John Belork v. Robin Latimer, Davis Township Trustee and DMK&H Farms, Inc. (rehearing) , 54 N.E.3d 388 ( 2016 )


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  •                                                                            FILED
    May 05 2016, 9:01 am
    OPINION ON REHEARING                                                       CLERK
    Indiana Supreme Court
    Court of Appeals
    and Tax Court
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT                                    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE ROBIN
    John J. Schwarz, II                                       LATIMER
    Schwarz Law Office, PC                                    Martin R. Lucas
    Hudson, Indiana                                           North Judson, Indiana
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE
    ATTORNEYS FOR AMICUS CURIAE                               DMK&H FARMS, INC.
    INDIANA AGRICULTURAL LAW                                  James N. Clevenger
    FOUNDATION                                                Wyland, Humphrey & Clevenger,
    LLP
    Todd J. Janzen
    Plymouth, Indiana
    Brianna J. Schroeder
    Janzen Agricultural Law, LLC
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    John Shoup
    Indiana Agricultural Law
    Foundation, Inc.
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    John Belork,                                             May 5, 2016
    Appellant-Petitioner,                                    Court of Appeals Case No.
    75A04-1503-MI-100
    v.                                               Appeal from the Starke Circuit
    Court
    Robin Latimer,                                           The Honorable Kim Hall, Judge
    Davis Township Trustee                                   Trial Court Cause No.
    and                                                      75C01-1406-MI-17
    DMK&H Farms, Inc.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016              Page 1 of 29
    Appellees-Respondents.
    Brown, Judge.
    [1]   In our opinion handed down on November 16, 2015, we affirmed the trial
    court’s entry of judgment on the evidence in favor of Robin Latimer as the
    Davis Township Trustee and DMK&H Farms, Inc. (“DMK&H” and, together
    with Latimer, the “Appellees”) with respect to John Belork’s claim under
    Indiana’s partition fence statutes found at Ind. Code §§ 32-26-9. Belork has
    petitioned for rehearing, arguing that we did not correctly apply the partition
    fence statutes. The Indiana Agricultural Law Foundation, Inc., (the “IALF”)
    filed a Motion for Leave to File Amicus Curiae Brief in Support of Appellant’s
    Petition for Rehearing together with its amicus curiae brief, and we have granted
    the IALF’s motion and ordered that its brief be filed. In its brief in response to
    the petition for rehearing, DMK&H responded to the arguments presented by
    Belork and the IALF.
    [2]   We note that this Court has been willing to reexamine its decisions and to grant
    petitions for rehearing, sometimes to reverse a previous decision. See Safe Auto
    Ins. Co. v. Farm Bur. Ins. Co., 
    867 N.E.2d 221
    , 222-223 (Ind. Ct. App. 2007)
    (granting a petition for rehearing which argued in part that the initial opinion
    misapplied certain precedent and noting that amicus curiae had appeared on
    rehearing in support of the petition’s position), trans. denied; Edwards v.
    Vermillion Cnty. Hosp., 
    579 N.E.2d 1347
    , 1347-1348 (Ind. Ct. App. 1991)
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016   Page 2 of 29
    (granting a petition for rehearing, vacating the original opinion, and arriving at
    a different conclusion regarding whether the petitioner was immune from
    liability under the Indiana Tort Claims Act), trans. denied; McNevin v. McNevin,
    
    447 N.E.2d 611
    , 612-616 (Ind. Ct. App. 1983) (granting a petition for rehearing,
    vacating the original opinion, and arriving at a different conclusion regarding
    whether the petitioner’s tort claim had been extinguished by a dissolution
    decree). Upon further consideration of the language of the provisions of Ind.
    Code §§ 32-26-9 set forth below and Belork’s position and arguments, as further
    developed by the IALF, we conclude that granting Belork’s petition is
    warranted.
    Facts and Procedural History
    [3]   Belork is the owner of real property in Starke County, Indiana, which he uses in
    part to raise cattle. Jan Ferch is the owner of real property along the eastern
    boundary of Belork’s property, and Ferch’s farming operation includes grain
    production. DMK&H is the owner of real property along the southern
    boundary of Belork’s property, and its farming operation includes grain
    production. At some point, Belork rebuilt portions of fencing along the eastern
    and southern boundaries of his property, specifically, the “southern half” of a
    fence along his eastern boundary which was adjoining Ferch’s property and the
    “western half” of a fence along his southern boundary which was adjoining
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016   Page 3 of 29
    DMK&H’s property.1 Transcript at 24. Ferch did not complete the northern
    half of the fence along the Belork-Ferch property line, and DMK&H did not
    complete the eastern half of the fence along the Belork-DMK&H property line.
    Belork requested that Latimer as the Davis Township Trustee require Ferch and
    DMK&H to construct or fund the construction of the remainder of the fences
    along the shared boundaries. Latimer did not grant Belork’s request.
    [4]   In June 2014, Belork filed a Petition for Writ of Mandamus pursuant to Ind.
