Cooper v. Polos

898 S.W.2d 237, 1995 Tenn. App. LEXIS 49
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 30, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 898 S.W.2d 237 (Cooper v. Polos) 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
Cooper v. Polos, 898 S.W.2d 237, 1995 Tenn. App. LEXIS 49 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

SUSANO, Judge.

This suit seeks to enjoin the Defendant1 John C. Polos from erecting and maintaining a gate across the Plaintiffs’ right-of-way that traverses the Defendant’s property. After sustaining the Plaintiffs’ objection to testimony that a gate was necessary to keep trespassers from using the right-of-way, the trial court, sitting without a jury, permanently enjoined the Defendant “from interfering with the Plaintiffs’ use of the twenty (20) foot right-of-way ... and permanently enjoined [them from] maintaining any gate, locked or unlocked, or any other structure upon said right-of-way which will impede or prohibit the free use thereof.” The Defendant appeals, raising two issues:

1. Does the owner of a servient estate have a right to erect and maintain a gate across a dedicated right-of-way?
2. Did the trial court err in excluding, as immaterial, testimony that the gate was installed to keep trespassers out?

Because we disagree with the trial court’s evidentiary ruling and because we believe that ruling requires that we vacate the Judgment below, we will direct our attention to the second issue. Our discussion of that issue will necessarily involve a consideration of the Defendant’s other issue.

I

The Defendant’s property fronts on Tucka-leechee Pike (“the highway”) in Blount County. A twenty foot easement runs through, and along the boundary of, the Defendant’s property connecting properties located to the rear of his property to the highway. At some time prior to the filing of this suit, the Defendant’s neighbor, Shields, with Polos’ permission, erected a gate across the right-of-way on the Defendant’s property. A driveway over the property of Shields’ family, whose last name is Teffeteller, runs next [239]*239to and parallel with the right-of-way at issue in this case. It also connects to the highway. A gate had earlier been installed across the driveway on the Teffeteller property. When Shields installed the gate on the right-of-way over the Defendant’s property, he placed it next to his own. The two gates, now side-by-side, were approximately 800 feet back from the highway. Together, they completely blocked the side-by-side ways running along the Teffeteller-Polos property line. After a temporary restraining order was entered in this case, the gate blocking the right-of-way over the Defendant’s property was removed pending a resolution of this controversy.

The Plaintiff Norman Cooper testified that he or members of his family had owned their property since 1929, and that the easement over the Defendant’s property had been owned by them since 1933. He acknowledged that there were two other gates across the right-of-way at points away from the Defendant’s property, but claimed that they did not keep him from using the right-of-way. He further testified that a gate across the right-of-way at the place suggested by the Defendant would not significantly increase security because it would not connect with any existing fencing to the sides of the way. It was his belief that the natural foliage barrier to the right of the proposed gate, which he described as just “a little young growth,” would not stop a trespassing vehicle from going around the gate. His wife testified that she has received calls from the Defendant’s agent reporting trespassers on the easement, but has never seen any herself.

The first witness for the defense was the Defendant. His counsel sought to question him on the security rationale for the gate, but the trial court sustained an objection to that line of questioning on the ground that the need for security from trespassers cannot justify a servient property owner’s erection and maintenance of a gate across an easement. Mr. Polos’ counsel then made the following statement:

Judge, could I ask the Court to consider doing this: All of our witnesses are pertaining to the security aspect of this case and we not in any jest at all ... say that certainly people have the right ... to be secure in their own property as they are the right to be the guardian of the security of their animals, ... I would ask the Court in light of the fact that if the Court does not allow us to prove our case, then I am really not sure how — and I certainly don’t want to waste the Court’s time and these people are very serious about their defense of this case, all of [our] witnesses pertain to breaches in security. In order to make a record in this case for the Court of Appeals we would have to I guess offer the proof....

The trial court agreed to counsel’s suggestion. After a brief recess, during which time the trial court read the parties’ trial briefs, the court returned to the bench and reiterated its ruling excluding the testimony relative to trespassers and security. The trial court then announced that it was going to permanently enjoin the servient landowner from “interfering with the [Coopers’] use of the right-of-way in question” and would also permanently enjoin them from “maintaining any gate locked or unlocked or any other structure upon said right-of-way_” Finally, the trial judge invited Mr. Polos’ counsel to make his offer of proof. He then left the courtroom.

Mr. Polos’ attorney, pursuant to his offer of proof, presented the testimony of Mr. Polos and his neighbors, all of whom testified, outside the presence of the trial judge, that trespassers repeatedly used the easement. One neighbor testified that she had seen both motorcycle traffic and individuals on horseback using the easement without permission. Finally, Mr. Polos called a security expert, who testified that based upon his personal examination of the Polos property, the proposed gate was located in the “correct” location to make the best use of available natural barriers. The security expert also testified that even an unlocked gate in that location would serve as a deterrent to trespassers.

II

We review this case de novo upon the record developed below. That record comes to us accompanied by a presumption of cor[240]*240rectness which “carries the day” unless the evidence preponderates against the trial court’s findings of fact. Tenn.R.App.P. 13(d). We owe no such deference, however, to the trial court’s conclusions of law. Union Carbide Corp. v. Huddleston, 854 S.W.2d 87, 91 (Tenn.1993).

We believe the trial court erred when it ruled that evidence that the gate was erected to keep out trespassers was immaterial. We do not subscribe to the Plaintiffs’ argument that the only reason which can support erection of a gate over an easement by the servient estate owner is the control of livestock. The law does not support such a narrow interpretation.

In Cole v. Dych, 535 S.W.2d 315 (Tenn. 1976), the Tennessee Supreme Court was confronted with the question of whether a mandatory injunction should issue requiring property owners to restore an easement of ingress and egress over their property which served as a roadway to a cemetery. In developing their property for commercial purposes, the servient owners had excavated some 75 feet of the road length “to a considerable depth ... rendering it impassable and unusable.” Id. at 317. The Court found that it was an “indisputable fact ...

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Bluebook (online)
898 S.W.2d 237, 1995 Tenn. App. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-polos-tennctapp-1995.