John T. Seyfarth, Jr. v. Adams County Board of Supervisors , 267 So. 3d 767 ( 2019 )


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  •                     IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 2018-CA-00217-SCT
    JOHN T. SEYFARTH, JR.
    v.
    ADAMS COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                          01/08/2018
    TRIAL JUDGE:                               HON. FORREST A. JOHNSON, JR.
    TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS:                     PAUL ANDERSON KOERBER
    SCOTT FLETCHER SLOVER
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                 ADAMS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                    PAUL ANDERSON KOERBER
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:                     SCOTT FLETCHER SLOVER
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                        CIVIL - STATE BOARDS AND AGENCIES
    DISPOSITION:                               AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED AND
    RENDERED IN PART - 04/18/2019
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:
    BEFORE KING, P.J., COLEMAN AND BEAM, JJ.
    KING, PRESIDING JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
    ¶1.    The Adams County Board of Supervisors (Board) designated Mount Airy Plantation
    Road as a public road, placing it on the official county road register in 2000. John Seyfarth
    petitioned the Board to abandon the portion of the road that dead ends into his property. He
    alleged that people were using the road to reach his property and trespass on it. The Board
    declined to abandon the road, denied Seyfarth’s request for damages, and did not address his
    requests that the Board take action to abate the nuisances he experienced. Seyfarth appealed
    to the circuit court, which affirmed the Board’s decisions not to abandon the road and not to
    award damages. But the circuit court ordered the Board to reasonably abate any nuisances
    to Seyfarth. Seyfarth appeals the circuit court’s ruling to affirm the Board’s decision not to
    abandon the road and not to award damages, and the Board cross-appeals the order that it
    abate any nuisances. Because Seyfarth has no remedy on the record before this Court, this
    Court affirms the circuit court’s judgment affirming the Board’s decisions declining to
    abandon the road and declining to award damages. But because, on this record, the Board
    has no legal authority to abate any nuisance in the manners suggested, this Court reverses and
    renders the circuit court’s order mandating that the Board abate any nuisance.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    ¶2.    In 1998, the Legislature passed a law that required each county board of supervisors
    to prepare and adopt an official map designating all public roads on the county road system
    on or before July 1, 2000. Miss. Code Ann. § 65-7-4 (Rev. 2012). The Legislature’s stated
    intent was that the official record “shall include all public roads that the board of supervisors
    determines, consistent with fact, as of July 1, 2000, or such date the initial official record is
    adopted, are laid out and open according to law.” Miss. Code Ann. § 65-7-4(6) (Rev. 2012).
    The Legislature further explained that the legislative intent for the proceedings and public
    hearing for the initial adoption of the roads
    are not intended to lay out, open, designate or otherwise establish new public
    roads, but to document and record existing roads which are, at the time of the
    initial adoption of said map and register, adjudicated by the board, consistent
    with fact, to be public roads by dedication, under the methods provided by
    statute, or by prescription and required by public convenience and necessity.
    2
    Miss. Code Ann. § 65-7-4.1 (Rev. 2012). On May 8, 2000, the Adams County Board of
    Supervisors published notice that a hearing would occur on June 5, 2000, regarding the
    official county road system registry, as required by statute. See Miss. Code Ann. § 65-7-4(3)
    (Rev. 2012). The road registry designated which county roads were public and which were
    private. The hearing occurred on June 5, 2000, and the Board approved the designations on
    June 19, 2000. Mount Airy Plantation Road, a road .58 miles long, was included as a public
    road on the designation.
    ¶3.    Mount Airy Plantation Road dead ends into property owned by Seyfarth. The portion
    that traverses Seyfarth’s land provides access to only one other property, and that property
    has a deeded perpetual easement and right-of-way over the portion of the road that must be
    used to access it. Seyfarth alleged that the public’s use of the portion of the road that dead
    ends onto his property has created a nuisance. Deer guts were being dumped on his property,
    hunters have trespassed and even constructed deer stands on Seyfarth’s property, and his
    cattle have been shot and injured.
    ¶4.    In March 2014, Seyfarth twice approached the Board and asked that a portion of
    Mount Airy Plantation Road be removed from the county road system. Also in March 2014,
    several residents and landowners along Mount Airy Plantation Road signed a petition asking
    the Board to keep the road public.1 On July 18, 2016, Seyfarth appeared before the Board
    and requested that the Board abandon the portion of Mount Airy Plantation Road that
    1
    Only one of those landowners needs the portion of Mount Airy Plantation Road that
    is contained within Seyfarth’s property to access his property, and an easement for access
    exists.
    3
    encroaches on his property, declare a variance restricting public use of the portion of the
    road, take action to abate the nuisances to Seyfarth’s property caused by the road, and/or
    provide just compensation to Seyfarth for the encroachment on his property. There was
    testimony that the road had been maintained by the general public since the 1980s.
