Clyde Bingham v. James Knipp

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 23, 1999
Docket02A01-9803-CH-00083
StatusPublished

This text of Clyde Bingham v. James Knipp (Clyde Bingham v. James Knipp) 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
Clyde Bingham v. James Knipp, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE, AT JACKSON

_______________________________________________________

) CLYDE BINGHAM, JR. and wife, ) Henderson County Chancery Court BETTY BINGHAM, ) No. 11281 ) Plaintiffs/Appellees. ) ) FILED VS. ) C.A. No. 02A01-9803-CH-00083 ) February 23, 1999 JAMES D. KNIPP and wife, ) LYNNE A. KNIPP, ) Cecil Crowson, Jr. Appellate C ourt Clerk ) Defendants/Appellants. ) ) ______________________________________________________________________________

From the Chancery Court of Henderson County at Lexington. Honorable Joe C. Morris, Chancellor

W. Collins Bonds, KIZER, BONDS & HUGHES, Milan, Tennessee Attorney for Defendants/Appellants.

Carthel L. Smith, Jr., Lexington, Tennessee Attorney for Plaintiffs/Appellees.

OPINION FILED:

REVERSED AND REMANDED

FARMER, J.

HIGHERS, J.: (Concurs) LILLARD, J.: (Concurs) Defendants James D. Knipp and Lynne A. Knipp appeal the trial court’s judgment

finding that Plaintiffs/Appellees Clyde Bingham, Jr., and Betty Bingham had acquired a prescriptive

easement to a field road on the Knipps’ property. We reverse the trial court’s judgment based on our

conclusion that the record contains insufficient evidence to support the court’s finding that the

Binghams or their predecessors-in-title had acquired a prescriptive easement across the Knipps’

property.

The parties own adjoining tracts of real property in Henderson County. The Knipps

have owned their property since March 1978. In December 1993, the Binghams acquired their

property from the Birdwell family, various members of whom apparently had owned the property

since the 1940's. In the warranty deed executed by Eura Gay Birdwell’s legal heirs, the grantors

purported to convey to the Binghams an easement across the Knipps’ property. The deed described

the easement as one “for reasonable ingress and egress to this property which exists across the land

of Knipp to reach the nearest public road known as Bucksnort Trail.”

After acquiring his property, Clyde Bingham proceeded to access the property by

using a field road which ran across the Knipps’ property. The field road began at Bucksnort Trail

and ended at the Knipps’ corn field, which abutted the Binghams’ own corn field. During much of

the year, Clyde Bingham accessed his property by driving to the end of the field road and then

proceeding through the Knipps’ corn field to his own property. During crop season, however, the

Knipps’ corn crop covered the field road. When the crop was in, Clyde Bingham accessed his

property by another route rather than driving through the Knipps’ corn field.

Several years after the Binghams’ purchase of the adjoining property, James Knipp

discovered that Clyde Bingham was using the field road across his property. Through his attorney,

Knipp asked Bingham to cease using the field road. This request prompted the Binghams to file the

present lawsuit in which they sought to establish their right to a prescriptive easement across the

Knipps’ property along the field road.

At trial, the evidence showed that various tenants had farmed the Binghams’ property

over the years. At one time, the Binghams’ property was part of a larger tract that included a farmhouse. In 1963 or 1964, however, the construction of Interstate 40 effectively split the property

into two sections, a northern section which contained the farmhouse and a southern section which

included what is now Binghams’ corn field. Prior to the construction, the Binghams’ property could

be accessed by the use of a public road to the north. The construction cut off access to this public

road and apparently left the property landlocked. Accordingly, beginning in the early 1960's, the

Birdwell family members and their tenants began to use the field road across the Knipps’ property

to access their property.

At various times over the subsequent years, the same person farmed both the

Binghams’ property and the Knipps’ property. In the early 1970's, for example, James B. Woods,

who then owned the Knipps’ property, farmed both his own property and the Binghams’ property.

In 1973 or 1974, Woods sold his property to one of the Knipps’ predecessors-in-title, but he

continued to farm both properties until his death. Beginning in the late 1980's or early 1990's, and

continuing until the time of trial, Donald Rush leased both tracts of land, and, prior to that, Anthony

Williams farmed both properties. The tenant farmers used the field road to access both properties.

At the trial’s conclusion, the trial court instructed counsel for each party to submit

a short memorandum addressing the Binghams’ right to either an easement of necessity or a

prescriptive easement. The trial court subsequently found that the Binghams had “acquired an

easement by prescription to the field road in question in this litigation,” and the court entered a

judgment accordingly. The Knipps have appealed, contending that the evidence preponderates

against the trial court’s finding that the Binghams had acquired an easement by prescription.

We begin our analysis with the well-established premise that the burden is on the

party claiming a prescriptive easement to prove, by clear and convincing evidence, the facts

necessary to establish such an easement. McCammon v. Meredith, 830 S.W.2d 577, 580 (Tenn.

App. 1991); Fite v. Gassaway, 184 S.W.2d 564, 567 (Tenn. App. 1944). Specifically, the claimant

must prove that his use and enjoyment of the alleged easement was “adverse, under claim of right,

continuous, uninterrupted, open, visible, exclusive, and with knowledge and acquiescence of the

owner of the servient tenement.” House v. Close, 346 S.W.2d 445, 447 (Tenn. App. 1961).

Moreover, the claimant must prove that his use and enjoyment of the alleged easement continued for the full prescriptive period of twenty years. Blakemore v. Matthews, 285 S.W. 567, 567-68

(Tenn. 1926); McCammon v. Meredith, 830 S.W.2d at 580; House v. Close, 346 S.W.2d at 447-49;

see also Rogers v. City of Knoxville, 289 S.W.2d 868, 871 (Tenn. App. 1955) (noting that illegal

possession cannot ripen into vested legal right to easement short of twenty years adverse possession).

The proof in this case focused on the use of the alleged easement by the Binghams

and their predecessors-in-title beginning in 1973 or 1974. The Binghams conceded that, at the time

James B. Woods sold the Knipps’ property in 1973 or 1974, the use of the alleged easement was not

adverse. Immediately prior to the sale, Woods owned the Knipps’ property, and he leased the

Binghams’ property as the tenant farmer of the Birdwells. Inasmuch as a party cannot use property

adversely to his own interests, we agree that Woods’ simultaneous ownership of the servient estate,

the Knipps’ property, and tenancy of the dominant estate, the Binghams’ property, prevented the

prescriptive period from running during Woods’ use of the alleged easement. See J.F. Gioia, Inc. v.

Cardinal Am. Corp., 491 N.E.2d 325, 330 (Ohio Ct. App. 1985); Sassman v. Collins, 115 S.W. 337,

339 (Tex. Civ. App.

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