Billy Culp v. Billie Grinder

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 10, 2003
DocketM2002-01512-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Billy Culp v. Billie Grinder (Billy Culp v. Billie Grinder) 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
Billy Culp v. Billie Grinder, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE April 10, 2003 Session

BILLY CULP AND LOIS CULP v. BILLIE GRINDER AND HELEN GRINDER

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Wayne County No. 10503 Jim T. Hamilton, Chancellor

No. M2002-01512-COA-R3-CV - Filed June 25, 2003

The Culps brought suit against their neighbors, the Grinders, for removal of a septic tank solid line located on their property. The Culps argued that the ten foot easement reserved by the subdivision for “utilities” did not include personal septic tanks. The trial court dismissed the suit and found that the septic tank solid line placement was a type of “utility” and was within the ten foot easement; further, the court found no damages had been suffered by the Culps. We affirm the decision of the trial court.

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

PATRICIA J. COTTRELL, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which WILLIAM B. CAIN , JUDGE and CAROL L. MCCOY , SP . J., joined.

W. Andrew Yarbrough, Waynesboro, Tennessee, for the appellants, Billy Culp and Lois Culp.

George Gray, Waynesboro, Tennessee, for the appellees, Billie Grinder and Helen Grinder.

OPINION

This suit arose when Billy and Lois Culp filed suit against their neighbors, Billie and Helen Grinder, who live across the street, seeking the removal of a septic tank solid line which the Culps claimed encroached on their property to the extent that it was causing damage to their property. The Culps sought only the removal of the solid line.

In July of 1989, Ronie and Ines Lopez purchased Lot 2, Section 3 of the Beechview Recreation Development (“Beechview”), a subdivision which also had campsites and recreational facilities. In May of 1991, J.B. and Mildred Hinson, the owners of Lot 2, Section 2,1 were conveyed a Perpetual Field Line Easement, granting a perpetual easement on Lot 2, Section 3 of Beechview Recreation Development, and in February of 1992, Beechview conveyed to J.B. Hinson and Tommy Hickerson a Perpetual Field Line Easement. Both easements were created for the purpose of installing and maintaining a field line to service the septic tank on Lot 2, Section 2 of Beechview and were properly recorded.2 The septic tank system was constructed. The Grinders purchased Lot 2, Section 2, from the Hinsons in 1999, and the Culps purchased Lot 2, Section 3 in 1997.

In August of 1999, the Culps brought suit against the Grinders. The suit sought removal of the septic tank pipeline which begins in the Grinders’ front yard, runs under the road, and then proceeds approximately one foot inside the western boundary of the Culps’ property for some distance before branching off onto unrelated property. The Culps alleged that Beechview had no authority to grant the easement and that the Grinders had not been using the property for the requisite amount of time to establish adverse possession. In making their request for relief, the Culps acknowledged that Beechview had granted Perpetual Field Line easements to the prior owner of the Grinder property for the specific purpose of running the solid line between the two properties. The Culps also acknowledged that Beechview granted the Perpetual Field Line easement pursuant to Article V, paragraph 22, of the development’s Declaration of Conditions, Covenants and Restrictions, (“Declaration”) which reserves to itself a ten-foot easement around the perimeter of every lot for the purpose of installing and maintaining utilities and drainage. That provision states, in pertinent part:

Declarant [Beechview] for itself, its successors, assigns and licensees, reserves ten (10) foot easements parallel to all property lines through and upon said land for the installation of utilities and for drainage and the perpetual maintenance thereof. Declarant for itself, its successors, assigns, and licensees, also reserves the right to install and operate electric and telephone lines, poles and appurtenances thereto, culverts and drainage ditches . . . . Declarant for itself, successors, assigns and licensees, also reserves the right to locate and install drains where it deems necessary and to cause or permit drainage of surface waters over/and through said land.

With regard to septic tanks and sewage disposal, Article III, paragraph 18 of the Declarations provides, in pertinent part:

1 Lot 2 , Sectio n 2, and Lo t 2, Sec tion 3 are directly acro ss the street from o ne ano ther.

2 In 1991, Mr. Jack Davidson, an employee with the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation testified at trial that the p revious owners of the Grinders’ property (the Hinsons) applied for a permit to install a septic system. Mr. Davidson told the previous owners that an easement would be required because there was an insufficient amount of soil to put a septic tank drain field on the lot, and he had to go somewhere else to install the field line with a solid line. As a result, Beechview executed the Perpetual Field Line easement at issue. The Lopezes were not informed of the ea sement.

-2- Owners will be required to obtain a permit for the installation of a septic tank from the Wayne County Health Department. Every sewage disposal system shall be of the type approved or recommended by the Tennessee or local health departments, and shall be maintained by the owner at all times in a sanitary condition and in strict accordance with applicable state and local sanitation laws and regulations . . . .

In the event declarant causes to be installed a sewage treatment unit for the general use of the lots in any subdivision, the owners of said shall be required to tap on to said sewer system for a fee of $750 and use of the septic systems within the subdivision shall cease, provided however, that this paragraph shall not be construed as an absolute obligation on the part of declarant or representation that such a sewer treatment package shall ever be put in place.

On October 6, 2000, the Grinders filed a third-party complaint against Beechview.3 At the time the property was purchased, Mr. Culp knew that there was a ten foot easement surrounding the property for utilities and drainage. At trial, however, Mr. Culp testified that he was not aware that there were Perpetual Field Line Easements within the ten foot easement even though the easements were properly recorded at the time the Culps received their deed. The Culps also testified that the solid line was leaking. As proof, Mr. Culp testified that dried soap suds appear on the property, along with mud and water, and that the grass is real green along the solid line. The trial court found the testimony of Mr. Culp not credible on his claim that the septic line was leaking onto his property.

During the trial, Mr. Jack Davidson with the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation testified that he went to the Culps’ property on June 14, 2001, to investigate the Culps’ complaint of a leak. He found no evidence of such.4 The only water that he found near the property appeared to be in a temporary hole that an employee of Beechview had dug with a backhoe.

The Grinders offered additional explanations for the wetness on the Culps’ property. First, they pointed out at trial that the area is in a flood plain and that the Tennessee River does occasionally flood. Moreover, the Culps’ property is flat and at the bottom of a hill.

After the bench trial, the trial court entered an order dismissing the Culps’ complaint and making the following findings:

The Plaintiffs do not seek money damages, rather they want the Defendants to move the solid sewage line which runs from Defendants’ property across Beechview Dive from Plaintiffs’ property, to the line between Plaintiffs’ property and the property of Levis Ferrell which is adjacent to Plaintiffs’ property.

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Bluebook (online)
Billy Culp v. Billie Grinder, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/billy-culp-v-billie-grinder-tennctapp-2003.