Cite as 2024 Ark. App. 263
ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
DIVISIONS III & IV
No. CV-22-774
BRANDON LEE YARBERY, AS Opinion Delivered April 17, 2024
TRUSTEE OF THE BRANDON LEE
YARBERY BYPASS TRUST; PAUL E. APPEAL FROM THE SEBASTIAN
RUSH AND CAROLYN SUE RUSH, COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT,
INDIVIDUALLY AND AS TRUSTEES GREENWOOD DISTRICT
OF THE PAUL E. RUSH AND [NO. 66GCV-21-171]
CAROLYN SUE RUSH FAMILY TRUST
OF 2008; MICHAEL SCOTT RUSH; HONORABLE GREG MAGNESS,
JEFFREY BRIAN RUSH; AND MISTY JUDGE
TEAGUE, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS
TRUSTEES OF THE PAUL E. RUSH
AND CAROLYN SUE RUSH
IRREVOCABLE AND UNAMENDABLE
LIVING TRUST OF 2017
APPELLANTS/CROSS-APPELLEES
V.
LAHOMA EDWARDS
APPELLEE/CROSS-APPELLANT AFFIRMED ON DIRECT APPEAL;
AFFIRMED ON CROSS-APPEAL
MIKE MURPHY, Judge
The appellants are property owners who access their lands by a road that runs across
appellee Lahoma Edwards’s property. The circuit court granted the appellants a prescriptive
easement to use this road, and that easement is the subject of this appeal. Brandon Yarbery
owns one tract of land, and the remaining appellants (“the Rushes”) own another separate
tract of land. On direct appeal, the appellants argue that the circuit court erred by limiting
the scope of the easement it granted them across Edwards’s land. On cross-appeal, Edwards
argues that the circuit court erred in granting an easement at all. We affirm both the direct
and the cross-appeal.
I. Introduction
On September 9, 2021, the Rushes and Yarbery sued Edwards for an easement by
prescription. Following a bench trial, the circuit court found that the appellants had a
prescriptive easement. In an amended order, the court explained that the easement was so
the appellants could access their respective lands for the limited purposes of “ranching,
farming, agriculture, hunting, fishing, recreation, and other personal uses (including the
construction, maintenance, and use of structures such as barns, hunting lodges, or cabins),”
but the easement “does not extend to the Yarbery Property or to the Rush Property for
commercial or industrial uses (other than to the extent ranching, farming, hunting, or fishing
would be considered such uses) or for single-family or multi-family residential housing.”
On direct appeal, the appellants assert that the circuit court erred by not allowing
them to use the easement for the purpose of building and accessing single-family homes. On
cross-appeal, Edwards argues that the circuit court erred by granting an easement by
prescription because the adjacent landowners’ use was permissive, not adverse. For the sake
of discussion, we will address the cross-appeal first.
II. Easement by Prescription
Lahoma Edwards purchased her land with her late husband, Gerald Edwards, in
1988. When they purchased their land in 1988, the other respective landowners were Kermit
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McNabb (Rush property) and Patricia Been (Yarbery property). McNabb gifted his land to
Foy Brown, and Brown later sold it to the current Rushes’ predecessors. Patricia Been was
Brandon Yarbery’s grandmother. McNabb’s title can be traced to 1955, and Been was deeded
her tract in 1968.
The road at issue begins at Mount Harmony Road, crosses the Edwards property,
crosses the Rush property, and continues into the Yarbery property. There is a gate at the
Mount Harmony Road entrance, and all the parties have a way to unlock the gate. Everyone
appreciates the gate staying locked, especially Edwards, who does not want unnecessary traffic
or trash on her land. The gate, as it stands today, was built by the Edwards family around
1988, but testimony by Foy Brown established that there has been some form of a gate since
at least 1940. Foy Brown testified the gate was substantial enough that when he and his twin
brother were both eight, they would ride around with McNabb, and it would take both of
them to open the gate. Brown explained that he got permission to use the road from McNabb
(“it was [McNabb]’s road”) and McNabb had others maintain the road for him.
