Doss v. Tennessee Products & Chemical Corp.

340 S.W.2d 923, 47 Tenn. App. 577, 1960 Tenn. App. LEXIS 92
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 2, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 340 S.W.2d 923 (Doss v. Tennessee Products & Chemical Corp.) 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
Doss v. Tennessee Products & Chemical Corp., 340 S.W.2d 923, 47 Tenn. App. 577, 1960 Tenn. App. LEXIS 92 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

HUMPHREYS, J.

The original bill in this cause was filed by Leonard Doss and Blanche Lee Doss against Tennessee Products & Chemical Corporation for the purpose of enjoining the defendants from cutting trees and strip mining coal on the land described in the bill, and to recover for the value of the coal and timber, and the damage done to the land by the strip mining. The bill alleged the complainants were the owners in fee of the land under a deed exhibited to the bill and relied on the [580]*580statutes of limitation contained in secs. 28-201 through. 28-208, T.C.A. The bill also alleged that the tract of land was at the time of the filing of the hill in the possession of the complainants and that a house and cleared land had been maintained on the tract for many more than seven continuous years by complainant and his predecessors in title. The defendant answered and denied that the boundaries of complainants’ land were located so as to include the place of defendant’s activities; denied that complainants had had seven years continuous possession of the lands upon which defendant was alleged to have trespassed; averred that title to the lands where defendant had carried out its admitted mining activities was vested in W. J. Morgan, under whom defendant claimed as a lessee for the use and occupancy of the lands; alleged that complainants and their predecessors in title had failed to pay and keep paid the taxes on said land during twenty years preceding the date of the filing of the original bill.

In the court below, and here, the defendant has responded to the suit as though it were in ejectment, which it is not. It is a suit for an injunction to restrain defendant from damaging complainants’ property and from continuing in its trespass thereon, and to recover damages on account thereof. The original bill avers title and possession to be in the complainants. This action is in principle similar to the law action of trespass quare clausum fregit, and complainants are entitled to recover if they can show either actual possession of the land in question, or a valid legal title carrying with it constructive possession, and a trespass by the defendant without justification.

[581]*581It appears complainants purchased a twenty-five acre (more or less) tract of land from Herbert and Hilda Caldwell in August, 1949, and soon thereafter moved into the house thereon, in which their grantors had lived. That, thereafter they exercised dominion over the tract by cutting timber thereon and by farming. In 1952, they went to Baltimore Md. to take employment. Upon their return in August, 1957, they found strip mining activities being carried on by defendant upon land they had always claimed under their deed. They then brought suit for injunction and trespass.

In the record title to the W. J. Morgan land it appears that in September, 1914, D. T. Layne and Lula Layne conveyed the surface interest in the Morgan lands to J. B. Morgan by a deed which described the south boundary line of the lands conveyed as “Beginning at a spruce pine on the bluff of the mountain near where the waters pour off, being A. Higgins Northwest corner; thence south 62 degrees, east 41 poles to a chestnut in the line of the T.C.I. and R.R. Co. ’ ’ In the record title to the Doss tract, it appears that in 1938 D. T. Layne, et ux., conveyed the tract to John Brown, who conveyed it in 1943 to Herbert Caldwell, who conveyed it to complainants in 1949. In complainants’ chain of title, the north line of the tract of land, the line separating the lands of complainant and defendants is described as beginning “on a rock in Higgins G-ap, going eastwardly to an oak corner in line of Tennessee Coal Iron & R. R. Co. then following the Tennessee Coal Iron & R. R. Co. line southwardly;”- "When the complainants returned from Baltimore, and found the strip mining activities being carried on upon what they had always understood was a portion of their tract of land, they employed a surveyor, W. P. Gibson, with [582]*582forty-four years experience, to make a survey and to determine whether defendant was trespassing across their north boundary. This survey began on a standing rock near Higgins Gap. From this beginning point, which is admitted to be approximately correct by the defendants, he surveyed a line eastwardly to a large stump hole in the T.O.I. line. He testified that although there were no calls in complainants’ deed for the compass bearing upon which he surveyed, he surveyed along a line of old marked trees, and in accordance with the reputation in the community as to the location of the line and along a line between the two monuments called for in the Doss deed, the stone and the place where the tree stood in the past; that he found a sideline tree bearing directly on the stump hole where the northeast corner, described in the deed as a chestnut oak, must have stood; that now there was only a large hole in the line, of the sort that is left when a tree is removed. That there was also another line tree nearby and several on the north line, all of which clearly established that the north line of complainants’ tract ran north 72 degrees east, 855 feet to the hole where the oak stood in the T.C.I. line, and not south 62 degrees east, 745 feet to said line, as contended by defendant.

It can be stated without further analysis of the proof, that if complainants’ north boundary runs north 72 degrees east to the hole in the T.C.I. line, rather than south 62 degrees east to the same line, the strip mining activities admittedly carried on by defendant, acting under the lease from Morgan, were carried on upon complainants’ land and 5,000 tons of coal were mined therefrom of the reasonable value of 35 cents per ton.

[583]*583The Chancellor found the preponderance of the evidence established the correct location of the Doss north boundary line, as running from the standing rock near Higgins Cap north 72 degrees east to its intersection with the T.C.I. line, where the oak once stood and where there now is only a hole; that the complainants had actual possession of this tract and that even though both the Doss tract and Morgan tract deraign from a common source, the burden of proof is that the line in fact ran as contended by complainants. In conformity with this opinion, a decree was entered awarding complainants $1,750 against defendant, declaring the south line of the Morgan tract and the north line of the Doss tract to be as above stated and making permanent the temporary injunction against trespass which had originally been granted. Defendant has appealed from this decree and assigned one error.

The error assigned is to the effect the court erred in holding complainants were the owner in fee and entitled to the possession of lands described in the original bill, and in decreeing the location of the same upon the ground so as to include the lands whereon the defendant had mined and removed coal under lease from W. J. Morgan, and erred in overruling defendant’s plea of title to said lands in its lessor, W. J. Morgan, and entering judgment against it and taxing it with the costs. This assignment of error is supported by some five primary contentions which we will discuss in the order in. which they are made.

First, it is said the assignment of error must be sustained because the great weight of the evidence proved a valid subsisting legal title in W. J. Morgan, supported by actual possession for almost twenty continuous years, to the lands which defendant had under [584]*584lease. With respect to this contention the Chancellor held that the defendant had proved W.

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Bluebook (online)
340 S.W.2d 923, 47 Tenn. App. 577, 1960 Tenn. App. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doss-v-tennessee-products-chemical-corp-tennctapp-1960.