    Code §§ 34-27-3 naming Latimer, as the Davis Township Trustee, as the
    respondent.2 Belork alleged that his farm is used primarily for the pasturing of
    cows, the land owned by Ferch and DMK&H is used for agriculture, he had
    rebuilt portions of the fence along the southern and eastern boundaries of his
    property, and he had requested that Ferch and DMK&H rebuild their respective
    portions of the fence line and they refused to do so. He further alleged that he
    had requested Latimer as the Davis Township Trustee to adhere to her statutory
    duty to see that the line fence was completed and that Latimer wholly failed
    after reasonable requests to do so. Belork requested that the court order
    1
    At the February 9, 2015 hearing, Belork testified that he had completed these portions of the fence ten or
    twelve years ago. He also indicated that, previously, there was a woven wire fence along the southern
    boundary of his property.
    2
    Indiana Code § 34-27-1-1 abolished the writ of mandate but allows for an action for mandate. Malone v.
    Price, 
    755 N.E.2d 213
    , 217 (Ind. Ct. App. 2001); Ind. Code § 34-27-1-1 (“Writs of mandate in the circuit and
    superior courts are abolished. Causes of action previously remedied by writs of mandate may be remedied by
    means of complaint and summons in the name of the state on relation of the party in interest in the circuit,
    superior, and probate courts as other civil actions. Such actions are to be known as actions for mandate.”).
    As noted below, Indiana Code §§ 34-27-3 govern actions for mandate.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016                 Page 4 of 29
    Latimer to adhere to her obligations and award him attorney fees. DMK&H
    filed a motion to intervene as a respondent, and the court granted the motion.
    [5]   On February 9, 2015, the court held a bench trial at which the parties by
    counsel presented arguments and Belork testified. His counsel contended that
    Ind. Code §§ 32-26-9 “employs what has always been known as the right-hand
    rule,” which exists where two adjoining property owners, facing each other at
    the center of the fence along their shared property boundary, each “agree to
    build [the] right half from the center of the property to the end of the property
    line.” Transcript at 8. His counsel noted that it was disputed whether Belork
    built the western half of the new fence along the southern boundary of his
    property on the property line or on DMK&H’s property, and stipulated that, at
    one point, Belork owned the property which is now owned by Ferch.
    DMK&H’s counsel argued in part that there are overgrown trees and shrubs on
    Belork’s property north of the fence and that it is impossible to access the fence
    row, that Belork maintains cattle on his property while the other farms grow
    grain, and that there is a history of Belork’s cattle leaving his property and
    roaming DMK&H’s fields causing damage. DMK&H’s counsel stated there
    had been a judgment in 2003 stemming from an injunction in 1997 to keep
    Belork’s cattle on his own property.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016   Page 5 of 29
    [6]   The court asked why Ind. Code § 32-26-9-13 applies in this situation because
    DMK&H did not use the fence for any purpose whatsoever. Belork’s counsel
    stated that the statute applies if one of two adjoining parcels is agricultural. The
    court noted that the statute by its terms states that it applies to a fence that is
    “used by adjoining property owners as a partition fence.” 
    Id. at 34.
    Latimer’s
    counsel argued that the partition fence statute applies when the fence is being
    used by both parties, that it makes sense for both parties to contribute to its
    maintenance, and that the statute does not state it applies where a fence “exists”
    between two parcels. 
    Id. at 36.
    The court responded that, if both property
    owners receive a benefit from the fence, it would be fair for both owners to
    maintain the fence, and Latimer’s counsel replied that such was clearly the
    intent of the statute. DMK&H’s counsel then argued that the fence is of no
    benefit to DMK&H, it is not using the fence, the fence has been in a state of
    disrepair for years, and that it had been in court in 2003 on the same issues.
    [7]   Belork’s counsel then noted that, although the majority of farms in the area are
    grain production farmers, there is still an interest for both sides to have a fence,
    and that the only prerequisite for the statute to apply is that one of the parcels
    be used for agriculture. The court noted the statute does not refer to a fence
    that exists between adjoining property owners but to one that is used by the
    property owners, and asked Belork’s counsel what evidence he had that
    3
    Ind. Code § 32-26-9-1 provides: “A fence that is used by adjoining property owners as a partition fence,
    unless otherwise agreed upon by the property owners, is considered a partition fence and shall be repaired,
    maintained, and paid for as provided under this chapter.”
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016                 Page 6 of 29
    DMK&H “used” the partition fence. 
    Id. at 41.
    Belork’s counsel replied that
    “[t]he only evidence . . . is that it is a fence that marks the property line as a
    partition.” 
    Id. Belork’s counsel
    further stated that DMK&H was not keeping
    cattle, goats, sheep, or anything else loose on its property and that “I think their
    use is going to be limited to what marks the property line.” 
    Id. [8] Belork
    testified that he raised cattle and used his property for pasturing them,
    that there had been a woven wire fence along the southern boundary of his
    property, and that “the new high-tensile wires actually touched the old woven
    wire fence post” so the new fence is “directly on the line of the previous fence.”
    
    Id. at 58.
    When asked how long the previous fence had been there, he
    responded that “[t]he trustee made us put it in about 1948, 1949.” 
    Id. at 59.
    He
    indicated that he did not have to bulldoze or excavate anything in order to
    install the new fence and was able to cut back branches and shrubs with
    nippers. When asked if DMK&H could build the eastern portion of the fence
    along the southern boundary of his property “under the same basically limited
    difficulties that you incurred,” Belork answered “[i]f I built it, they should be
    able to build it,” and when asked if DMK&H would have to bring in an
    excavator or bulldozer, he replied “I would hope not.” 
    Id. at 60.
