Audie Lowe v. Bill Goad

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 29, 2001
DocketE2000-02056-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Audie Lowe v. Bill Goad (Audie Lowe v. Bill Goad) 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
Audie Lowe v. Bill Goad, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE March 29, 2001 Session

AUDIE LOWE, ET AL. v. BILL GOAD, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Scott County No. 8289 Billy Joe White, Chancellor

FILED JUNE 22, 2001

No. E2000-02056-COA-R3-CV

Audie Lowe, Hilda Lowe, and Sheilda Mills (“Plaintiffs”) brought this boundary line suit against members of their family, Bill Goad, Mattie Goad, Eugene Olmstead, and Mae Olmstead (“Defendants”). Plaintiffs allege their predecessor-in-title, Arlie Overton, had an agreement with Defendants’ predecessor-in-title, Sherman Overton, that a fence (“Fence”) would serve as the boundary line. Plaintiffs’ deed does not include the disputed area up to the fence. After a trial, the Trial Court dismissed Plaintiffs’ complaint, holding that the Fence was not the boundary line by agreement or acquiescence. Plaintiffs appeal. We affirm.

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

D. MICHAEL SWINEY, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which HERSCHEL P. FRANKS , J., and CHARLES D. SUSANO, JR., J., joined.

Stephen A. Marcum, Huntsville, Tennessee, for the Appellants, Audie Lowe, Hilda Lowe, and Sheila Mills.

Johnny V. Dunaway, LaFollette, Tennessee, for the Appellees, Bill Goad, Mattie Goad, Eugene Olmstead and Mattie Olmstead. OPINION

Background

This matter involves a boundary line dispute between family members over an area consisting of approximately 9 acres (“Disputed Area”) located in Scott County. The Disputed Area is a wooded, mountainous area located adjacent to another parcel of property that is primarily pastureland. The parties to this litigation are the children and grandchildren of Sherman Overton and their spouses. Sherman is the father of Arlie Overton, Arvil Overton, Mae Olmstead and Mattie Goad.1 The Plaintiffs are Arlie’s daughters, Sheilda Mills and Hilda Lowe, and Hilda Lowe’s husband, Audie Lowe. The Defendants are Sherman’s daughters, Mattie Goad and Mae Olmstead, and their spouses, Bill Goad and Eugene Olmstead.

In 1942, Arvil purchased two parcels of property near his father’s farm in Scott County. Thereafter, in 1962, Arvil sold a portion of this land to his father, Sherman, and the rest to his brother, Arlie. Sherman, who died in 1980, is the Defendants’ predecessor-in-title. Arlie is the Plaintiffs’ predecessor-in-title. The parcels encompass pastureland and the Disputed Area and were separated by an old fence (“Fence”) which was replaced by Arlie and Arvil sometime near the time of the transfer. By deposition, Arvil testified that his father wanted the pastureland for himself and wanted Arlie to have the wooded, mountainous area. Accordingly, Arvil sold the parcels to Sherman and Arlie. Arvil, however, admitted that he did not change the legal description in the deeds that he received when he purchased the two parcels in 1942. The deed that Sherman received from Arvil apparently did not state the amount of acreage in his parcel, but Arvil testified that he sold Sherman between 8 and 10 acres. Arlie’s deed showed that he received 25 acres from Arvil.

In 1984, Arlie deeded his 25 acre parcel to his son, Dennis. In 1985, Dennis deeded the 25 acres to Plaintiffs. In 1998, Plaintiffs filed this Complaint for Declaratory Judgment, alleging that they were the owners of the Disputed Area under the theories of adverse possession and prescriptive easement. Plaintiffs agreed, at trial, to dismiss their adverse possession claim but proceeded under the theory that the Fence was the boundary line by agreement or acquiescence between Arlie and Sherman.2 Arlie, Arvil and the Defendants provided testimony at trial via deposition only.

The record on appeal shows that Arlie and Arvil testified that the Fence was the boundary line and that Arlie and Arvil restricted their use of the land to their respective sides of the Fence. On the other hand, Defendants testified that they never knew the location of the boundary line and that Arlie’s and Sherman’s use of the property was not restricted to one side of the Fence or the other. It is, however, undisputed that Plaintiffs have no deed covering the Disputed Area. It

1 For clarity’s sake and to minimize confusion, we refer to Sherma n Overto n and his two sons, Arlie and Arvil, by their first name s only.

2 The record on appeal makes no mention of the disposition of Plaintiffs’ remaining alternative claim of prescriptive easement.

-2- also is undisputed that in early 1999, less than one month after Plaintiffs filed their complaint, Arlie gave a warranty deed (“1999 Warranty Deed”) to Defendants covering the disputed area. Additionally, one of the Defendants, Mattie Goad, testified that approximately two years prior to the instant litigation, Arlie asked some of the family members to give the Disputed Area to him via a quit claim deed.

Moreover, sometime prior to this lawsuit, a partition action (“Partition Action”) regarding Sherman’s farm was brought between Sherman’s children. The record on appeal in this matter provides sketchy information regarding the Partition Action and does not contain any pleadings or a judgment from the Partition Action. The Trial Court, however, in its Opinion, found that a consent judgment in the Partition Action had been entered between the parties in which Arlie and Arvil participated. The consent judgment and a corresponding deed placed the Disputed Area into Sherman’s property.

At trial, each side presented expert witness testimony from land surveyors. Both surveyors agreed that Plaintiffs’ deed does not cover the Disputed Area. Plaintiffs’ surveyor, Richard Reece (“Reece”), testified that the calls of the deeds involved did not close but that he located the 25 acre plot that is covered in the deed that Plaintiffs received from Dennis. Reece testified that he examined the Fence and found that it skirts three sides of the Disputed Area and had been built on Arlie’s side instead of Sherman’s side. Reece agreed that its appearance was consistent with a fence that had been standing for 30 years but that it had been maintained.

Defendants’ surveyor, Jerry Crutchfield (“Crutchfield”), performed two surveys. The first survey (“First Survey”) apparently was prepared for the earlier Partition Action and resulted in a finding that the Disputed Area belonged to Arlie. Like Plaintiffs’ surveyor, Crutchfield testified that the calls of the deeds involved did not close and further testified that most of the landmarks or points were no longer on the property. After submitting the First Survey to the court in the Partition Action, Crutchfield received a telephone call from a third-party who advised Crutchfield about a point that had been missed in the First Survey.3 Using this point, Crutchfield re-surveyed (“Second Survey”) and concluded that Arlie’s property did not include the Disputed Area. In explaining his conflicting findings, Crutchfield testified that the First Survey was a mistake and that he felt more comfortable with the Second Survey. Moreover, Crutchfield reviewed the 1999 Warranty Deed that Arlie had given to Defendants and concluded that it covered the Disputed Area.

The Trial Court, in its Judgment, dismissed Plaintiffs’ Complaint and found that Defendants were the owners of the Disputed Area. In its Opinion, which was incorporated into the Judgment, the Trial Court held that it did not give great weight to Arlie’s testimony because Arlie testified that he had difficulty with his memory since he had suffered a stroke. The Trial Court further held that since Plaintiffs had no deed to the Disputed Area, their only claim was based upon the parties’ predecessors’ alleged agreement regarding the boundary line. Citing Arlie’s transfer of

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Bluebook (online)
Audie Lowe v. Bill Goad, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/audie-lowe-v-bill-goad-tennctapp-2001.