    Moreover, the other landowner using the road objected to its abandonment. The Board
    declined to abandon the portion of the road at issue, and it found that Seyfarth’s request for
    damages was untimely. Seyfarth filed a Petition for Bill of Exceptions and Other Relief in
    the Adams County Circuit Court, appealing the Board’s decision. The circuit court affirmed
    the Board’s decisions not to abandon the portion of the road and not to award damages.
    However, the circuit court noted that the Board did not address Seyfarth’s nuisance concerns
    and ordered “that the county be required to maintain the road in a reasonable manner so as
    to reasonably abate any nuisance caused by public use of the road, specifically including
    those cited and complained of by the Plaintiff.”
    ¶5.    Seyfarth appeals, arguing that 1) the court erred in affirming the Board’s decision not
    to abandon the road because no substantial evidence exists that the road is a “public road”
    and the Board should thus abandon the road, and 2) the Board’s decision was arbitrary and
    capricious. Seyfarth asks this Court to 1) reverse and remand the Board’s decision; 2)
    declare that the road was improperly and without legal notice designated a public road; 3)
    compel the Board to abandon the road; 4) compel the Board to declare a variance from use
    of the road, including restricting use from the general public and installing a gate at the point
    of access to Seyfarth’s property, and to take action to prevent the nuisances, including
    4
    stationing law enforcement continuously at the access point; and 5) order the board to
    provide just compensation to Seyfarth. The Board cross-appeals, arguing that the court’s
    order to abate the nuisance was beyond the circuit court’s authority.
    ANALYSIS
    1.     Standard of Review
    ¶6.    This Court does not disturb the decision of a board of supervisors unless the decision
    was not supported by substantial evidence, was arbitrary or capricious, was beyond the
    board’s scope or powers, or violated the constitutional or statutory rights of the aggrieved
    party. Hooks v. George Cty., 
    748 So. 2d 678
    , 680 (Miss. 1999). Substantial evidence is
    more than a mere scintilla of evidence.         
    Id. Additionally, because
    the Mississippi
    Constitution gives boards of supervisors “full jurisdiction” over roads, this Court gives
    substantial deference to board decisions regarding roads in which the board has discretion.
    See Covington Cty. v. Collins, 
    92 Miss. 330
    , 
    45 So. 854
    , 855 (1908).
    2.     Law Regarding County Roads
    ¶7.    The Mississippi Constitution places authority over county roads with the county board
    of supervisors. Miss. Const. art. 6, § 170. It provides that “[t]he board of supervisors [of
    each county] shall have full jurisdiction over roads, ferries, and bridges, to be exercised in
    accordance with such regulations as the legislature may prescribe.” 
    Id. The Legislature
    reaffirmed this jurisdiction, providing that “[t]he board of supervisors of each county shall
    have full jurisdiction over all matters relating to the public roads of the county, including the
    establishment, laying out, opening, abandonment, altering, changing, working and
    5
    maintaining of such roads . . . .” Miss. Code Ann. § 65-7-1(1) (Rev. 2012). The Legislature
    also mandated that “[a]ll public roads shall be kept open . . . .” Miss. Code Ann. § 65-7-3
    (Rev. 2012). The Legislature provides only limited exceptions to its mandate to keep all
    roads open: 1) the board may regulate the kinds of wheels that may be used on public roads,
    and may prohibit vehicles from using cleats or spikes on wheels; 2) in the event of inclement
    weather, floods, or other causes in which nonuse of a public road is necessary, a supervisor
    may prohibit use of the road or regulate the type of traffic that may be used on the road; 3)
    the board may protect its roads from unusual or uncommon use, including regulating
    maximum loads or weights, that is likely to injure or impair the roads’ usefulness as public
    highways; and 4) the board may close a road during its construction or repair. Miss. Code
    Ann. §§ 65-7-37, 65-7-43, 65-7-45, 65-7-53 (Rev. 2012).
    ¶8.    The Legislature also provides that the board of supervisors “may . . . declare any
    section of the county road system abandoned . . . .” Miss. Code Ann. § 65-7-121(1) (Rev.
    2012) (emphasis added). The board may abandon any section if it finds
    that one or more of the following circumstances are applicable to the section
    in question:
    (a) The section does not provide primary access to occupied properties;
    (b) Traffic on the section has for a period of at least ten (10) consecutive years
    been intermittent and of such low volume that no substantial public purpose
    is being served thereby;
    (c) The board of supervisors has, for a period of at least the previous five (5)
    consecutive years, not maintained such section as part of the county road
    system; or
    (d) For any reason, the public interest or convenience does not require the
    6
    section to remain open to the public or that it is in the public interest or
    convenience to close, vacate and abandon the section.