    When asked
    if it was feasible to rebuild the previous woven wire fence, Belork responded
    that, “because of the open land and the wind blows from the south, it turned up
    the fence line and the windbreak into a sand dune and a build up of sand.” 
    Id. at 61.
    He said that the woven wire fence “would help catch it and the sand
    would build up underneath it” and that his cattle “just stepped across” the
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016   Page 7 of 29
    woven wire fence “[b]ecause of the sand build up.” 
    Id. at 62.
    Belork also
    testified that he sold the property owned by Ferch to her in 2000 or 2001.
    [9]    On cross-examination, Belork indicated that the properties owned by Ferch and
    DMK&H are used primarily for growing crops. When asked what use Ferch
    has for the fence, he replied: “Because the sheriff has complained about trespass
    and cattle grazing, their wheat and corn crops, et cetera.” 
    Id. at 66.
    To the
    question “[s]o really, the only use of the fence for them is a protection from
    you; that’s what you’re saying,” Belork answered “[t]hat’s what I’m saying.”
    
    Id. He agreed
    that the purpose of the fences is to keep his cattle on his property,
    and acknowledged that his cattle “got out of his farm” in both 2014 and 2015,
    and that he did not keep a tally of the number of times. 
    Id. at 83.
    When asked
    how many cattle left his property in January, Belork answered “[p]robably all of
    them” and that he had about forty cattle. 
    Id. at 84.
    He stated that, to keep his
    cattle from leaving his property, he “run[s] a second, temporary electric fence.
    In other words, a single wire, hot wire that keeps the cows home.” 
    Id. at 87-88.
    [10]   Following the presentation of evidence, counsel for the Appellees moved for
    judgment on the evidence, arguing that they do not use the fence and thus the
    fence partition statute does not apply. In response, Belork’s counsel argued
    that, if DMK&H “decides to start raising cattle or other type of animals, well
    haven’t they just been totally benefited by [] Belork having put up the entire
    fence?” 
    Id. at 95.
    His counsel asserted: “I think that’s what the statute
    anticipates is that from time to time, some people grain farm. They may bring
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016   Page 8 of 29
    animals in. They may not. But there’s again, there may be a time when both
    parties are benefiting from the use of the fence.” 
    Id. at 95-96.
    [11]   The court asked whether, in a situation where there is farmland adjacent to a
    subdivision and the owner of the agricultural land decided he wanted to raise
    cattle, “each one of those residential property owners would be required to
    build a fence one-half of their property to the right to keep the cattle out of
    coming into their children’s sandbox, and the swing set,” and Belork’s counsel
    replied “[t]hat would be correct.” 
    Id. at 96-97.
    The court also noted that the
    statute refers to structures that can hold cattle, hogs, horses, mules, and sheep
    and said that the statute “is meant for the purpose of keeping your own animals
    on your own side of the property” and “anticipates that both property owners
    have livestock.” 
    Id. at 99.
    The court noted that, “[t]o me, common sense has to
    come into play here,” that “[c]ommon sense is, right from the very beginning, a
    fence that is used by adjoining property owners as a partition fence,” and
    “[t]hat means to me, this statute and this fence law is for the purpose of keeping
    animals inside your own property for adjoining property owners” and is “not
    meant to apply to situations where . . . a property owner who has agriculture
    property that adjoins a subdivision in a city decides to have livestock” and is
    “not going to require each one of those residential areas to construct half a
    fence to keep the cattle from coming into their back yards.” 
    Id. at 99-100.
    [12]   The court granted the Appellees’ motion, denied Belork’s petition, and entered
    a written order granting the Appellees’ motion for judgment on the evidence
    which included the following findings:
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016   Page 9 of 29
    1) [Belork] directed this Court to Indiana Code 32-26-9 as the
    sole statutory authority to support his position.
    2) I.C. 32-26-9-1 provides as follows:
    “A fence that is used by adjoining property owners as a
    partition fence, unless otherwise agreed upon by the
    property owners, is considered a partition fence and shall
    be repaired, maintained, and paid for as provided under
    this chapter.”
    3) When one “uses” a fence, he derives a benefit from the fence.
    4) The benefit contemplated by the fence addressed by the
    statute is the control of one’s own livestock.
    5) In other words, the statute sets forth the responsibilities of
    adjoining property owners who both “use” the fence to keep their
    livestock on their own property.
    6) I.C. 32-26-9-3 reinforces that the application of the statute is
    to livestock when it discusses the need to secure, “. . . hogs,
    sheep, cattle, mules, and horses or other domestic animals.”
    7) It is clear that the legislature enacted the statue [sic] to set forth
    the respective responsibilities of adjoining land owners to
    maintain a partition fence to keep their livestock within the
    boundaries of their respective properties.
    8) If the legislature had intended to have the statute applicable to
    all adjoining property owners, regardless of any benefit derived
    from the fence, they could have simply crafted the statute to
    state, “A fence that exists between adjoining property owners, . .
    . .”
    9) To interpret the statute otherwise would require all property
    owners, including residential, to incur the cost of one-half of a
    fence to assist their neighbor in keeping his livestock on his own
    property.
    10) The evidence is uncontroverted that [Belork] is the only
    property owner with livestock and the only property owner who
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016   Page 10 of 29
    “uses” the fence. Belork uses the fence to keep his livestock on
    his property.
    11) The evidence is uncontroverted that the adjoining property
    owners, DMK&H [] and [] Ferch, are grain farmers, do not “use”
    the fence, and derive no benefit from the fence.