Edwards family members testified that they have never minded allowing the
neighbors to use the road to check on their cattle and land. When they put the new gate up
in 1988, they locked it with a combination lock and gave the code to the landowners behind
the gate. By trial, there were multiple locks on the gate, daisy-chained together, so that several
parties and their invitees had their own locks on it.
Yarbery testified that the lock he has on the gate was his grandfather’s lock, and it
had been there at least twenty years. He said his grandparents “never had permission to go
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in there” but that his grandfather made modifications to, and did upkeep on, the road.
Yarbery has also put thousands of dollars into maintaining and improving the entire
roadway, including the Edwards parcel.
There is no disagreement that the Rushes, Yarberry, and their predecessors used the
road that crosses Edwards’s property to access their own tracts. The issue is whether that use
was permissive. The court took the issue under advisement and issued a subsequent written
order, which was later amended. That order provided the following detailed findings:
Plaintiff Yarbery established that the Yarbery Property has been in his family
for generations. See Plaintiffs Exhibit D. Plaintiff Yarbery testified that he
remembered using the Roadway with his grandfather and prior owner, Buren Been,
to access his family property in the mid-1980’s when he was young. Plaintiff Yarbery
further testified that he has used the Roadway thousands of times over his lifetime
and neither he nor his grandparents, to his knowledge, ever asked permission from
Defendant to use the Roadway. Plaintiff Yarbery also testified that he has spent at
least $5,000.00 to maintain and improve the Roadway and that he and his
grandfather maintained the Roadway across Defendant’s property without the
permission of Defendant.
Plaintiff Rush obtained his property in 2009. See Plaintiffs Exhibits F-H.
Plaintiff Rush testified that he has used the Roadway since purchasing the property
and has also helped to maintain it by bush hoggin and clearing fallen trees and limbs.
Plaintiff Rush did not believe that he was using the Roadway with permission of
Defendant as he believed that he was using it in the same manner as did Foy Brown
from whom he purchased the property.
Foy Brown is a third party who testified at trial. Mr. Brown stated that he
began using the Roadway to access the Rush Property as early as the mid-1940’s. Mr.
Brown testified that the Roadway was used by Kermit McNabb as a regular practice
when Mr. McNabb owned the Rush Property. Later, Mr. McNabb gifted the property
to Mr. Brown who continued to use the Roadway without any permission from
Defendant. Mr. Brown owned the Rush Property from 1998 to 2009 when he sold it
to Plaintiff Paul Rush.
On cross-appeal, Edwards argues that the circuit court’s findings are not supported
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by a preponderance of the evidence. She explains that the adjoining landowners’ use was
permissive because the gate had a lock on it. “Only those with permission—keys to a lock—
are allowed”; therefore, the circuit court erroneously found that use by the appellants and
their predecessors was adverse.
One asserting an easement by prescription must show by a preponderance of the
evidence that his or her use has been adverse to the true owner and under a claim of right
for the statutory period. Johnson v. Jones, 64 Ark. App. 20, 977 S.W.2d 903 (1998). Where
there is usage of a passageway over land, whether it be by permission or otherwise, if that
usage continues openly for seven years after the landowner has actual knowledge that the
usage is adverse to his interest or where the usage continues for seven years after the facts
and circumstances of the prior usage are such that the landowner would be presumed to
know the usage was adverse, then such usage ripens into an absolute right. Fullenwider v.
Kitchens, 223 Ark. 442, 266 S.W.2d 281 (1954).
A prescriptive easement, once attached, is permanent and irrevocable. Carson v. Cnty.
of Drew, 354 Ark. 621, 626–27, 128 S.W.3d 423, 427. This means that the immediate
landowners need not establish their use was adverse; they may be able to establish that their
predecessors-in-titles’ use was adverse. Fox v. Alexander, 2023 Ark. App. 247, at 5, 668 S.W.3d
191, 195 (“When an easement is annexed as an appurtenance to land, whether by express or
implied grant or reservation, or by prescription, it passes with a transfer of the land, even
though it may not be specifically mentioned in the instrument of transfer.”).
The determination of whether the use of a roadway is adverse or permissive is a
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question of fact, and a circuit court’s finding with respect to the existence of a prescriptive
easement will not be reversed by this court unless it is clearly erroneous. Camp Nine Co. v.
