Arrowood v. Williams

586 S.W.2d 131, 1979 Tenn. App. LEXIS 331
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 19, 1979
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 586 S.W.2d 131 (Arrowood v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arrowood v. Williams, 586 S.W.2d 131, 1979 Tenn. App. LEXIS 331 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

EWELL, Judge.

Plaintiffs below, hereinafter referred to as Arrowood, on September 22, 1958, purchased two acres of real estate located in the Fourth Civil District of Washington County, Tennessee. The east boundary of the tract was also the lower west boundary of a tract then owned by Dr. Arthur J. Willis. The original fence separating the tracts was constructed in the fall of 1943 or the spring of 1944. In 1962 Arrowood constructed across the entire eastern portion of his tract another fence approximately parallel to and from ten to thirteen feet west of the original fence in order to drive cattle between the two fences in moving them from pasture to water. On November 10, 1972, Dr. Willis sold his tract to the defendants below, hereinafter referred to as Williams; and on or about March 24, 1977, Williams removed the original fence claiming that his lower west boundary, being the east boundary of Arrowood, was along the fence constructed by Arrowood in 1962.

Arrowood insisted that his tract extended east to the line along which the original fence had been constructed in 1943-1944. Williams insisted that the tract of Arro-wood extended only to the 1962 fence. The area in dispute consists of a strip of land extending 222.5 feet north and south and from ten feet two inches to thirteen feet one inch east and west. Arrowood sued in Chancery requesting (1) an order restraining Williams from trespassing, (2) a mandatory injunction requiring Williams to restore the original fence, and (3) damages occasioned by the removal of the fence. Williams answered admitting removal of the fence but insisting that the common boundary was along the westerly fence still standing. The Chancellor found for Arro-wood establishing the boundary along the line of the original fence removed by Williams and ordering Williams to rebuild the fence in its original location with the provision that Arrowood have judgment against Williams in the amount of $325.00 in the event the fence was not rebuilt in 30 days.

Williams appealed filing four assignments and eight sub-assignments of error. The assignments and sub-assignments raise four basic issues determinative of this appeal. We will address these issues separately.

Williams insists that this is an ejectment suit and that Arrowood cannot prevail because he failed to deraign title to a common source under which both parties claim or to a grant from the State of Tennessee or the State of North Carolina. The Chancellor treated this suit as a boundary line dispute under T.C.A. 16-606, 16-607; and we concur in this action.

The material portions of the complaint are as follows:

Plaintiffs and defendants are residents of the 4th Civil District of Washington County, Tennessee. Plaintiffs purchased property adjoining the defendants almost 20 years ago, their deed having been of record for over seven years.
Said property of plaintiffs being more particularly described as follows, to-wit:
“Beginning at a post, A. J. Willis’ corner; with his line N. 22½ W. 222½ feet to a post; thence with a dividing line this day made, S. 58 W. 365 feet to a locust in the margin of a County Road; with the same S. 26½ E. 236 feet to a post; thence N. 57 E. 356 feet to the BEGINNING, containing 2 acres, more or less.”
Said deed being of record in the Register’s Office for Washington County at Jonesboro, Tennessee in Deed Book 319, page 565 and which property is enclosed by a fence.
There is one common line between the properties of the plaintiffs and defendants, same beginning at a post, A. J. Willis’ corner with his line N. 22¾⅞ W. 222½ feet to a post.
[133]*133The defendants recently took down this fence over the protest of the plaintiffs and the defendants are now claiming that they own the property of the plaintiffs a distance of 222½ feet and varying in width ten to fourteen feet. The defendants made no claim to this property until recently.
Plaintiffs allege that they are entitled to a restraining order against the defendants restraining them from encroaching on their property or they will suffer irreparable damage and injury and likewise they are entitled to injunctive process requiring him to rebuild the line fence to its original status between the properties and that the defendants are liable for all damages occasioned by the wilful and malicious act and conduct of the defendant Williams.

The complaint concludes with a prayer for a restraining order, a mandatory injunction, damages and general relief.

The essence of the defense offered by Williams is set forth in that portion of the answer which follows:

(I)t is admitted that there is a common line between the properties of the plaintiffs and the defendants, but the line is not located where the plaintiffs claim that the line is located. There were two fences running parallel and about ten feet apart which provided a lane for access to plaintiffs’ land. The westerly fence line is the line between the properties of the parties, and it is still standing. Defendant Raymond Williams removed the easterly fence line which was and is located upon defendants’ land and which fence was not the division line between the properties of the parties.

In the course of the cross-examination of plaintiff, George Arrowood, by the attorney for Williams, the following exchange occurred:

“Q. . . . Now actually, the two as you testified here, there are two fences along there, and the two fences made a little lane for this distance that you’re disputing, isn’t that right, Sir?
“A. Yeah, that’s right.
“Q. Two fences. So the question is which fence is the line? That’s what the dispute is about, isn’t it?
“A. That part of it up there is, yeah.”

The foregoing succinctly summarizes the essence of this litigation which, in fact, is a boundary line dispute. It follows that under T.C.A. 16-607 Arrowood did not have the burden of proving a complete deraignment of title from a state grant or a common source but was only required to prove clearly that he was the true owner of the land as described in the complaint. Excepting the location of the east boundary, this was admitted by Williams in the answer. Further, the proof establishes the fact that both tracts were owned by Vergie French Poore and husband, R. W. Poore, and sold by them to separate parties at public auction in 1943. Therefore, title to the separate tracts was in fact deraigned to a common source. This deraignment with respect to the Williams tract was established formally by the filing of copies of the legal instruments constituting the chain of title. With respect of the Arrowood property, the deraignment was proven by the uncontro-verted testimony of witnesses.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
586 S.W.2d 131, 1979 Tenn. App. LEXIS 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arrowood-v-williams-tennctapp-1979.