Donnie Vaught v. Alan Jakes, Sr. and wife Deborah Jakes

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 26, 2009
DocketM2007-01858-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Donnie Vaught v. Alan Jakes, Sr. and wife Deborah Jakes (Donnie Vaught v. Alan Jakes, Sr. and wife Deborah Jakes) 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
Donnie Vaught v. Alan Jakes, Sr. and wife Deborah Jakes, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE July 10, 2008 Session

DONNIE VAUGHT, ET AL. v. ALAN JAKES, SR. and wife DEBORAH JAKES, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Rutherford County No. 04-9382 CV Donald P. Harris, Judge

No. M2007-01858-COA-R3-CV - Filed May 26, 2009

A group of Rutherford County landowners whose property abutted one side of a private road which they maintained at their own expense filed a suit for trespass against a neighbor and developer who used the same road for access to houses he was building on the other side. Their suit also included a due process claim against the County for erroneously granting building permits for those houses. The trial court agreed that the building permits were granted in error, but ruled that the county’s action was an innocent error rather than a due process violation. The trial court also dismissed the plaintiffs’ claims against the developer, holding that he was entitled to use the road because of a permanent easement he had acquired from his predecessors-in-interest. We affirm the trial court’s dismissal of the due process claim, but reverse its dismissal of the trespass claim because the evidence shows that the individual who sold the property to the defendant had abandoned the easement and, thus, that the defendant had no right to use the road.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Part _____________

PATRICIA J. COTTRELL, P.J.,M.S., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ANDY D. BENNETT and RICHARD H. DINKINS, JJ., joined.

Jerry E. Farmer, Murfreesboro, Tennessee, for the appellants, Donnie Vaught, et al.

Mark Allen Polk, Murfreesboro, Tennessee, for the appellees, Alan Jakes, Sr. and wife Deborah Jakes, et al.

James C. Cope, Thomas S. Santel, Jr., Murfreesboro, Tennessee, for the appellee, Rutherford County, A Political Subdivision of the State of Tennessee. OPINION

I. AN OLD ROAD

The disputed road in this case is located in a rural area of Rutherford County. The earliest references to the road in the record are found in a 1930 deed from E.I. Rion to Ms. Annie Todd and a 1932 deed from J. F. Lasiter to L.F. Todd conveying respectively a one-third interest and a two- thirds interest in the same 100 acre tract “bounded on east by public road (1930 deed) and “bounded on the east by the road” (1932 deed). Several witnesses who grew up in the area testified that they knew the road as “Todd’s Lane,” and that it was “an old country lane,” or “an old wagon road.” At some point Todd’s Lane acquired its current name of Bowen Road.

The proof shows that Bowen Road is a narrow, one-lane road that has never been paved. It springs northward from Trimble Road, a paved county road that runs from southwest to northeast. Bowen Road does not go anywhere other than to privately-owned farm properties along its length before it loses its character as a road. Most of the plaintiffs in this case are members of the Todd family by blood or marriage. They own land on the west side of Bowen Road which was part of L.F. Todd’s original 100 acre tract.1 The individual defendants are all members of the Jakes family. They are the current owners of land located between the east side of Bowen Road and Trimble Road.

In the 1950's, Grover Cleveland Barrett owned a farm which abutted Trimble Road on the east and the disputed road on the west. Mr. Barrett’s grandson James Campbell testified that he milked cows on his grandfather’s farm between 1956 and 1959. He further testified that Mr. Barrett cultivated all the way to a line of wire fence that bounded the west side of his property and adjoined “Todd’s Lane.” There was one place where the fence wire could be pulled away to allow access to the road, but “it wasn’t a gate that would swing open.” Mr. Campbell testified that he never knew the road to be a public road. In 1973, Barrett’s farm was conveyed to Roy and Marie Dye. According to the deposition of Willard Richardson, a neighbor and former Rutherford County Road Superintendent, the Dyes never used the unpaved road.

In 1974, Henry and Lewis Parsley and their wives purchased the Dyes’ farm. They acquired two other contiguous tracts in 1986 and combined the properties. They raised cattle and farmed the land, 419 acres in all, using two separate entrances along Trimble Road to gain access to their property. A continuous line of trees had grown up along the old wire fence on the western boundary of their land, cutting it off almost completely from Bowen Road. There was a makeshift gate in the wire fence that the Parsleys used on a few occasions to move hay from their barn by way of the road. The proof showed that neither that gate nor the barn was on the property later acquired by the Jakes defendants.

1 The affidavit of Faye Todd T rent and Terry Todd states that no conveyance of the 100 acre property “has occurred since 1932 except by devise or by operation of the law of intestate succession.”

-2- The Parsleys’ northernmost parcel stretched across both sides of Bowen Road. In 1974 or 1975, Henry Parsley asked the Rutherford County Roads Superintendent, James Comer, if the Parsleys could obliterate the part of Bowen Road that entered that parcel so they could use the entire property for farming. Mr. Comer said that the road was not on the county maps, so the Parsleys could do what they wanted. They accordingly plowed up that part of the road.

Some time between 1981 and 1985, Billy Worley and Bubba Young installed a locked metal gate across Bowen Road to keep hunters and other trespassers off their land.2 The gate was at the intersection of Bowen Road and Trimble Road, and it totally blocked access to the unpaved roadway from Trimble Road. The Parsleys had obtained a key to the lock from one of the Todd heirs, but as we noted above, they only used Bowen Road occasionally. Henry Parsley testified that he used the road no more than four times in fourteen years. His brother, who “primarily looked after the farm” may have used it somewhat more frequently.

In 1988, the Parsleys sold their land to Ronald D. Baltz. He considered the portion of the land abutting Trimble Road to be “the front side of my farm,” and he used the same entrances on Trimble Road for access as did the Parsleys. He did not have a key to the gate at the entrance to Bowen Road. He testified that he used that road only once, to pick up a load of water pipe for a neighbor when the gate was unlocked.

In 1994, Plaintiffs Dwight Roberson and his wife Brenda Roberson bought a 33 acre wedge of land on the east side of Bowen Road. The tract widens as it extends northward from the intersection of Bowen Road and Trimble Lane until it abuts the Baltz property. The Robersons built a home on their property. Since they were able to keep an eye on the traffic entering Bowen Road, the gate was left open, and it was eventually removed. The Robersons conveyed a portion of the property to their daughter and their son-in-law, plaintiffs Ashley and Gary Young. The Youngs built a house on their property for themselves and their two children.

On August 6, 1994, the Todd heirs entered into an “Agreement for Easement” by which they granted “unto each other, their heirs and assigns, a perpetual easement over and across their respective said lands and running with said lands for the purpose of ingress and egress from and to the Trimble Road.” There were eleven signatories to the document. Pursuant to their agreement, the plaintiffs all contributed money, material and services to improve Bowen Road. The Robersons and Youngs subsequently entered into a similar right of way agreement, which mutually obligated them to maintain the portion of Bowen Road which abutted their properties.

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Donnie Vaught v. Alan Jakes, Sr. and wife Deborah Jakes, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donnie-vaught-v-alan-jakes-sr-and-wife-deborah-jak-tennctapp-2009.