ordered a new description prepared that “describes the
[sixteen-foot] access easement in a manner that goes straight south into the
Dickey Easement and a new Plat of Survey filed.”
On our de novo review of the district court’s ruling, we discern no reason to
disturb the court’s findings and conclusions.
AFFIRMED ON BOTH APPEALS.