Cusick v. Cutshaw

237 S.W.2d 563, 34 Tenn. App. 283, 1948 Tenn. App. LEXIS 134
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 17, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 237 S.W.2d 563 (Cusick v. Cutshaw) 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
Cusick v. Cutshaw, 237 S.W.2d 563, 34 Tenn. App. 283, 1948 Tenn. App. LEXIS 134 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

GOODMAN, J.

This is a controversy over the boundary line between the lands of Harley Cutshaw and Anna Mae Cutshaw, complainants and appellees, on the one hand, and Charlie Cusick and Aubrey Cusick, defendants and appellants, on the other. The parties are the owners of adjoining farms in the Tenth Civil District of Sevier County, Tennessee.

Complainants, in their original bill, invoked the jurisdiction of the Chancery Court under the provisions of Sections 10368 and 10369 of the Code of Tennessee. *285 Having* set forth the respective titles to the subject properties, they averred the correct boundary line between them to be as follows: “Beginning on a stake at the Rogers line corner to Samuel Cusick and the defendants herein, being the line of the complainants herein; thence S. 53 ~W. 125 poles to a stake. ’ ’ They averred that a dispute had arisen over the same and sought by said bill for the establishment of the true and correct boundary line and for an injunction restraining and prohibiting the defendants from interfering with the peaceful occupation and possession of their premises. The defendants, by their answer, in substance, admitted the ownership of respective properties by the parties, but denied that the boundary line between said properties was as asserted in the original bill. They pleaded peaceable, exclusive, uninterrupted and continuous possession of the disputed lands claimed by complainants for more than twenty years and further declared reliance upon their title papers to establish ownership of the same. By cross-bill subsequently filed, they averred that, pending said suit, the complainants had erected a fence on and along, over and through said disputed lands; that said fence was built without their knowledge and consent and upon the land which they claim under their title papers, and also by open, public, notorious and unobstructed possession for more than twenty years. They further averred that the cross-defendants had turned cattle and other stock in and upon their said lands, causing damage and injuries thereto and to the crops sowed thereupon. Application was therein made for the court to permit Mrs. Charles Cusick to become a party cross-complainant, representing herself in her own right and also as next friend of her husband, Charles Cusick, by reason of the physical and mental condition of the latter. An in *286 junction was sought prohibiting and restraining the cross-defendants from erecting any fence across the disputed lands, and from exercising any further occupation or possession thereof, pending determination of the cause by the court; and an order of reference to ascertain damages sustained as a result of the alleged wrongful acts of cross-defendants prayed. The injunctions sought by the original bill and by the cross-bill were both issued and served.

By answer to the cross-bill, the cross-defendants, in substance, admitted that they had constructed a fence across said premises in accordance with the boundary line insisted upon by them as correct, pending the outcome of the suit. They denied that they had trespassed upon the land of cross-complainants, averring that the latter were in willful violation of the injunction issued pursuant to the original bill. They also challenged the right of the petitioner, Mrs. Charles Cusick, to be permitted to appear as next friend on behalf of her alleged husband. By amendment to their answer to the original bill, the defendants, reiterating their plea of the twenty year statute, specifically pleaded Sections 8582-8583 and 8584 of the Code of Tennessee as a bar to complainants’ action, declaring that they had held the land in controversy in adverse and peaceful possession and under a color of title for more than seven years. By amendment to the cross-bill, cross-complainants declared that cross-defendants had allowed a large number of chickens upon their said lands in cultivation, which had destroyed or would destroy their said crops unless they were restrained by order of the court. An injunction was issued and served pursuant to the prayer therefor contained in the amended cross-bill. A demurrer interposed by the cross-defendants to such amendment, predicated princi *287 pally upon multifariousness, was sustained by the court and the amendment dismissed. Other motions and orders relative to the pleadings are not herein specifically recited because immaterial to a determination of the case, and no question with respect thereto having been raised upon appeal.

Upon the hearing, the Chancellor found and decreed that said disputed boundary line “. . . begins on an iron, pipe, a corner to Cusick and Pitner in the old Rogers line, as designated in the Sam Cusick deed filed and exhibited in the record, the same being at a point South 31 degrees and 30 minutes east 940.5 feet from a stake, a corner to the Sam Cusick property; thence running from said iron pipe-stake in the old Rogers line, South 53 degrees west 1646 feet to an iron stake in the old Rogers line at the orchard fence near the Sam Cusick residence; thence running with the said orchard fence, South 4 degrees and 15 minutes east 200 feet to an iron stake; thence north 66 west 115 feet to an iron stake, said stake being 13 feet south of said orchard fence and 6 feet from a plum tree; thence south 67 west 164 feet to an iron stake in old road, the said stake being South 8 west 36 feet from a three-quarter inch pipe planted at old roadway, the same being the beginning corner of the Sam Cusick property, as shown by the testimony and the map, Exhibit 4 to the testimony of Hubert Tarwater, surveyor, and made and filed in connection with H. L. Sienknecht, surveyor, the same being 2136 feet from said stake at the old Rogers line, corner to Sam Cusick property. The said three-quarter-inch pipe being at a point of the beginning of the Sam Cusick property and the Sam Taylor property, and across the old road 22 feet from a sassafras tree.” The court further decreed “ . . . that the true and correct boundary or prop *288 erty line at issue between the parties in this canse, be and the same is hereby fixed and established in accordance with the aforesaid metes and bounds, and that each of the parties, their representatives, heirs, and assigns may have, nse and possess, their respective adjacent lands in question in accordance with the provisions of this decree, and without any interference by either.”

Appellants’ seven assignments of error, in general, challenge the methods employed by the Chancellor in determining the division line between the properties and the resulting boundary, the sufficiency of the evidence upon which such determination was predicated and the action of the Chancellor in failing to hold that adverse possession by them of the lands in controversy operated as a bar to any recovery by the complainants. The title papers of the complainants exhibited in evidence describe their property by boundary only, whereas the deeds by which the defendants and their predecessor acquired title describe their premises more particularly by courses and distances. It is the call contained in the deed from A. B. Delozier and wife, Laura Delozier, to Sam Cusick, father and immediate predecessor in title to the defendants, Aubrey Cusick and Charlie Cusick, dated September 14, 1906, to-wit: “¡S 53 W 125 poles” which complainants insist represents the true and correct boundary call between their property and that of the defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
237 S.W.2d 563, 34 Tenn. App. 283, 1948 Tenn. App. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cusick-v-cutshaw-tennctapp-1948.