    12) The Court declines to apply I.C. 32-26-9 to the
    uncontroverted facts of this case.
    13) [Belork] cited no statutory authority nor Indiana case law
    that would direct this Court to reach any other conclusion.
    Appellant’s Appendix at 5-6.
    Issue and Standard of Review
    [13]   The issue is whether the trial court erred in granting the Appellees’ motion for
    judgment on the evidence. Indiana Trial Rule 50 provides that a motion for
    judgment on the evidence shall be granted “[w]here all or some of the issues in
    a case . . . are not supported by sufficient evidence or a verdict thereon is clearly
    erroneous as contrary to the evidence because the evidence is insufficient to
    support it . . . .” Ind. Trial Rule 50(A). A motion for judgment on the evidence
    should be granted “only when there is a complete failure of proof because there
    is no substantial evidence or reasonable inference supporting an essential
    element of the claim.” Coldwell Banker Roth Wehrly Graber v. Laub Bros. Oil Co.,
    
    949 N.E.2d 1273
    , 1282 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011) (quoting Raess v. Doescher, 
    883 N.E.2d 790
    , 794 (Ind. 2008) (quoting Dahlin v. Amoco Oil Corp., 
    567 N.E.2d 806
    ,
    810 (Ind. Ct. App. 1991), trans. denied), reh’g denied), trans. denied. Upon
    appellate review of a trial court’s ruling on such a motion, the reviewing court
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016   Page 11 of 29
    must consider only the evidence and reasonable inferences most favorable to
    the nonmoving party. 
    Id. at 1282-1283.
    [14]   Ind. Code § 34-27-3-1 governs actions for mandate and provides:
    An action for mandate may be prosecuted against any inferior
    tribunal, corporation, public or corporate officer, or person to
    compel the performance of any:
    (1) act that the law specifically requires; or
    (2) duty resulting from any office, trust, or station.
    [15]   An action for mandate, an extraordinary remedy of an equitable nature, is
    generally viewed with disfavor. Malone v. Butts, 
    974 N.E.2d 1025
    , 1027 (Ind.
    Ct. App. 2012) (citation omitted), trans. denied. Mandamus does not lie unless
    the petitioner has a clear and unquestioned right to relief and the respondent
    has failed to perform a clear, absolute, and imperative duty imposed by law. 
    Id. (citation omitted).
    The mandamus action does not lie to establish a right or to
    define and impose a duty. 
    Id. (citation omitted).
    Public officials, boards, and
    commissions may be mandated to perform ministerial acts when under a clear
    legal duty to perform such acts. 
    Id. (citation omitted).
    Mandate actions exist
    only where no adequate remedy at law is available. 
    Id. (citation omitted).
    The Parties’ Arguments
    [16]   Belork contends that, because he, Ferch, and DMK&H all utilize their lands as
    agricultural land, the fence partition statute is controlling and requires the
    adjoining landowners to build their respective halves of the partition fences
    once Belork has built his. He asserts that the legislature amended the Indiana
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016   Page 12 of 29
    Fence Law in 2003 by adding Ind. Code § 32-26-9-0.5 to define agricultural
    land and that, if the legislature “intended to limit the Indiana Fence Law to
    situations where both adjoining landowners ‘used’ the partition fence, i.e.
    owned livestock, surely the legislature would have provided an alternative
    definition to ‘agricultural land’ or directly stated that the Indiana Fence Law
    only applies when all adjoining owners raise livestock.” Appellant’s Brief at 16.
    He also argues that prior Indiana cases have not made any distinction based on
    whether one of the adjoining parcel owners uses the partition fence.
    [17]   Latimer contends that Indiana common law places a duty upon the owner of an
    animal to confine it, that this principle is codified at Ind. Code § 32-26-2-2,4
    Belork conceded that the intention of the fence is to contain his cattle on his
    property, and that he is solely responsible for this. Latimer further argues that
    the statute requires that the adjoining property owners “use” the fence “as a
    partition fence,” this “implies that not all fences are partition fences,” and that
    “this implication is borne out by I.C. § 32-26-2-15.” Appellee Latimer’s Brief at
    5. She also contends that no testimony or evidence suggested that fences are
    helpful to modern grain farming operations and that nothing in the statute even
    remotely suggests that one of the purposes of the law is wind erosion control.
    4
    Ind. Code § 32-26-2-2(b) provides that, in the absence of adoption of an open range ordinance by the county
    commissioners, “if a domestic animal breaks into an enclosure or enters upon the property of another person,
    it is not necessary for the person injured by the actions of the domestic animal to allege or prove the existence
    of a lawful fence to recover for damage done.”
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016                  Page 13 of 29
    [18]   DMK&H maintains that the evidence presented by Belork was not whether a
    partition was needed to divide the properties but rather was a request to use
    Ind. Code § 32-26-9-1 to force his neighbors into rebuilding a fence his cattle
    had destroyed, and to stop his cattle from trespassing on DMK&H’s lands.
    [19]   In its amicus brief, the IALF argues that the partition fence statute has been
    interpreted broadly to require neighboring property owners to share
    responsibility for maintaining partition fences regardless of property use. It
    asserts that the Indiana legislature has considered and rejected imposing a use
    requirement into the statute, that Ind. Code § 32-26-9-1 applies to existing
    fences, and the purpose of the section is to address agreements between
    neighbors regarding how to handle partition fences and fences that, while not
    constructed directly on a boundary line, have been treated and used as
    boundary or partition fences.