Firehunt, Inc., 2023 Ark. App. 421, at 9, 676 S.W.3d 284, 290. This is a matter sounding in
equity, which we review de novo. Inman v. Hornbeck, 2022 Ark. App. 522, at 4, 657 S.W.3d
200, 204.
Edwards contends that the court erred by finding that the use was adverse in light of
the forty years of use, maintenance, and improvements. She cites Baysinger v. Biggers, 100 Ark.
App. 109, 111–12, 265 S.W.3d 144, 145–46 (2007), for the proposition that use alone
without objection was not sufficient to put the servient tenement landowner on notice that
the use was hostile. Notably, however, Baysinger was decided off a record for a temporary
injunction, and in reversing, we explained that the record was lacking significantly in any
evidence supporting that the use was adverse whatsoever. “Significantly, even [the party
claiming the right] did not testify that his use was adverse, hostile, or under a claim of right.”
Baysinger, 100 Ark. App. at 111, 265 S.W.3d at 146.
Baysinger, in explaining that “[t]ime alone will not suffice to transform permissive use
into legal title,” cites McGill v. Miller, 172 Ark. 390, 288 S.W. 932 (1926). Id. at 112, 265
S.W.3d at 146. But in McGill, the court actually held that when an alley had been kept open
and used for about nineteen years, coupled with the way the fence was constructed along it,
“the length of time which it was used without objection is sufficient to show that use was
made of the alley by the owners of adjoining property as a matter of right and not as a matter
of permission.” McGill, 172 Ark. at 393, 288 S.W. at 934.
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Like McGill, the lock could indicate use as a matter of right and not one of permission.
And because a determination of whether the use of a roadway is adverse or permissive is a
question of fact, we decline to put ourselves in the place of the circuit court to weigh that
evidence. Camp Nine Co., 2023 Ark. App. 421, at 9, 676 S.W.3d at 290–91.
Edwards also cites Hoover v. Smith, 248 Ark. 443, 451 S.W.2d 877 (1970), for the
proposition that erection of a gate “constitutes notice to the public that any travel thereon
is by permission of the owner and not as a matter of right to the public or to any individual
traveling the road.” But that makes the distinction that the notice is to the public. Here, we
are concerned with the rights of only a few landowners. This is evident because in the same
paragraph, the Hoover court explains that “erection and maintenance of a gate by an owner
does not give notice that subsequent use of a way across his lands is permissive and not as a
matter of right, unless it was maintained as a means of asserting the owner’s dominion over
the road.” 248 Ark. at 446, 451 S.W.2d at 879. This means that we look to the owner’s
intent in placing and maintaining the gate. Id. Here, because there was testimony that there
was always a gate, and because the intent was to keep the general public out, it stands to
reason that the Edwards were asserting dominion over the road only as it relates to the
general public.
Instead, the facts here resemble those in Smith v. Loyd, 68 Ark. App. 127, 5 S.W.3d
74 (1999), and Jackson v. Downs, 2022 Ark. App. 17, 639 S.W.3d 416.
In Smith, the appellees asserted they had a prescriptive easement and the appellant
argued the use was permissive. The appellant contended that the absence of proof that the
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appellees or their predecessors “performed some other activity besides driving up and down
the road” was fatal to their claim of a prescriptive easement. 68 Ark. App. at 130, 5 S.W.3d
at 76. We reasoned, however, that given that the roadway was “used without complaint by
the owner of record for nearly forty years” the permissive-use presumption had been
overcome. Id. at 131, 5 S.W.3d at 76.
In Jackson, the appellant advanced that his land was wild, unenclosed, and
unimproved, and therefore, a presumption that the use was permissive existed; but we held
that an easement by prescription existed because the appellant should have known that the
use was adverse given the use and the length of time that passed. Jackson, 2022 Ark. App. 17
at 7. Even permissive use can ripen into adverse use when the use continues openly for seven
years after the landowner or his predecessors know the use is adverse or if they, under the
circumstances, are presumed to know the use is adverse. Id.