    Miss. Code Ann. § 65-7-121(1) (Rev. 2012).
    3.      Public Use
    ¶9.     Seyfarth’s primary argument on appeal is that substantial evidence of public use does
    not exist. Yet, the decision by the Board that Seyfarth appeals is the decision not to abandon
    the road. He did not appeal the Board’s initial decision to make the road public. The Board
    does not have to establish public use in a determination of whether to abandon a road; it must
    establish public use only when initially designating a road as public. Mount Airy Plantation
    Road was listed as public in the county road registry as evinced by the Board’s minutes in
    June 2000. Testimony indicated that it had been maintained by the public since the 1980s.
    And indeed, the Legislature noted that the intent of the registry was to memorialize already-
    existing public roads, not to create new ones. Miss. Code Ann. § 65-7-4.1 (Rev. 2012).
    Thus, the presumption is that Mount Airy Plantation Road was a public road prior to June
    2000.
    ¶10.    A person aggrieved by a decision of the board of supervisors of a county may appeal
    to the circuit court within ten days from the date of the decision. Miss. Code Ann. § 11-51-
    75 (Rev. 2012). At the latest, the Board decided that Mount Airy Plantation Road was public
    on June 19, 2000. Seyfarth filed his bill of exceptions with the circuit court on July 28, 2016.
    To the extent that Seyfarth appeals any decision regarding the public use or nature of Mount
    Airy Plantation Road, his appeal is out of time. The ten day time limit is mandatory and
    jurisdictional, and when it is not complied with, the appellate court lacks jurisdiction over
    7
    the appeal. Lowndes Cty. ex rel. Bd. of Supervisors v. McClanahan, 
    161 So. 3d 1052
    , 1056
    (Miss. 2015).
    4.     Abandonment
    ¶11.   To the extent Seyfarth argues that the Board failed to provide substantial evidence
    regarding its declining to abandon the road pursuant to Section 65-7-121, his argument is
    misplaced. Section 65-7-121 leaves the decision not to abandon a road entirely within the
    discretion of the board of supervisors. Miss. Code Ann. § 65-7-121(1) (Rev. 2012)
    (emphasis added) (The board of supervisors “may . . . declare any section of the county road
    system abandoned . . . .”). The factors listed provide for the procedure the board must follow
    if and when it does determine to abandon a road; they do not provide mandates for when a
    board should or must abandon a road. This Court has recognized that the statute provides
    the “procedure for abandoning a road.” 
    McClanahan, 161 So. 3d at 1056
    ; see also Valley
    Road Action Comm. v. Lauderdale Cty. Bd. of Supervisors, 
    97 So. 3d 1242
    , 1246 (Miss.
    Ct. App. 2012) (Section 65-7-121(1) “sets forth the requirements for a county board of
    supervisors to close, vacate, or abandon a public road.”). This is also illustrated by the
    statute itself, which provides that “any proceedings under this section shall be documented
    in the official record of the county road system in accordance with the requirements of
    Section 65-7-4.” Miss. Code Ann. § 65-7-121(6) (Rev. 2012) (emphases added). Section
    65-7-4 provides that “[c]hanges to the county road system shall be recorded on this map as
    soon as is reasonably possible.”     Miss. Code Ann. § 65-7-4(1) (Rev. 2012) (emphasis
    added). A decision not to abandon a public road does not change the county road system in
    8
    any way and would not need documentation on the road system record; thus it is clear that
    the procedures of this chapter are the requirements the county must follow in order to allow
    it to abandon a road, not mandates for when it must or should abandon a road.
    ¶12.   The only other way to find abandonment of a road is through a finding of disuse,
    which is informed by the law of adverse possession. McNeely v. Jacks, 
    526 So. 2d 541
    , 544
    (Miss. 1988). Seyfarth does not argue that the road has been abandoned through disuse. Nor
    does it appear from the record that he would be successful doing so. He and another
    landowner use the road, and the public uses the road for allegedly improper purposes. This
    Court has held that each of those factors alone can defeat a claim of disuse. 
    Id. at 545
    (“If
    a public road runs through the property of one and deadends on the property of another, and
    for ten years the latter (and persons acting on his behalf and with his permission) are the only
    ones to use the road, no abandonment occurs. . . . [T]he owner of the land on whose property
    the road deadends is as much as any other a member of the general public, as able in law to
    interrupt the period of prescription.”); Barrett v. Pilgrim, 
    317 So. 2d 382
    , 383 (Miss. 1975)
    (holding that the Court was without power to close a public road in private litigation without
    an order from the Board of Supervisors closing the road, and noting that “[m]ere non-user
    [sic] by a part or all the general public, or use by some members of the general public of a
    public road as a ‘lovers’ lane, whiskey cache or as a place for dumping garbage, will not
    constitute such an abandonment as to deprive it of its public character . . . .”).
