Derryberry v. Ledford

506 S.W.2d 152, 1973 Tenn. App. LEXIS 267
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 31, 1973
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 506 S.W.2d 152 (Derryberry v. Ledford) 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
Derryberry v. Ledford, 506 S.W.2d 152, 1973 Tenn. App. LEXIS 267 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

OPINION

PURYEAR, Judge.

This case involves a dispute over the title to and possession of a triangular parcel of land containing approximately three-fourths of an acre situated in the new Third (old Fifteenth) Civil District of Marshall County, Tennessee, on the east side of a public road known as Cochran Cemetery Road.

On December 24, 1884, William N. Fowler conveyed to Wilson Cochran a tract of land situated in the old Fifteenth Civil District of Marshall County, which land was on both the east and west sides of Cochran Cemetery Road, and the deed by which such conveyance was made included the triangular parcel of land in dispute here.

By deeds dated December 26, 1904, and April 5, 1905, two of the heirs of Wilson Cochran, deceased, conveyed their two-tenths undivided interest in said land to W. N. Freeman and the descriptions used in these two deeds included said triangular parcel of land which is in dispute here. By deed dated January 7, 1907, seven of the heirs of Wilson Cochran, deceased, conveyed their interest in said land to W. N. Freeman. However, by inadvertence, said triangular parcel of land was omitted from the description in this latter mentioned deed. The remaining undivided one-tenth interest was, at that time, owned by W. N. Freeman’s wife, Mrs. I. E. Cochran Freeman, a daughter and heir at law of Wilson Cochran, deceased.

W. N. Freeman and wife, I. E. Freeman, died and left surviving them as their heirs at law five children, one of whom was Homer Freeman. The said Homer Freeman and his wife, Inez, purchased the interest *154 of the other four Freeman heirs in said land but, by inadvertence, said triangular parcel of land in dispute here was omitted from the deeds by which the other four Freeman heirs conveyed their interest to Homer and Inez Freeman.

By deed dated March 20, 1950, Homer Freeman and wife conveyed the portion of the Freeman farm which is situated on the west side of Cochran Cemetery Road to the defendants, G. L. Ledford and wife, Edna Ledford.

Thereafter, as result of a succession of conveyances, beginning with a deed from Homer Freeman and wife to John W. Thompson and wife, dated July 15, 1950, the plaintiffs finally acquired all that portion of the Freeman farm which is situated east of Cochran Cemetery Road. The triangular parcel of land in dispute here is situated east of said road but it is not embraced in the metes and bounds set forth in any of the deeds in the aforesaid succession of conveyances after nine of the Cochran heirs conveyed their interest to W. N. Freeman.

The parcel of land in dispute here lies in the triangle formed by the intersection of a private road, no longer in use, with Cochran Cemetery Road.

Said parcel of land is a heavily wooded area and the dispute erupted early in 1972 when defendants started clearing the trees and undergrowth from said land with a bulldozer at which time plaintiffs filed this suit, alleging in their complaint that they are the owners of said land citing as their immediate source of title a deed dated October 21, 1970, and of record in the Register’s Office of Marshall County, Tennessee, and alleging that it is a part of the land conveyed to them in said deed. This is a deed from Aline M. Ray to the plaintiffs, William M. Derryberry and wife, of record in Book 25, page 175 in the Register’s Office of Marshall County, Tennessee.

Defendants filed an answer denying that plaintiffs are the owners of said triangular parcel of land and denying that it is a part of the same land conveyed to plaintiffs by the aforementioned deed dated October 21, 1970.

The case was tried by the Chancellor on October 2, 1972, upon oral testimony and documentary evidence. At conclusion of plaintiffs’ evidence counsel for plaintiffs moved that they be allowed to amend their complaint by averring that plaintiffs and their predecessors in title have been in the actual, open, notorious, continuous, exclusive and adverse possession of said triangular parcel of land under claim of right for more than twenty years next preceding filing of the complaint, which motion was allowed by the Court over objection of counsel for defendants.

Defendants did not introduce any evidence and the Court entered a final decree containing the following findings of fact:

"That said plot was part of a larger farm owned by Wilson Cochran, now know as the Freeman Farm, which complainants now own in fee simple; except for the 50 acres more or less, lying South and West of the Cochran Cemetery Road.
That the successors in title to Wilson Cochran held said farm, including the disputed plot, under this claim of right and conveyed to it each successor, even though the metes and bounds description failed to include the plot. The belief that said triangular plot was a part of the larger farm persisted in the minds of the parties with each conveyance.
That, at least, since January 7, 1907 these owners have exercised open, notorious, exclusive, continuous, and adverse possession to this plot of land and said possession under claim of right has remained unbroken until the entrance upon said land in April of 1972 by the defendants.
*155 That the owners have posted the land to prevent the use as a ‘lover’s lane’, cleaned-up dumped trash and garbage from it, cut firewood from it, and generally used it commensurate with the uses for which it is suited.” (Tech.Rec. pp. 19-20)

Based upon the foregoing findings of fact, the trial Court ordered, adjudged and decreed that the plaintiffs’ bill, as amended, be sustained and the fee simple title be vested in plaintiffs by prescriptive right absolutely and that the defendants have no right, title or interest in said land.

From this decree, defendants have prayed and perfected an appeal and filed seven assignments of error as follows:

1.
“The Court erred in allowing plaintiffs to amend their complaint, which was sworn to by both of them, after all of the proof had been presented.
2.
The Court erred in holding that the plot of' ground about which this suit is brought by Appellees, is part of a larger farm owned by Wilson Cochran, now known as the Freeman Farm, which complainants (Appellees) now own in fee simple, except for the SO acres more or less, lying South and West of the Cochran Cemetery Road.
3.
The Court erred in holding: ‘That the successors in title to Wilson Cochran held said farm, including the disputed plot, under this claim of right and conveyed it to each successor, even though the metes and bounds description failed to include the plot.’
4.
The Court erred in holding: ‘Since January 7, 1907, these owners (if he means plaintiffs and their predecessors in title) have exercised, open, notorious, exclusive, continuous, and adverse possession to this plot of land, said possession under claim of right had remained unbroken until the entrance upon said land in April of 1972 by defendants.’

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
506 S.W.2d 152, 1973 Tenn. App. LEXIS 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/derryberry-v-ledford-tennctapp-1973.