Connie J. OTTINGER v. Patricia E. STOOKSBURY

206 S.W.3d 73, 2006 Tenn. App. LEXIS 85
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 7, 2006
DocketE2005-00381-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 206 S.W.3d 73 (Connie J. OTTINGER v. Patricia E. STOOKSBURY) 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
Connie J. OTTINGER v. Patricia E. STOOKSBURY, 206 S.W.3d 73, 2006 Tenn. App. LEXIS 85 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

D. MICHAEL SWINEY, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court,

in which HERSCHEL P. FRANKS, P.J., and SHARON G. LEE, J., joined.

Connie J. Ottinger (“Plaintiff’) sued Patricia E. Stooksbury (“Defendant”) seeking, among other things, to quiet title to a thirty foot easement. Defendant answered the complaint and filed a counterclaim asserting, in part, that her right to use the easement is exclusive and that Plaintiff has no right to use the easement. The case was tried without a jury and the Trial Court entered a final order holding, inter alia, that Defendant is permanently enjoined from interfering with Plaintiffs right to use the easement located on Plaintiffs property. Defendant appeals claiming that the Trial Court erred by considering parol evidence and by requiring Defendant to prove her case by clear evidence. Defendant also argues that the evidence preponderates against the Trial Court’s finding that the original grantors did not intend to create an exclusive easement in favor of Defendant. We affirm.

Background

This case involves the right to use an easement, or right-of-way, on land currently owned by Plaintiff. The easement was created in 1963 when Oaty and Mary Shelton deeded a portion of their land to Charles and Mayme Stooksbury. The September 26, 1968 deed from the Shel-tons to the Stooksburys states, in pertinent part:

The first parties also grant a 30 foot right of way for ingress and egress adjoining and lying north of the north line of subject property extending from the west line of Norris Freeway west along the north line of subject property at the north west corner of subject property; said right-of-way to be for the second parties, their heirs and assigns of the first parties but by the first parties only so long as they are the owners of the adjoining property; ...

The 1963 deed identifies the Sheltons as the first parties and the Stooksburys as the second parties.

Defendant is Charles and Mayme Stooksbury’s daughter and is the current record owner of the parcel deeded to Charles and Mayme Stooksbury by the September 26, 1963 deed from the Shel-tons. The easement at issue contains a driveway that leads to Defendant’s house. Plaintiff is the current record owner of the parcel of land burdened with the easement. Plaintiff purchased her land from Wayne Shelton, Oaty and Mary Shelton’s son.

In the spring of 2003, before Plaintiff moved to her property, Defendant began to erect a fence to prevent Plaintiff from using the easement. In March of 2004, Plaintiff sued Defendant seeking, in part, to quiet title to the easement. Defendant answered the complaint and filed a counter-claim asserting, in part, that her right to use the easement is exclusive and, therefore, Plaintiff has no right to use the easement even though it is located on Plaintiffs land. The case was tried without a jury in October of 2004.

*75 At trial, Defendant explained that she began to construct her fence because “it’s always been my assumption that it was our driveway with a right of way that the Sheltons were allowed to use. But it has always — as long as I’ve known, it’s been our driveway.” Defendant testified that she doesn’t want Plaintiff to use the driveway:

because it’s out in the country. They have a driveway that goes right to their garage. I have lived there where I live now off and on since I was ten, either there or on the other side of [Plaintiff]. It’s very private back there. There’s never been anybody use that driveway. And I guess I just don’t want to have to look, as I back out of my carport, for traffic, because it’s always been a private drive.

Defendant testified that she has lived on this property for approximately two years and also lived there when she was a child. Defendant explained that her father built the driveway within the easement. Defendant admitted that, over the years, Oaty Shelton used this driveway occasionally to get to his barn where he stored his lawnmower.

Plaintiffs husband, Dennis Kyle Ottinger, testified that although he and his wife have another driveway leading to their property, they want to use the easement “[t]o get access to the top of the hill. On the left side of the property, it’s pretty steep around the back of it, and there’s not really a good way to get in there except to go up the driveway [within the easement].” Mr. Ottinger testified that a motor vehicle cannot get up the back to the southwest corner of the property. He further testified that he tried taking a Bobcat up the hill, but slid off the hill. Mr. Ottinger testified that it would cost at least $150,000, not including labor if he constructed it himself, to build another way of access up to the southwest corner of the property. Mr. Ottinger testified that he and his wife have no problem with Defendant continuing to use the easement, they simply want to be able to use it too.

Hershel John Sharp testified that he was related to Oaty and Mary Shelton and that he assisted the Sheltons in caring for their property after they became disabled. Mr. Sharp also testified that he visited the Sheltons over the years and used the easement when he visited. In addition, Mr. Sharp testified that he had seen other visitors to the Sheltons use the easement over the years.

Wayne Shelton testified that his father, Oaty Shelton, always said he planned to build his wife a home up on the hill on the southwest corner of the property. Wayne Shelton stated: ‘When they bought this property back in 1958, Mother — Dad’s promise to Mom was that he was going to build her a new home at a later date upon that hill and we — throughout as far as I can remember he always tried to maintain that promise, and Mother kept holding it over him. But, unfortunately, the events didn’t go there.”

Wayne Shelton testified that his father paid for half of a bridge that Paul and Mayme Stooksbury constructed within the easement. This bridge leads to the driveway in the easement. Wayne Shelton testified that his father complained about the cost of the bridge and stated “[h]is complaint at the time was that he only wanted access to get to his property to the top of the hill and up the valley there to the barn.”

Wayne Shelton further testified that he used the easement to get to where he was allowed to park his car when he was a teenager and still living with his parents. He stated: “From about 1960 until 1995 Dad had exclusive use of the one-car garage there at the house, and no one was *76 allowed to block him in.... So, therefore, the rest of us had to go and use the driveway [in the easement] that goes to the barn to park our vehicles.” Wayne Shelton testified that there was a gravel driveway leading from the driveway in the easement to the Sheltons’ barn. He further stated: “Anyone that was a regular visitor would usually get the lecture about using [the driveway in the easement]. My dad’s first cousin, who maintained the yard for them after they became unable to, he would always take his pickup truck and come in that way to perform the yard maintenance.”

Wayne Shelton testified that after he moved out of his parents’ house, he would visit his parents four or five times a year and would always use the driveway in the easement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
206 S.W.3d 73, 2006 Tenn. App. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connie-j-ottinger-v-patricia-e-stooksbury-tennctapp-2006.