    5.     Just Compensation
    ¶13.   When a landowner claims compensation for land taken for a public road, the
    9
    landowner must petition the board of supervisors “at the next meeting after the laying out of
    the road or at the meeting when the report thereof shall be returned . . . .” Miss. Code Ann.
    § 65-7-61 (Rev. 2012). At the latest, the public nature of the road was laid out in June 2000.
    Seyfarth filed his bill of exceptions in July 2016. Any claim for compensation under Section
    65-7-61 is untimely, and this Court lacks jurisdiction to review it. Seyfarth has not filed suit
    under the takings clause of the Mississippi Constitution. However, to the extent Seyfarth
    argues in his brief that he is entitled to just compensation under Mississippi Constitution,
    article 3, section 17, his claim is likewise untimely, as a three-year statute of limitations
    applies to actions brought under the Takings Clause of the Mississippi Constitution. City of
    Tupelo v. O’Callaghan, 
    208 So. 3d 556
    , 568 (Miss. 2017).
    6.     Abatement of Nuisances
    ¶14.   The Mississippi Constitution gives county boards of supervisors full jurisdiction over
    roads, subject only to the regulations prescribed by the Legislature. Miss. Const. art. 6, §
    170. The Legislature has required boards of supervisors to keep public roads open, subject
    only to limited exceptions, and it further prohibits obstruction of public roads. Miss. Code
    Ann. §§ 65-7-3, 65-7-7, 65-7-37, 65-7-43, 65-7-45, 65-7-53 (Rev. 2012); see also Op. Miss.
    Att’y Gen. 96-0421 (July 12, 1996). Seyfarth requests that the Board address his concerns
    by blocking public access to the public road, without citing any authority that would
    authorize the Board to do so. The Board does not have the authority to abate any nuisance
    by closing a public road to the public; its full jurisdiction over roads is subject to legislative
    regulations, which require that public roads be kept open and do not except situations in
    10
    which some of the public use the road to interfere with private property. Moreover, the
    sheriff of each county is charged with keeping the peace and enforcing the laws. Miss. Code
    Ann. § 19-25-67 (Rev. 2012). Seyfarth points to no authority that would allow the Board of
    Supervisors to compel law enforcement to continuously monitor the road. Further, “[i]t is
    within the sheriff’s discretion as to how to allocate and deploy the resources of his office.”
    Op. Miss. Att’y Gen. 2009-00747 (Mar. 5, 2010). Seyfarth offers no other methods by which
    the Board could address his concerns. The circuit court determined, without citation of
    authority, that the Board’s duty to “maintain” public roads includes “proper usage by the
    public.”2 Seyfarth offers no authority to support the proposition that the duty to maintain
    roads encompasses ensuring only “proper” usage, nor does he offer any explanation as to
    how “proper usage” may be defined. Moreover, “the method and extent to which each road
    is maintained is within the discretion of the board[,]” unless a statutory provision mandates
    a certain method. Op. Miss. Att’y Gen. 97-0136 (Mar. 7, 1997). Seyfarth points to no statute
    that requires the Board to reasonably abate any nuisance on private property allegedly caused
    by the public nature of a road. Thus, we reverse the circuit court’s order mandating that the
    county reasonably abate any nuisance and render judgment in favor of the Board on this
    issue. This holding does not preclude Seyfarth from petitioning the Board to employ means
    within its authority to address his concerns.3
    2
    Seyfarth’s concerns and the circuit court’s sympathy for them are certainly
    understandable; however, on the record that is before this Court, Seyfarth does not have an
    available remedy.
    3
    If the use of a road is “unreasonable, unusual, and dangerous to safe travel,” the
    board is within its power to stop the usage within legal means available to it. See Collins,
    11
    CONCLUSION
    ¶15.   Because the decision not to abandon the portion of Mount Airy Plantation Road at
    issue did not abuse the Board’s discretion, this Court affirms the Board’s decision and the
    circuit court’s order affirming the Board’s decision. No authority exists for the Board to
    abate any nuisances in the manners suggested by Seyfarth, nor does the circuit court suggest
    any legal manner in which the Board may abate any nuisances; thus, the circuit court’s order
    requiring that the Board reasonably abate any nuisances is reversed and rendered.
    ¶16.   AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED AND RENDERED IN PART.
    RANDOLPH, C.J., KITCHENS, P.J., COLEMAN, MAXWELL, BEAM,
    CHAMBERLIN, ISHEE AND GRIFFIS, JJ., 
    CONCUR. 45 So. at 855
    .
    12
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2018-CA-00217-SCT

Citation Numbers: 267 So. 3d 767

Filed Date: 4/18/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023