    Indiana Fence Law
    [20]   The statutory provisions set forth in Ind. Code §§ 32-26 relate to fences in
    Indiana and address issues such as the recording of agreements to erect and
    repair fences and fencemarks, the enclosure of land subject to flooding, and the
    cutting and trimming of live fences along public highways and between
    adjoining lands. Partition fences are governed primarily by Ind. Code §§ 32-26-
    9 and certain sections of Ind. Code §§ 32-26-2.
    [21]   Ind. Code §§ 32-26-9 is titled “Partition Fences.” Ind. Code § 32-26-9-0.5
    provides:
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016   Page 14 of 29
    (a) As used in this section, “agricultural land” means land that is:
    (1) zoned or otherwise designated as agricultural land;
    (2) used for growing crops or raising livestock; or
    (3) reserved for conservation.
    (b) This chapter does not apply to a fence that separates two (2)
    adjoining parcels of property unless at least one (1) of the
    adjoining parcels is agricultural land.
    [22]   Ind. Code § 32-26-9-1 is titled “Existing fences” and provides:
    A fence that is used by adjoining property owners as a partition
    fence, unless otherwise agreed upon by the property owners, is
    considered a partition fence and shall be repaired, maintained,
    and paid for as provided under this chapter.
    [23]   Ind. Code § 32-26-9-2 is titled “Lands outside or abutting municipal boundary”
    and provides:
    (a) The owner of a property that:
    (1) is located outside;
    (2) abuts; or
    (3) is adjacent to;
    the boundary of the corporate limits of a town or city shall
    separate the owner’s property from adjoining properties by a
    partition fence constructed upon the line dividing or separating
    the properties regardless of when the properties were divided.
    (b) Except as otherwise provided in this chapter, and if a division
    of the partition fence has not been made between the property
    owners for the building, repairing, or rebuilding of the partition
    fence:
    (1) for a partition fence built along a property line than
    [sic] runs from north to south:
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016   Page 15 of 29
    (A) the owner whose property lies to the east of the
    fence shall build the north half of the fence; and
    (B) the owner whose land lies to the west of the
    fence shall build the south half of the fence; and
    (2) for a partition fence built along a property line that runs
    from east to west:
    (A) the owner whose property lies north of the fence
    shall build the west half of the fence; and
    (B) the owner whose property lies to the south of the
    fence shall build the east half of the fence.
    (c) Notwithstanding subsection (b), if either property owner has
    constructed one-half (½) of a partition fence that is not the
    portion required under subsection (b) and has maintained that
    portion of the partition fence for a period of not less than five (5)
    years, the property owner may continue to maintain the portion
    of the fence.
    (d) If a property owner fails to build, rebuild, or repair a partition
    fence after receiving notice under this chapter, the township
    trustee of the township in which the property is located shall
    build, rebuild, or repair the fence as provided under this chapter.
    [24]   Ind. Code § 32-26-9-3, titled “Defaulting landowner; description of lawful
    partition fence; floodgates across water courses,” relates in part to the role of a
    township trustee and provides in part:
    (a) A partition fence shall be built, rebuilt, and kept in repair at
    the cost of the property owners whose properties are enclosed or
    separated by the fences proportionately according to the number
    of rods or proportion of the fence the property owner owns along
    the line of the fence, whether the property owner’s title is a fee
    simple or a life estate.
    (b) If a property owner fails or refuses to compensate for building,
    rebuilding, or repairing the property owner’s portion of a
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016   Page 16 of 29
    partition fence, another property owner who is interested in the
    fence, after having built, rebuilt, or repaired the property owner’s
    portion of the fence, shall give to the defaulting property owner
    or the defaulting property owner’s agent or tenant twenty (20)
    days notice to build, rebuild, or repair the defaulting property
    owner’s portion of the fence. If the defaulting property owner or
    the defaulting property owner’s agent or tenant fails to build,
    rebuild, or repair the fence within twenty (20) days, the
    complaining property owner shall notify the township trustee of
    the township in which the properties are located of the default.
    *****
    (d) The township trustee who receives a complaint under this
    section shall:
    (1) estimate the costs for building, rebuilding, or repairing
    the partition fence; and
    (2) within a reasonable time after receiving the complaint,
    make out a statement and notify the defaulting property
    owner of the probable cost of building, rebuilding, or
    repairing the fence.
    If twenty (20) days after receiving a notice under this subsection
    the defaulting property owner has not built, rebuilt, or repaired
    the fence, the trustee shall build or repair the fence. The trustee
    may use only the materials for the fences that are most
    commonly used by the farmers of the community.
    *****
    (f) A lawful partition fence is any one (1) of the following that is
    sufficiently tight and strong to hold cattle, hogs, horses, mules,
    and sheep:
    (1) A straight board and wire fence, a straight wire fence, a
    straight board fence, or a picket fence four (4) feet high.
    (2) A straight rail fence four and one-half (4 ½ ) feet high.
    (3) A worm rail fence five (5) feet high.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016   Page 17 of 29
    Other subsections of Ind. Code § 32-26-9-3 relate to, among other things, when
    a fence is sought on a township line, when a trustee is disqualified to act, when
    a ditch or creek crosses the division line between two property owners, and
    when floodgates or similar structures should be constructed. See Ind. Code §§
    32-26-9-3(c), (e), (g)-(m).
