Betty J. Collins v. David Collins

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 8, 1998
Docket03A01-9708-CH-00326
StatusPublished

This text of Betty J. Collins v. David Collins (Betty J. Collins v. David Collins) 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
Betty J. Collins v. David Collins, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE, AT KNOXVILLE FILED _______________________________________________________ May 8, 1998 ) BETTY J. COLLINS, ET AL, ) Hamblen County Chancery Court Cecil Crowson, Jr. ) No. 96-99 Appellate C ourt Clerk Plaintiffs/Appellants. ) ) VS. ) C.A. No. 03A01-9708-CH-00326 ) DAVID COLLINS, ) ) Defendant/Appellee. ) ) ______________________________________________________________________________

From the Chancery Court of Hamblen County at Morristown. Honorable Thomas R. Frierson, II, Chancellor

Kelley Hinsley, Morristown, Tennessee, Attorney for Plaintiffs/Appellants.

C. Dwaine Evans, EVANS & BEIER, Morristown, Tennessee Attorney for Defendant/Appellee.

OPINION FILED:

AFFIRMED AND REMANDED

FARMER, J.

CRAWFORD, P.J., W.S.: (Concurs) HIGHERS, J.: (Concurs) Plaintiffs Betty J. Collins, Panther Park Missionary Baptist Church, and six Church

trustees appeal the trial court’s final judgment which established the boundary line between the

parties’ respective properties. We affirm the trial court’s judgment based on our conclusion that the

evidence does not preponderate against the trial court’s finding that an existing fence row represents

the boundary line between the properties.

Betty Collins and the Church own separate parcels of real property immediately

northwest of real property owned by Defendant/Appellee David Collins. All of the parcels originally

were part of the Pence Collins Estate. After Pence Collins died, his estate was partitioned among

his three sons, Clarence, Bill, and David. This partition was accomplished in 1967 pursuant to a

survey performed by P.P. (Pete) Neblett. Pursuant to the 1967 Neblett survey, the original partition

deeds indicated that the boundary line between Clarence Collins’ and David Collins’ respective

properties was marked by a pin or a stake in the center of a gravel road. The gravel road since has

been paved and now is known as Cameron Road.

In 1971, Clarence Collins and his wife, Appellant Betty Collins, deeded a portion of

their property to the Panther Creek Baptist Church. In describing the property conveyed, the deed

to Panther Creek Baptist Church relied upon the 1967 survey performed by Pete Neblett. In 1975,

Clarence and Betty Collins deeded the same tract of land to a successor entity known as Panther Park

Missionary Baptist Church. Again, the deed referred to the 1967 Neblett survey.

In 1992, Clarence Collins conveyed a portion of his property to his brother, Appellee

David Collins, because David Collins wanted to increase the width and depth of his property by an

additional sixty-five feet. The quitclaim deed executed by Clarence Collins referred to a survey

performed that same year by William Shockley, a registered land surveyor commissioned by David

Collins. The survey included the property already owned by David Collins and the additional sixty-

five feet being acquired. As a result of the various real estate transactions which had taken place

over the years, David Collins’ property now shared a common boundary with property owned by

Clarence and Betty Collins and property owned by the Church. In performing his survey, therefore,

Shockley was required to determine the location of the common boundary line. When Shockley performed his survey in 1992, he could not reconcile his field

observations and his calculations with the 1967 survey performed by Pete Neblett. After performing

various calculations, Shockley realized that the 1967 Neblett survey contained some degree of error

because the survey did not close properly, although Shockley could not pinpoint the precise source

of the error. Accordingly, in performing his own survey, Shockley relied not only upon the 1967

survey but upon his field observations, his calculations, and his review of the relevant property

deeds. Some of Shockley’s observations included an iron pin and a post which served as corner

markers of David Collins’ property. Shockley acknowledged that, if these corner markers were

wrong, then his entire survey would be incorrect. Nevertheless, after examining the 1967 Neblett

survey, the property deeds, and the physical evidence, as well as performing the required

calculations, Shockley concluded that the corner markers were correctly located and, further, that the

boundary line between the properties was marked by an existing fence row which had grown up over

the years.

When he performed his survey, Shockley marked the boundaries of David Collins’

property with iron pins and bright orange flags. At that time, neither Clarence Collins nor

representatives of the Church challenged Shockley’s placements of the flags. This boundary dispute

did not arise until after the death of Clarence Collins in 1993.

Contending that David Collins wrongfully had encroached upon their properties by

a distance of approximately ten feet, Betty Collins, the Church, and the Church trustees filed a

complaint to establish the parties’ common boundary line. At trial, the Plaintiffs/Appellants sought

to show that the 1992 Shockley survey was in error and that the boundary line between the parties’

respective properties was marked by a pin or stake in the center of Cameron Road as indicated on

the 1967 Neblett survey. At the conclusion of the bench trial, however, the trial court ruled in favor

of David Collins and found that the common boundary line was the old fence row as shown on the

1992 Shockley survey. Accordingly, the trial court entered a judgment establishing the existing

fence row as the boundary line.

The Appellants now contend that the trial court erred in establishing the common

boundary line in accordance with the 1992 Shockley survey because (1) Shockley’s survey was based on a corner marker which was placed by David Collins rather than by a previous surveyor, and

(2) lay witnesses testified that the old fence row was not the common boundary line.

We conclude that both of these arguments are without merit. It is true that David

Collins admitted personally placing one of the corner markers upon which Shockley relied in

performing his survey. Collins testified, however, that he drove the iron pipe into the ground within

one inch of the stake placed by Neblett and that he accomplished this feat in 1967 shortly after

Neblett completed his survey. Moreover, Shockley’s survey was not dependent upon the location

of the iron pipe which David Collins placed in the ground. In performing his survey, Shockley also

relied on other field observations, as well as his own calculations, the property deeds, and the 1967

Neblett survey.

As for the lay witnesses who testified that the old fence row was not the recognized

common boundary line, we note that other lay witnesses testified to the contrary. Wiley Willie

Williams, the former pastor of the Church’s predecessor, Panther Creek Baptist Church, testified that

when Clarence Collins deeded the property to the church, he told Williams that the old fence row

was the property’s boundary line. David Collins also testified that the old fence row was the

recognized boundary line between the properties.

Inasmuch as this case was tried by the court below sitting without a jury, our review

of the trial court’s judgment is governed by the Tennessee Rules of Appellate Procedure, which

provide that, in civil actions, the appellate court’s review of the trial court’s findings of fact “shall

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Related

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