Dale England v. Robert England

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 2, 2012
DocketE2011-02094-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Dale England v. Robert England (Dale England v. Robert England) 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
Dale England v. Robert England, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE Assigned on Briefs June 28, 2012

DALE ENGLAND, ET AL. v. ROBERT ENGLAND, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Union County No. 5520 Billy J. White, Chancellor

No. E2011-02094-COA-R3-CV-FILED-OCTOBER 2, 2012

This case is a property dispute between two brothers regarding the width of a right-of-way that affects both their properties. The plaintiff claims the right-of-way is eight feet wide and the defendant should be prevented from expanding the gravel road that runs along the right-of-way to 25 feet because the expansion would require the plaintiff to remove fences, septic tanks, and other permanent structures. The trial court ruled that the right-of-way created by the brothers’ father was intended to be 25 feet wide. The plaintiff appeals. We affirm.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed; Case Remanded

J OHN W. M CC LARTY, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which H ERSCHEL P. F RANKS, P.J., and C HARLES D. S USANO, J R., J., joined.

Michael S. Shipwash, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellants, Dale England and Barbara England.

B.J. Reed, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellees, Robert England and Alice Mae England.

OPINION

I. BACKGROUND

This case, filed in April 2008, arises from a family dispute. At issue is the width of a right-of-way known as England Lane.

W.F. England (“W.F.”), the father of the plaintiff, Dale England (“Dale”), and the defendant, Robert England (“Robert”), inherited a 100-acre tract of land in Union County, Tennessee, from his father, W.B. England. Through deeds of his own making, W.F. conveyed most of the property to his eleven children so they would each have a piece of land.1 He did not, however, deed out the land that comprises England Lane, a road that accesses the back of the 100-acre tract; rather, England Lane serves as a boundary in the deeds to the children. Since W.F. never deeded out the land over which England Lane runs, when he passed away without a will, England Lane became the property of his heirs as tenants in common. Those heirs, W.F.’s children, are Dale, Robert, Lucille Carr, Walter England, Eula Bradley, June Boggs (“June”), Dewey England (“Dewey”), Wayne England, June Lawson, Shirley Graham, and Sheila Long.

Per the testimony of Bruce Butler, a title attorney, in the original deed from W.F. to Dale, there is a mention of England Lane having a width of 21 feet (“crossing England Lane 21 feet.”). Shortly after that deed, W.F. gave Dale a correction deed for his property, because the original deed incorrectly describes the land being transferred. The correction deed makes mention of an easement along England Lane but does not specify a width.2 Butler noted that Dale has bought property from at least two of his siblings by deeds relating that England Lane is a 25-foot right-of-way. Butler testified further that surveyor Perry Walker had prepared a survey in 1992 denoting the width of the right-of-way to be 16 feet. Butler opined that the width of the right-of-way is “25 foot based on . . . the deeds” that Dale received from his siblings.

Both parties have had the property surveyed. The survey for Dale by Billy Easter established that at no point is the gravel road along England Lane 25 feet wide, and that there is nothing in the deeds made by W.F. to indicate that England Lane is meant to be 25 feet wide. Easter stated the average width of the road is actually 15 feet. The survey for Robert, conducted by Ronnie Keener, marked off the right-of-way as being 25 feet wide. Keener based his measurements on the deeds from the other England siblings to Dale, not the original conveyances by W.F. to his children. Easter’s center line for the right-of-way agrees with Keener’s center line.

Dewey, a sibling to the parties, testified that he helped W.F. set out the right-of-way:

A. . . . It was all just an old horse-drawn road, and I took the center . . . of that and measured twelve-and-a-half feet on each side.

1 Most siblings received these deeds in 1975. 2 The deed notes as follows: “That England Lane which crosses or traverses this property will remain a free and open easement and right-of-way for ingress and egress and is perpetual and never to be closed.”

-2- Q. Yes, sir.

A. And that was where we come up with putting the property pins and the right-of-way.

Q. So when the property was divided, it was property off of a 25-foot right-of- way.

Q. On either side?

A. On either side because we took twelve-and-a-half feet on each side.

THE COURT: Let me ask you a question; who told you to do that or showed you to do that or told you?

A. My daddy. Now, the right-of-way was established I’d say two or three months before the property was ever divided.

***

Q. So you’re telling us before anybody got a deed from your daddy, at your daddy’s instructions you staked out the 25?

A. I staked out the 25-foot right-of-way.
Q. And all of the deeds were made away from there?

A. All of the deeds bordering the right-of-way. They did not cross the right- of-way. . . .

A. I got no dog in this fight except to tell you the God’s truth of what Dad told us to do to lay this out, and that’s what I done. It was his saying and his doings. I did not have one thing to do with it except for what he said to do.

Dewey noted that only the corner of the barn came “right at” the edge of the right-of-way when it was laid out.

June, another sibling, testified that W.F. sold her the property on which she lives in

-3- 1967. In regard to the right-of-way, she stated as follows:

A. I was the one that talked my dad into dividing it because I thought that everybody needed a place to live

A. . . . It went all the way to – into his (pointing) because he –
Q. Into whose?
A. Robert England because he was the one that was on the end . . . .
Q. How did it get to be 25 feet?

A. Our dad did it. He specified that it would be 25 or so two cars could pass without any trouble.

Dale claims that he owns all of the right-of-way by adverse possession. He acknowledges that Robert has used England Lane as his means of ingress and egress and has the right to an easement over the property. Dale asserts, however, the right-of-way is eight feet wide and Robert should be prevented from expanding the gravel road that runs along the right-of-way to 25 feet because it will require Dale to remove fences, septic tanks, and permanent structures. He argues the road has never been 25 feet wide and that the right-of- way should be limited to the width it has been since the parties began using it.

Robert states that after he moved onto the property in 1985, Dale began building his home. In regard to the roadway, Robert testified as follows:

A. . . . I went in there and I got this mobile home, I go in there and cut all of this off, and went in there -- there was a swamp up there, I had to fill it in, and I graded out and fixed the road . . . to where I could even get the mobile home in . . . .

The next thing . . . when I did all of that and moved in down there, I was down there probably 10 or more years I know before [Dale] ever decided to come down there and build a house. And the[re] wasn’t a thing -- now, all of this stuff that you see on these things, he put them in after, after I had the road and

-4- everything built.

Like the church up there, that was d[one] after that, and th[ese] here trailers down through there, he put th[ose] in after I built that road. . . .

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Dale England v. Robert England, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dale-england-v-robert-england-tennctapp-2012.