Charles w. McKinney, a resident of Smith County, Tennessee v. Smith County, Tennessee, a county duly constituted by the State of Tennessee

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 5, 1999
DocketM1998-00074-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Charles w. McKinney, a resident of Smith County, Tennessee v. Smith County, Tennessee, a county duly constituted by the State of Tennessee (Charles w. McKinney, a resident of Smith County, Tennessee v. Smith County, Tennessee, a county duly constituted by the State of Tennessee) 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.

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Charles w. McKinney, a resident of Smith County, Tennessee v. Smith County, Tennessee, a county duly constituted by the State of Tennessee, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE,

FILED November 5, 1999

Cecil Crowson, Jr. Appellate Court Clerk AT NASHVILLE __________________________________________________________________

CHARLES W. McKINNEY, ) Smith County Circuit Court a resident of Smith County, ) No. 3957 Tennessee, ) ) Plaintiff/Appellee, ) ) VS. ) C.A. No. M1998-00074-COA-R3-CV ) SMITH COUNTY, TENNESSEE, ) a county duly constituted by the ) State of Tennessee, ) ) Defendant/Appellant. ) )

______________________________________________________________________________

From the Circuit Court of Smith County at Carthage. Honorable Bobby Capers, Judge

Paul G. Summers, Attorney General and Reporter George G. Boyte, Jr., Assistant Attorney General Attorneys for Defendant/Appellant.

Jacky O. Bellar, BELLAR AND BELLAR, Carthage, Tennessee Attorney for Plaintiff/Appellee.

Page 1 OPINION FILED:

REVERSED AND REMANDED

FARMER, J.

CRAWFORD, P.J., W.S.: (Concurs) LILLARD, J.: (Concurs)

In this inverse condemnation action, Defendant Smith County appeals the trial court’s final

judgment that suggested a $15,000 additur to the $7700 verdict rendered by the jury in favor of

Plaintiff/Appellee Charles W. McKinney. We reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand this cause for a

new trial on the issue of damages.

McKinney filed this inverse condemnation action seeking to recover damages for the taking

of an easement that McKinney used to access property he owned in Smith County, Tennessee. McKinney’s

amended complaint alleged that the State of Tennessee, by and through its Department of Transportation,

was constructing a new road through Smith County and that the State’s road project had “destroyed or

greatly damaged [McKinney’s] right of ingress and egress to said property.”

The State Attorney General’s Office filed an answer on behalf of Smith County. In its

answer, the County denied that any “taking” had occurred as a result of the State’s road project. The

County later amended its answer to assert, as an affirmative defense, that McKinney’s inverse condemnation

claim was barred by the one-year statute of limitations set forth in Tennessee Code Annotated section

29-16-124 (1980). 1 Prior to trial, the County filed a motion to dismiss or, in the alternative, for summary

judgment based upon the statute of limitations. The motion was denied.

Page 2 At trial, the evidence showed that McKinney owned a 1.7-acre tract of commercially-zoned

property near Highway 53 in Smith County. When McKinney acquired the property, he also received from

his grantor a 50-foot wide unimproved easement that he used to access the property from Highway 53.

Prior to construction of the State’s road project, Highway 53 dead-ended at a “T” intersection near O.J.’s

Restaurant. McKinney’s easement ran from the front corner of his property to Highway 53, a distance of

approximately 600 feet, and it connected to the highway near the “T” intersection.

The State’s road project included the construction of a new highway, Highway 264, and it

reconfigured the “T” intersection so that Highway 53 would intersect Highway 264. As a result of the State’s

reconfiguration of the intersection, McKinney no longer could use the easement to access his property from

Highway 53.

During the trial, McKinney took the position that he lost the use of the easement on

October 8, 1993, when the State condemned certain lots containing a portion of McKinney’s easement.

McKinney testified that, as a result of the October 1993 taking, his easement was reduced to only twelve feet

in width, which was insufficient to access the property.

McKinney acknowledged that his easement also had been affected by an order of possession

entered prior to October 1993. In September 1993, the State condemned a lot owned by James T. Watts.

As a result of the earlier taking, McKinney’s easement was reduced from 50 feet in width to approximately

30 feet in width. McKinney testified that, despite this reduction in width, he still could use the easement to

access his property after the September 1993 taking. McKinney admitted that, at one point at the side of the

road, the State took the entire width of the easement; however, he characterized the point at which this taking

occurred as “infinitesimal.”

As previously indicated, after the October 1993 taking, McKinney no longer could use the

Page 3 easement to access his property from Highway 53. The proof showed, however, that, when the State’s road

project was completed, McKinney could access his property from the new highway, Highway 264, provided

he built a ramp from his property to the highway. Because the difference in elevation between Highway 264

and McKinney’s property was at least nineteen feet, the parties agreed that building a ramp would require a

significant expenditure of funds. One of McKinney’s experts, contractor John M. Moffield, estimated that

such a ramp would cost over $25,000 to build. The County’s experts, on the other hand, estimated that

constructing a suitable ramp would cost between $7800 and $9400.

In an effort to prove his damages, McKinney testified that, as a result of the State’s road

project, his property had decreased in value from “at least $51,000” to “no more than $5,000,” a difference

of $46,000. McKinney also presented the testimony of Harold Gene Carmen, a local real estate broker and

appraiser. Carmen estimated that the property’s value just prior to the taking was $31,000. In reaching this

estimate, Carmen deducted the amount that would have been required to build an access road over the old

easement from Highway 53 to the property. Carmen opined that, due to its loss of access to Highway 53,

McKinney’s property had decreased in value by approximately $7750. Over the County’s objection,

Carmen testified that McKinney’s damages also included the cost of constructing a new access ramp to

Highway 264.

In contrast, the County presented the testimony of two experts who opined that, in their

respective opinions, McKinney’s property had not suffered any decline in value as a result of the State’s road

project. These experts included James Daniel Wamble, a licensed surveyor and civil engineer, and James S.

Baggett, a real estate appraiser. Wamble even suggested that the property had benefitted from the State’s

road project because the property now had better access to a highway. Wamble acknowledged that

McKinney would be required to build an access ramp to Highway 264, but he testified that building the new

ramp would cost less than constructing an access road over the old easement would have cost.

Page 4 At the conclusion of all the evidence, the County renewed its motion to dismiss based upon

the one-year statute of limitations applicable to inverse condemnation actions. The trial court refused to

dismiss the action and, without objection from either party, gave the jury the following instructions to

determine McKinney’s damages for the loss of his easement:

[T]he landowner has a right to go to and from the landowner’s property by using the easement that was there available . . . . This is called the right of access and is part of the value of the property. The right of access is the access that is reasonably required for the landowner’s property, considering all the uses and purposes for which the property is adaptable, or available.

The landowner is entitled to compensation for loss or serious impairment of the right of access.

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Charles w. McKinney, a resident of Smith County, Tennessee v. Smith County, Tennessee, a county duly constituted by the State of Tennessee, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charles-w-mckinney-a-resident-of-smith-county-tenn-tennctapp-1999.