Arvell Ezell v. Alvin E. Duncan

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 15, 2004
DocketM2003-00081-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Arvell Ezell v. Alvin E. Duncan (Arvell Ezell v. Alvin E. Duncan) 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
Arvell Ezell v. Alvin E. Duncan, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE May 4, 2004 Session

ARVELL EZELL, ET AL. v. ALVIN E. DUNCAN, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Perry County No. 3902 & 3903 Timothy L. Easter, Judge

No. M2003-00081-COA-R3-CV - Filed December 15, 2004

This appeal involves a boundary line dispute between neighbors. The trial court found in favor of the plaintiffs’ boundary line description, and defendants appeal. We affirm the decision of the trial court.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed

PATRICIA J. COTTRELL, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which WILLIAM C. KOCH , JR., P.J., M.S., and WILLIAM B. CAIN , J., joined.

Bobby A. McGee, Linden, Tennessee, for the appellants Alvin E. Duncan and Wife, Hazel Duncan.

Douglas Thompson Bates, III, Centerville, Tennessee, for the appellees, Arvell Ezell and Lance Duncan.

MEMORANDUM OPINION1

Neighbors Arvell Ezell and Alvin and Hazel Duncan share a common border on three tracts of land. The parties refer to the two Ezell tracts as the Home Tract and the Thompson Tract, and the Duncans’ tract is simply called the Duncan tract. Mr. Ezell is the owner of the Home Tract, east of

1 Tenn. R. Ct. App. 10 states:

This Court, with the concurrence of all judges participating in the case, may affirm, reverse or modify the actions of the trial court by memorandum opinion when a formal opinion would have no precedential value. W hen a case is decided by memorandum opinion it shall be designated “MEMORANDUM OPINION,” shall not be published, and shall not be cited or relied on for any reason in any unrelated case. the Duncan property, and a co-owner with Lance Duncan to be of the Thompson Tract, south of the Duncan property.2

In 1984, Mr. Ezell hired Thomas White to prepare a survey plat to establish the exact common boundary line. Key to the determination of the boundary line was the location of a “white oak with hickory pointers” which is referenced in all the deeds and was used by Mr. White to establish the common boundary line for the three tracts. Once the White survey was complete and the Duncans declined to offer a viable alternative,3 Mr. Ezell recorded the White survey in the Perry County Register’s Office on December 19, 1985.

In 1997, when Mr. Ezell began cutting timber on the Thompson Tract on what he believed to be his property as established by the White survey, the Duncans hired F & M Surveying to conduct another survey. Not liking the result, Mr. Duncan took it upon himself to personally survey his property with a compass. While conducting his own survey, Mr. Duncan began painting a new boundary line, cutting down trees supposedly blazed by Mr. Ezell,4 and using them as posts for his new boundary which shifted the common boundary to the east in his favor, adding fifteen acres to the Duncan Tract when compared with the White survey.

I. TRIAL PROCEEDINGS

In September 1998, Mr. Ezell and Mr. Lance Duncan filed suit against the Duncans in an effort to settle the parties’ boundary line dispute. Specifically, plaintiffs requested the line between the parties be set in accordance with the White survey. The Duncans counterclaimed, requesting the court to establish the true boundary and to compensate them for the timber improperly cut on their property by Mr. Ezell. Following the filing of the lawsuit, the Duncans hired yet another surveyor, Devon Acheson, to survey the disputed boundary line. Mr. Duncan led the Acheson crew himself during the survey. The Acheson survey disagreed with the White survey’s boundary line placement. The disagreements in the two surveys amounted to a dispute over roughly fifteen acres.

Following a bench trial spanning three days, the trial court found the White survey more credible than the Acheson survey. The trial court also rejected the Duncans’ argument that the parties had acquiesced that the boundary lines were controlled by the steel fence posts put in place in the 1940's by Mr. Duncan and Mr. Harper. The trial court ordered the Register of Deeds to correct

2 Lance Duncan died during the pendency of this matter, and his heirs have been substituted as parties.

3 Mr. W hite invited the Duncans to a meeting to discuss his work while still in progress. Throughout the process, Mr. Ezell encouraged the Duncans to hire their own surveyor so the parties could reach an amicable agreement regarding their common boundary. Instead, the Duncans offered a partial survey conducted by a Mr. Beasley and Mr. Lawson.

4 The trial court found Mr. Ezell’s testimony “unimpeached and credible” concerning his denial of blazing or marking trees along the disputed boundary line. The trial court found that if any trees cut were painted, they had been painted by Mr. Duncan over the years during his homemade surveys and had contributed to the confusion.

2 the plats at issue to conform to the White survey in favor of the Ezells. The trial court made specific factual findings which set out the evidence and the history of the dispute:

1. Alvin E. Duncan (Duncan) obtained interest in his property (Duncan property) by inheritance in 1948. This property is more particularly described by deed filed on November 23, 1962, with the Perry County Register’s Office, describing the property as being situated on the waters of Brush creek in the Third Civil District of Perry County, Tennessee, to-wit:

“Beginning at a set rock with white oak pointers; thence east 88 poles to a stake in a hollow at Dena Harper’s southwest corner; thence north 10 degrees west, 101 poles to a white oak with a hickory pointer;ptoien ee;noetn 10 d sgre0 s olestt,o1a 2 oro eeatm a stakeb netch field; thence _____ h ntcr thr hce wee t 1 e p we 4 h p nlb s o with a ie he 15 degrees east, 35 poles to a black walnut near the foot of the hill; thence ____ 10 degrees east, 8 poles to a hickory; thence north 10 degrees west, 217 poles to a chestnut, with a hickory pointer at the Pleasantville Road; thence west with the meanders of the said road, 103 poles to a chestnut oak; which is the northeast corner of Maye Qualls line; thence south with the meanders of the said Maye Qualls line to the beginning, containing ______ acres, more or less.”

(Trial Exhibit 1);

2. Plaintiff Arvell Ezell (Ezell) obtained interest in property adjoining the eastern boundary of Duncan property in May 1957, from Olen Harper and wife. This property is described in a deed filed on May 6, 1957, with the Perry County Register’s Office, as being property situated in the Third (old 4th) Civil District of Perry County, Tennessee, on the waters of Brush Creek to-wit:

“Tract No. 1: Beginning at a stake with beech pointer near the old school house on the bank of Brush Creek; thence south 30 degrees west, 10 poles to a stake; thence north 85 degrees west, 8 poles to a mulberry tree; thence north 65 degrees west, 10 poles to a stake; thence north 40 degrees west, 27 poles to Beulah Duncan’s line; thence south 15 degrees west, 9 poles to a stake on hill; thence south 10 degrees east, 142 poles to a hornbeam with beech pointers at the branch; thence east 10 poles to a white oak with hickory pointers; thence south 10 degrees east, 101 poles to a stake in Eli Duncan’s north boundary line; thence east 42 poles to a stake in Gibbon’s line; thence north 5 degrees east, with Gibbon’s line 94 poles to a stake in Qualls’ line: thence north 24 degrees west, with Qualls’ line 12 poles to a stake on ridge; thence south 82 degrees west, 8 poles to a white oak; thence west 46 poles to a large chestnut stump, J. W. Qualls’ corner; thence north 7 degrees west, 12 poles to a black oak; thence

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Arvell Ezell v. Alvin E. Duncan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arvell-ezell-v-alvin-e-duncan-tennctapp-2004.