    [25]   Ind. Code § 32-26-9-6 (eff. Jul. 1, 2003),5 titled “Construction and application of
    law,” provides:
    This chapter shall be liberally construed in favor of the objects
    and purposes for which it is enacted and shall apply to all
    agricultural land, whether enclosed or unenclosed, cultivated or
    uncultivated, wild or wood lot.
    [26]   In addition, several sections of Ind. Code §§ 32-26-2, titled “Enclosures,
    Trespassing Animals, and Partition Fences,” relate to partition fences. In
    particular, Ind. Code § 32-26-2-15 is titled “Existing fence becoming partition
    fence; compensation” and provides:
    When a fence that is already erected becomes a partition fence
    because previously unenclosed property is enclosed, the person
    who encloses the previously unenclosed property shall pay to the
    owner of the existing fence fifty percent (50%) of the value of the
    existing fence, as estimated by the owner of the existing fence.
    5
    Ind. Code § 32-26-9-0.5 became effective on July 1, 2003, and Ind. Code § 32-26-9-6 was amended, effective
    on that date, to include the word “agricultural” in referring to “agricultural land.” See Pub. L. No. 57-2003,
    §§ 1-2 (eff. Jul. 1, 2003).
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016               Page 18 of 29
    Ind. Code § 32-26-2-18 is titled “Notice; intention to remove partition fence”
    and provides:
    This section applies to a person who ceases to use the person’s
    property or opens the person’s enclosures. A person to whom
    this section applies may not remove any part of the person’s
    fence that forms a partition fence between the person’s property
    and the enclosure of any other person until the person to whom
    this section applies has first given six (6) months notice of the
    person’s intention to remove the fence to any person who may be
    interested in the removal of the fence.
    Discussion
    [27]   We address whether the fences that exist and the fences Belork desires to be
    constructed along the southern and eastern boundaries of his property
    constitute or would constitute partition fences under Ind. Code §§ 32-26-9
    requiring DMK&H and Ferch to construct or fund the construction of portions
    of the fences. The first step in interpreting a statute is to determine whether the
    legislature has spoken clearly and unambiguously on the point in question. City
    of N. Vernon v. Jennings Nw. Reg’l Utils., 
    829 N.E.2d 1
    , 4 (Ind. 2005). When a
    statute is clear and unambiguous, we need not apply any rules of construction
    other than to require that words and phrases be taken in their plain, ordinary,
    and usual sense. 
    Id. When a
    statute is susceptible to more than one
    interpretation, it is deemed ambiguous and thus open to judicial construction.
    
    Id. When faced
    with an ambiguous statute, our primary goal of statutory
    construction is to determine, give effect to, and implement the intent of the
    legislature. 
    Id. To effectuate
    legislative intent, we read the sections of an act
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016   Page 19 of 29
    together in order that no part is rendered meaningless if it can be harmonized
    with the remainder of the statute. 
    Id. We also
    examine the statute as a whole
    and do not presume that the legislature intended language used in a statute to
    be applied illogically or to bring about an unjust or absurd result. 
    Id. at 4-5.
    [28]   We will first address Ind. Code §§ 32-26-9-2 and -3, which are the operative
    sections of the chapter relating to the construction and subsequent repair of
    partition fences, and then we will address the Appellees’ arguments related to
    Ind. Code § 32-26-9-1 and the circumstances to which that section is applicable.
    [29]   With respect to Ind. Code §§ 32-26-9-2 and -3, we note that Ind. Code § 32-26-
    9-2(a) provides in part that an owner of a property that is located outside, abuts,
    or is adjacent to the boundary of the corporate limits of a town or city “shall
    separate the owner’s property from adjoining properties by a partition fence
    constructed upon the line dividing or separating the properties regardless of when the
    properties were divided.” (Emphasis added). Thus, according to subsection
    2(a), a partition fence is one which is “constructed upon the line dividing or
    separating adjoining properties.” Similarly, Ind. Code § 32-26-9-3(a) provides
    in part that a partition fence shall be built, rebuilt, and kept in repair at the cost
    of the property owners whose “properties are . . . separated by the fences.”
    There is no language in Ind. Code §§ 32-26-9-2 or -3 which suggests that a fence
    constructed upon the line dividing or separating adjoining properties is exempt
    from Ind. Code §§ 32-26-9-2 and -3 on the basis that one of the adjoining
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016   Page 20 of 29
    property owners does not use or make certain beneficial use of the partition
    fence.6
    [30]   We also observe that Ind. Code § 32-26-9-0.5(a) provides that “agricultural
    land” includes land that is “used for growing crops or raising livestock,” that
    Ind. Code § 32-26-9-0.5(b) states that the partition fence chapter does not apply
    “unless at least one [] of the adjoining parcels is agricultural land,” and that Ind.
    Code § 32-26-9-6 states in part that the partition fence chapter “shall apply to all
    agricultural land, whether enclosed or unenclosed . . . .” (Emphases added).
    While these sections provide that Ind. Code §§ 32-26-9 applies where at least
    one adjoining parcel is agricultural land, neither section limits the application of
    the chapter based on the fact that one of the adjoining parcel owners does not
    make certain beneficial use of the partition fence.