Here, it was not erroneous for the court to rely on the length of time of use,
maintenance performed, improvements made, and even the existence of a gate and locks in
concluding the appellants’ use was as a matter of right. We affirm on cross-appeal.
III. Scope of Use
This brings us to the appellants’ direct appeal. On direct, the appellants contend that
the circuit court erred in prohibiting the use of the easement to build and access single-family
homes. In the order, the court explained that the easement it granted was
for the restricted purposes of accessing their lands for ranching, farming, agriculture,
hunting, fishing, recreation, and other personal uses (including the construction,
maintenance, and use of structures such as barns, hunting lodges, or cabins), but
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subject to the perpetual obligation that [the appellants] must secure the Mt. Harmony
Gate to protect the interests of the owners of the Edwards Property. The prescriptive
easement granted by this Order extends to [appellants’] guests, lessors, licensees, and
invitees for the approved land uses. The prescriptive easement granted by this Order
does not extend to the Yarbery Property or to the Rush Property for commercial or
industrial uses (other than to the extent ranching, farming, hunting, or fishing would
be considered such uses) or for single-family or multi-family residential housing.
The court explained that it was fashioning this equitable remedy in accordance with
the evidence. See generally Branscum v. Nelson, 2022 Ark. App. 354, at 3, 654 S.W.3d 343,
345.
When an easement is acquired by prescription, the nature of the use cannot be
changed to render it more burdensome to the servient estate than it was during the
prescriptive period. Williams v. Owen, 247 Ark. 42, 444 S.W.2d 237 (1969). Because we hold
there was no error in establishing an easement by prescription, we evaluate if there was
evidence to support the court’s finding that the scope of the easement should be limited
such that it was.
In the case of an easement by prescription, both its creation and extent are ascertained
from the adverse use of the property over a long period of time. Jordan v. Guinn, 253 Ark.
315, 485 S.W.2d 715 (1972). A circuit court’s findings in this regard will not be reversed
unless they are clearly erroneous. Wallner v. Johnson, 21 Ark. App. 124, 730 S.W.2d 253
(1987). Here, significant testimony established that the appellants and their predecessors
used their properties for farming, ranching, hunting, fishing, and other types of recreation.
There was some testimony by Yarbery there may have been a homestead on the Rush
property “about a time period that predates probably electricity even getting to Greenwood.
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. . . Early nineteen hundreds.” But from the bench on the motion for rehearing, the court
explained that it could not ascertain from the evidence the extent of the use of that site, and
my intention was that the plaintiffs continue to be able to use their property the way
they’ve used it. And so the question is -- I don’t want to limit their use to not being
able to have a cabin out there, or you know, a place to stay. That was not my intention
is to say you can only go out there for day use. But by the same token, I don’t like the
idea that you proposed that, well, if they sell me an acre, I’m going to build a house
out there. I think that goes beyond the historic use, because otherwise, he can sell me
an acre and everybody here an acre, and all of a sudden there’s ten houses out there[.]
Where the owner of land has a right to use it, subject to the prescriptive right of another to
travel a well-defined designated route across the land, some degree of inconvenience is to be
expected and tolerated in the exercise of these overlapping rights, and the conflicts that arise
in the exercise of such rights are measured by reasonableness of interference of one with the
other. Massee v. Schiller, 243 Ark. 572, 579, 420 S.W.2d 839, 843 (1967). What is reasonable
or not reasonable depends on the facts and circumstances of each case and is a matter on
which the minds of reasonable men may differ. Id. A determination of the scope of a
prescriptive easement should focus on what a landowner in the position of the owner of the
servient estate should reasonably have expected to lose by failing to interrupt the adverse use
before the prescriptive period had run. 25 Am. Jur. 2d Easements and Licenses § 66, Westlaw
(database updated Feb. 2024).
Here, the court was careful to limit the scope of the use of the easement to the
historical use of the dominant tenements. Given the record before it and the court’s
reasoning, we hold that the limitation was not clearly erroneous.
Affirmed on direct appeal; affirmed on cross-appeal.
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ABRAMSON, GRUBER, and BROWN, JJ., agree.
BARRETT and HIXSON, JJ., dissent.
