Brady v. Correll

97 S.W.2d 448, 20 Tenn. App. 224, 1936 Tenn. App. LEXIS 15
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 20, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 97 S.W.2d 448 (Brady v. Correll) 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
Brady v. Correll, 97 S.W.2d 448, 20 Tenn. App. 224, 1936 Tenn. App. LEXIS 15 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

- MeAMIS, J.

Henry Correll has appealed in error from a judgment of condemnation entered in the county court of Cocke county in favor of the petitioner below, R. C. Brady, here the defendant in error. The case was tried below before the county chairman and a jury, upon appeal from a jury of view finding, resulting in an adjudication of the right of petitioner, Brady, to condemn a right of way across the lands of defendant, Correll, and an award of $300 as damages for the land actually taken and incidental damages to the remainder of the lands of said Correll. For convenience we refer to the parties as .petitioner and defendant.

Section 2746 of the Code provides as follows:

“Any person owning any lands, ingress or egress to and from which is cut off or obstructed entirely from a public road or highway by the intervening lands of another, or who has no adequate and convenient outlet from said lands to a public road in the state, by reason of the intervening lands of another, are given the right to have an easement or right of way condemned and set aside for the benefit of such lands over and across such intervening lands or property. The chancery, circuit, and county courts, the latter *226 ■acting by and through the chairman or county judge, are given concurrent jurisdiction in such matters; and as many different owners of lands as may be so cut off or obstructed or deprived of adequate and convenient outlets may join together against any number of different owners of intervening lands, as may wish to have such easement or right of way so condemned and set aside to them over such intervening property and such joining shall not make such proceedings multifarious.”

The petitioner alleges that he is the owner of two tracts of land containing 250 acres and 17% acres, respectively, and that the defendant owns a tract of land containing 250 acres, contiguous to petitioner’s 17%-acre tract and separating it from petitioner’s main farm of 250 acres. This proceeding was instituted under the provisions of the Code section quoted above, it being the theory, later insisted upon and sustained by the court at the hearing, that there was no convenient and adequate means of ingress and egress to and from said 17%-acre tract except over the intervening lands of defendant.

The contention first made by defendant in this court is that the court erred in not confirming the report of the jury of view and in submitting the case to a trial jury. This contention proceeds upon the theory that a jury trial in the county court is unknown to the forms of law and that Code, section 2758 (which is a part of the act of 1921, chapter 75, from which section 2746 was codified), if given the construction of permitting such trials, would be unconstitutional.

Section 2746 expressly provides that the chancery, circuit, and county courts shall have concurrent jurisdiction of proceedings of this nature. Section 2758 expressly authorizes the right of either party to appeal from the finding of the jury of view and demand a trial before a jury to be summoned and impaneled by the court in the usual way.

This court is without jurisdiction to pass upon constitutional questions which may be controlling in the disposition of a ease. However, we are cited to no provision of the present Constitution which either expressly or impliedly inhibits the Legislature, by express enactment, from providing for a trial by jury in the county court. In the absence of any citation to a constitutional provision affecting such a-proceeding in the county court, we have jurisdiction and the case should not, upon the bare assertion that a constitutional question- is involved, be transferred to the Supreme Court. The assignments based upon the ground that a trial before the chairman and a jury was improperly allowed are overruled.

(1) Is the petitioner, upon the facts shown, entitled to condemn a right of way over the lands of defendant, and, (2) if so,.is -there *227 material evidence to support tbe finding of tbe jury that $300 represents adequate compensation for tbe land actually taken and incidental damages to tbe remainder of defendant’s lands?

Tbe record shows that tbe lands of defendant over wbicb tbe easement is sought to be condemned lie between tbe two tracts >of petitioner and that tbe 17%-aere tract is completely surrounded by tbe lands of defendant and Nolacbuckey river, so that it can only be reached by land by traversing some part of defendant’s farm. There is no question made that tbe route laid out by the jury of view is unsuitable or results in unnecessary damage and inconvenience to defendant. It is earnestly insisted, however, that petitioner could reach said lands by crossing tbe river by boat or ferry. While it is shown that this mode of reaching the land was at one time made use of, the proof shows that it was never satisfactory and that it was resorted to only because of necessity.

We think under these facts petitioner established his right to invoke the provisions of section 2746. We do not think it could be reasonably said that crossing by boat or ferry with machinery and products of the land would be adequate and convenient. It is not necessary that petitioner show that he has no outlet but only that he has no adequate and convenient one. Sorrell v. Wood, 8 Tenn. App., 84.

It is insisted that petitioner has not brought himself within the provisions of the Code for the reason that the right of way over the lands of defendant connects at neither termini with a public road. The statute was passed for the benefit of landowners whose lands are cut off from access to a public road, “by the intervening lands of another,” and petitioner’s right to condemn a right of way is not affected by the fact that after leaving the right of way he must cross other lands of his own to reach a public road. The purpose and effect of condemning the right of way across the lands of defendant is to make available to the 17%-acre tract access to a public road, and this is accomplished just as effectively as if the condemned right of way terminated immediately at a public road.

As to the amount of the award, we think there is material evidence to support the finding of the jury. It is true all of the witnesses, who qualified as experts, placed a considerably higher estimate upon defendant's damages than the amount awarded by the trial jury. However, the record shows that some, if not all of them, were under the impression that defendant would be forced •to fence the right of way instead of maintaining gates at the ends

thereof, and that stock would thereby be cut off from water except for a distance of a few rods at one end of the right of way. *228 They admit that with these items eliminated the damages to defendant’s property would' be reduced.

Under section 2746, if petitioner had alleged and proved that it was necessary to have the right of way free of the obstruction of gates across it in order to obtain an adequate and convenient outlet, considering the nature and extent of travel over it, we have no doubt that he could have secured such a right of way; and, in that case, the hypotheses upon which the witnesses based their estimate of damages would have justified their conclusions.

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Bluebook (online)
97 S.W.2d 448, 20 Tenn. App. 224, 1936 Tenn. App. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brady-v-correll-tennctapp-1936.