    [31]   We conclude that the sections above, considered together, demonstrate that the
    intent of the legislature was to require adjoining parcel owners to build and
    keep in repair a partition fence constructed upon the line dividing or separating
    their parcels as set forth in Ind. Code §§ 32-26-9-2 and -3, provided that one of
    the parcels is located outside, abuts, or is adjacent to the boundary of the
    corporate limit of a town or city, see Ind. Code § 32-26-9-2(a), and is agricultural
    6
    We note that in 1999 there was a proposed modification to Ind. Code § 32-26-9-2, which would have
    become effective July 1, 2000, and which would have provided in part that, subject to certain restrictions, an
    owner of a tract of land who does not keep livestock would not be liable for costs incurred by the owner of an
    adjoining tract of land in constructing or repairing a partition fence. Senate Bill No. 101 (2000). The
    legislature did not enact the proposed modifications to the statute.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016               Page 21 of 29
    land. See Ind. Code §§ 32-26-9-0.5, -6. Moreover, these sections do not limit
    the applicability of the construction and repair requirements of Ind. Code §§ 32-
    26-9-2 or -3 based on the fact that one or both of the parcel owners may not
    make certain beneficial use of the partition fence.
    [32]   We next address the Appellees’ argument that the effect of Ind. Code § 32-26-9-
    1 is to limit the application of the chapter to those circumstances in which both
    adjoining property owners make or would make beneficial use of a partition
    fence separating their properties. We note that Ind. Code § 32-26-9-1 pertains
    to existing fences.7 Moreover, we must read Ind. Code § 32-26-9-1 together
    with Ind. Code §§ 32-26-9-2 and -3 so that none of the sections are rendered
    meaningless and all may be given effect. Accordingly, we note that Ind. Code
    §§ 32-26-9-2 and -3 contain the operative provisions governing the construction
    and subsequent repair and maintenance of partition fences under the chapter.
    Ind. Code § 32-26-9-1 establishes that certain existing fences are also subject to
    these repair and maintenance provisions. Specifically, by providing that “[a]
    fence that is used by adjoining property owners as a partition fence . . . is
    considered a partition fence and shall be repaired, maintained, and paid for as
    provided under this chapter,” Ind. Code § 32-26-9-1 permits adjoining parcel
    owners to treat an existing fence, including an existing fence which is not
    located on or precisely on the line dividing the adjoining parcels, as a partition
    7
    Ind. Code §§ 32-26-2-15 and -18 also relate to existing fences which have served as or have been
    treated as partition fences.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016           Page 22 of 29
    fence. The section provides that if adjoining owners have treated or “used” an
    existing fence as a partition fence, or an existing fence has served as a partition
    fence, then, for purposes of allocating the cost and responsibility of keeping the
    fence in repair, the provisions of Ind. Code § 32-26-9-2 and -3 are applicable,
    and the parcel owners may not avoid their respective maintenance obligations
    on the basis that the fence is not located on or precisely on the line dividing
    their parcels. Thus, adjoining parcel owners can treat a fence not initially
    constructed on the true property line between their parcels as a partition fence,
    and in that circumstance the fence will be considered a partition fence for
    purposes of the maintenance and repair requirements and cost-sharing
    provisions of the partition fence statute. See Burck v. Davis, 
    35 Ind. App. 648
    , 
    73 N.E. 192
    , 193 (1905) (noting that a fence separated two parcels, that one of the
    parcel owners refused to rebuild or repair her part of the fence, that the other
    parcel owner served notice to the township trustee who had the fence rebuilt,
    and that the first parcel owner did not pay for the repair and objected that the
    fence was not on the line dividing the lands of the parties; observing that the
    statute at the time provided that “all fences now constructed and used by
    adjoining landowners as a partition fence or fences . . . shall be deemed
    partition fences, and shall be built, maintained, repaired and paid for as
    hereinafter provided”; and concluding that the complaint “showed, in the
    language of the statute, that [the fence at issue] was such a fence as must be
    deemed a partition fence”); see also Capps v. Abbott, 
    897 N.E.2d 984
    , 986-988
    (Ind. Ct. App. 2008) (concluding that the appellees had used and improved the
    land on their side of a fence and, citing Freiburger below, that the appellants
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016   Page 23 of 29
    were estopped from denying that the fence constituted the legal boundary line);
    Freiburger v. Fry, 
    439 N.E.2d 169
    , 172-173 (Ind. Ct. App. 1982) (observing that
    two adjoining parcel owners erected “a partition fence and treated that fence as
    a legal boundary line” and that the partition fence was erected along an existing
    fence line except for moving one corner post thirty feet and concluding that,
    when adjoining landowners agree to treat a fence as a legal boundary, they are
    estopped from denying it as the legal boundary line, and that “[u]se and
    improvement of the land up to the alleged boundary line may be sufficient to
    satisfy the requirement of an agreement if the adjoining landowner
    acquiesces”).
    [33]   In sum, Ind. Code § 32-26-9-1 establishes that an existing fence, including one
    which may be not be located entirely on the shared boundary of adjoining
    parcels, is nonetheless subject to the maintenance and repair and cost-sharing
    provisions of Ind. Code §§ 32-26-9-2 and -3 if the fence has served as or has
    been treated or used as a partition fence by the adjoining parcel owners. There
    is no claim that this circumstance occurred here, and thus Ind. Code § 32-26-9-1
    is not applicable in this case.