STEPHANIE POTTER BARRETT, Judge, dissenting. The majority decision continues to
confuse—or more accurately, ignore—the elements necessary to prove a prescriptive easement.
If the public, the bar, and even the bench look to us for certainty and consistency in
application of the law, their look will be in vain. Like its closely related sister “adverse
possession,” prescriptive easements “are not favored in the law, since they necessarily work
corresponding losses or forfeitures in the rights of other persons.” Carson v. Cnty. of Drew,
354 Ark. 621, 625, 128 S.W.3d 423, 426 (quoting 25 Am. Jur. 2d Easements and Licenses §
45 (1996)). It is imperative to note and remember that this case does not pertain to easements
by necessity, which is another area of law ripe for confusion. This case solely concerns the
requirements to prove a prescriptive easement.
The pertinent facts are not in dispute. Edwards, Rush, and Yarbery own adjacent
tracts of land. Edwards purchased his tract in 1988, the Rushes purchased their tract in
2009, and Yarbery testified that his tract had been in his family for generations. A twelve-
foot-wide dirt lane (“dirt lane’) exits Mount Harmony Road commencing on the Edwards
tract and then meanders across the Rush and Yarbery tracts. Shortly after Edwards
purchased his tract in 1988, he built a gate where the dirt lane exits Mount Harmony Road.
Edwards placed a combination lock on his gate. The previous occupiers of the Rush and
Yarbery property routinely requested permission from Edwards to use the dirt lane to check
on their cattle. Edwards obliged and routinely gave them neighborly permission to use the
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dirt lane and provided the combination to his lock. Over the years, the lock on Edwards’s
gate changed from a single combination lock to what is described as a “daisy-chain” locking
system where each landowner had his/her own key to his/her respective lock that was looped
through a log chain. There is no disagreement that the Rushes, Yarbery, and their
predecessors used the dirt lane that crosses Edwards’s property to access their own property.
This system of permissive ingress and egress has been in place for over thirty years since at
least 1988 when Edwards purchased his tract.
For the sake of simplicity, we acknowledge that all owners and occupiers of the three
tracts occasionally performed maintenance on the dirt lane. However, as explained below,
mere maintenance does not place an owner of a tract on notice of adverse conduct.
However, everything changed in 2020 when the Rushes and Yarberys decided to
commercially develop their respective property. The Rushes and the Yarberys wanted to use
the dirt lane crossing Edwards’s property for ingress and egress for their
developments. Edwards disagreed. Hence, the disagreement concerning the use of the dirt
lane was conceived.
The only issue is whether the historical use of the dirt lane as it crosses Edwards’s
tract by the Rushes and Yarberys was by permission of the Edwardses. If that use was
permissive, then the only avenue by which the Rushes and Yarberys could gain any rights to
Edwards’s tract would be to prove the establishment of a prescriptive easement along the dirt
lane. At trial, the circuit court split the baby leaving both sides dissatisfied. The circuit court
found that the Rushes and the Yarberys established a prescriptive easement on Edwards’s
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tract along the dirt lane; however, the court found that the prescriptive easement could be
used only for “the limited purposes of accessing their lands for ranching, farming,
agriculture, hunting, fishing, recreation, and other personal uses” but not for “commercial
uses . . . or for multi-family residential purposes such as planning or constructing
subdivisions.”
That leads us to two questions: (1) whether the use of the dirt lane on Edwards’s tract
by the Rushes and Yarberys was by permission; and (2) whether the Rushes and Yarberys
proved the existence of a prescriptive easement. Even a cursory review of the evidence reveals
that the use by the Rushes and Yarberys across the Edwards tract was by permission. Over
thirty years ago, Edwards bought his tract and constructed a locked gate across the dirt lane.
For thirty years, the Rushes and Yarberys or their predecessors in title requested that Edwards
allow them to cross his tract to check their cattle. For thirty years, Edwards gave them the
combination to his lock. Clearly, the use by the Rushes and Yarberys across Edwards’s tract
was permissive. That leads to the question of whether the Rushes and Yarberys proved the
existence of a prescriptive easement across the Edwards tract.
To establish a prescriptive easement, there must be an overt act proved against the
interests of the landowner (Edwards) to show that the permissive user (Rushes and Yarberys)
has shown an adverse claim to the roadway. Owners Ass’n of Foxcroft Woods v. Foxglen, 346
Ark. 354, 57 S.W.3d 187 (2001); Stone v. Halliburton, 244 Ark. 392, 425 S.W.2d 325 (1968).
It has also been described that the true owner (Edwards) must either know or be presumed
to know of the adverse character of the claimant’s (Rushes and Yarberys) possession based
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on the facts and circumstances of the claimant’s use. The alternative line of cases dating to
Manitowoc Remanufacturing v. Vocque, 307 Ark. 271, 819 S.W.2d 275 (1991), hold that the
claimant must take affirmative steps to put the true owner on notice of an adverse claim to
support a prescriptive easement. Arkansas case law clearly requires that the claimant prove
adverse use for seven years. There must be a “distinct and positive assertion . . . of a right
hostile to the owner.” Harper v. Hannibal, 241 Ark. 508, 408 S.W.2d 591 (1966). Not only
has this court held that the claimant must prove an overt adverse act, but we have also held
in Pop-A-Duck, Inc. v. Gardner, 2022 Ark. App. 88, at 11, 642 S.W.3d 220, 228, that “length
of use accompanied by the fact that there had been no objection” was insufficient to establish
the right to a prescriptive easement. In short, where is the overt act by the Rushes and
Yarberys to place Edwards on notice? Where is the adverse conduct? Where are the
affirmative steps? Where is the distinct and positive hostile assertion? Where are the seven
years? There are none. If this court eliminates the requirement of showing an adverse or
overt act by the permissive user when the landowner permits a neighbor to use the land for
the claimant’s benefit, then the rights of the owner of real property diminish
considerably. The law is clear: permissive use cannot transform into adverse use or
prescriptive use absent overt or adverse conduct sufficient to place the owner on notice of
hostility. The majority’s decision is a major shift in property law, which, for all practical
purposes, eliminates the element of permissive use under a claim of right to establish a
prescriptive easement, finding that long-term use will constitute abandonment of the
permissive use. While giving lip service to the principle that there must be some overt act to
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put the landowner on notice of the adverse use, that requirement has been discarded like
yesterday’s trash.
I would be remiss if I did not mention Yarbery’s inapposite use of tacking by a
previous owner. Yarberry had not owned the property for the requisite period of time to
establish adverse possession of the dirt lane under a claim of right when he brought the
lawsuit. The statutory period of seven years for adverse possession applies to prescriptive
easements. Neyland v. Hunter, 282 Ark. 323, 668 S.W.2d 530 (1984); Duty v. Vinson, 228
Ark. 617, 309 S.W.2d 318 (1958); Brundidge v. O’Neal, 213 Ark. 213, 210 S.W.2d 305
(1948). In finding that a prescriptive easement should be granted, the court was forced to
bootstrap Yarbery’s adverse claim to that of his predecessor in title (Been) to permit a finding
that an extended period of adverse claim of right to the dirt lane existed by the rule of
tacking. “As a general proposition, an adverse occupant cannot tack the possession of a
prior occupant to perfect adverse title in himself where predecessor did not or could not
claim the land adversely.” 2 C.J.S. Adverse Possession § 132; St. Louis Union Tr. Co. v. Smith,
207 Ark. 815, 182 S.W.2d 945 (1944). Not only did Yarbery use the Edwards tract by
permission, Yarbery’s predecessor in title also used the dirt lane crossing Edwards’s property
by permission. The circuit court erred by tacking the adverse possession (if one could be
found) of the prior occupants (McNabb and Been) to that of Yarbery and Rush.
In conclusion, the circuit court erred in finding that the Rushes and Yarberys proved
the existence of a prescriptive easement over Edwards’s property. I would reverse.
HIXSON, J., joins.
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Brett D. Watson, Attorney at Law, PLLC, by: Brett D. Watson; and Walters, Allison, Parker
& Estell, by: Derick Allison, for appellants/cross-appellees.
Jones, Jackson, Moll, McGinnis & Stocks, PLC, by: J. Dalton Person, for appellee/cross-
appellant.
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