    [34]   Belork has requested that partition fences be constructed or completed along the
    southern and eastern boundaries of his property pursuant to the partition fence
    statute. He seeks relief provided by the statutory procedures set forth at Ind.
    Code §§ 32-26-9-2 and -3 and, accordingly, notified Latimer as the township
    trustee of his complaint. The Appellees do not assert that the properties of
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016   Page 24 of 29
    Belork, DMK&H, and Ferch do not constitute agricultural land under Ind.
    Code §§ 32-26-9-.5 and -6 or are not located outside the boundary of the
    corporate limits of a town or city under Ind. Code § 32-26-9-2(a). The
    requirements of Ind. Code §§ 32-26-9-2 and -3 are applicable to the fences at
    issue. The fact that DMK&H and Ferch claim they will not use or make
    certain beneficial use of the partition fences does not exempt the fences from
    Ind. Code § 32-26-9-2 and -3. See Ashley v. Kelley, 
    84 Ind. App. 303
    , 
    149 N.E. 377
    , 377 (1925) (observing, where the appellants argued that a fence
    constructed along their parcel’s boundary would not be of any use, value, or
    service to them and would be of service only to the appellee, that the partition
    fence statute applied “to all lands whether inclosed or uninclosed, cultivated or
    uncultivated, wild or wood lot,” and affirming the judgment of an assessment
    for the building of the partition fence on the line between the parties’ parcels),
    reh’g denied; see also Myers v. Dodd, 
    9 Ind. 290
    , 292 (1857) (concluding in part,
    where the cattle of one parcel owner escaped into the corn field on an adjoining
    parcel, that both parcel owners were equally bound to maintain a partition
    fence and that either might have repaired it and enforced contribution from the
    other); Stephenson v. Elliott, 
    2 Ind. App. 233
    , 
    28 N.E. 326
    , 326-327 (1891)
    (concluding in part that two tenant farmers, one of whom had horses and cows
    and the other of whom had a wheat field, occupied to each other the relation of
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016   Page 25 of 29
    adjoining property owners and thus were equally bound to maintain a partition
    fence).8
    [35]   Based on the record, we conclude that the fences Belork desires to be
    constructed or completed along the southern and eastern boundaries of his
    property constitute partition fences under Ind. Code §§ 32-26-9. Therefore, we
    reverse and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    Conclusion
    [36]   For the foregoing reasons, we grant Belork’s petition for rehearing, vacate our
    opinion of November 16, 2015, reverse the trial court’s order, and remand for
    further proceedings.
    [37]   Reversed and Remanded.
    Altice, J., concurs.
    Riley, J., dissents with separate opinion.
    8
    Because the desired partition fences are not exempt from Ind. Code §§ 32-26-9-2 and -3 on the grounds that
    DMK&H and Ferch claim they will not use or make any certain beneficial use of the fences, we need not
    address the various arguments regarding beneficial use, such as whether the fences constitute capital
    improvements of the properties.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016             Page 26 of 29
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    John Belork,                                              Court of Appeals Case No.
    75A04-1503-MI-100
    Appellant-Petitioner,
    v.
    Robin Latimer, Davis Township
    Trustees, and DMK&H Farms,
    Inc.,
    Appellee-Respondent.
    Riley, Judge dissenting
    [38]   I dissent from the majority’s opinion on rehearing, which vacates our opinion
    of November 16, 2015, and reverses the trial court’s order. I would deny
    Belork’s petition for rehearing and reaffirm our earlier opinion in every respect.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016     Page 27 of 29
    [39]   In our opinion of November 16, 2015, we concluded “that the fences Belork
    desires along the southern and eastern boundaries of his property would not
    constitute partition fences under Ind. Code §§ 32-26-9.” Belork v. Latimer, 
    2015 WL 7185539
    , *10 (Ind. Ct. App. Nov. 15, 2015). We addressed the issue
    precisely as framed by the parties, and we did not sua sponte venture into issues
    which were not raised. We analyzed the arguments of the parties in detail and
    addressed them fully. There was no surprise in our first opinion and I see no
    reason to disturb our carefully crafted decision.
    [40]   Nonetheless, Belork, pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 54, now seeks rehearing.
    He presents us with essentially the same arguments, with the request to this
    court to try again—a request which the majority took to heart. The only
    difference this time is the presence of the amicus curiae, Indiana Agricultural
    Law Foundation, which aligned itself with Belork’s position. Like here, amicus
    curiae briefs are often attempts to inject interest-group politics into the appellate
    process by flaunting the interest of the trade association or other interest group
    in the outcome of the appeal. From its brief, it is apparent that Indiana
    Agricultural Law Foundation is not a neutral advisor, but rather is clearly in the
    driver’s seat in these rehearing proceedings.
    [41]   Curiously, although an amicus curiae is not a party and has traditionally no
    control over the proceedings, the majority appears to consider the amicus here
    as an equal partner, quoting from its brief in the parties’ section of the majority
    opinion.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016   Page 28 of 29
    [42]   I would deny the petition for rehearing as it merely exhausts precious judicial
    resources that could be expended elsewhere. There are sound reasons for
    requiring a party to present all known arguments or claims to an appellate court
    before its decision is rendered. Belork did just that in his appellate brief and
    there is no reason to revisit our analysis.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion on Rehearing 75A04-1503-MI-100| May 5, 2016   Page 29 of 29