E. Joseph Robinson, II v. Nelle Powell Williams Mahaffey

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 21, 2022
DocketM2021-01068-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of E. Joseph Robinson, II v. Nelle Powell Williams Mahaffey (E. Joseph Robinson, II v. Nelle Powell Williams Mahaffey) 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
E. Joseph Robinson, II v. Nelle Powell Williams Mahaffey, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

10/21/2022 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE July 6, 2022 Session

E. JOSEPH ROBINSON, II, ET AL. V. NELLE POWELL WILLIAMS MAHAFFEY ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Bedford County No. 32139 J.B. Cox, Chancellor

No. M2021-01068-COA-R3-CV

This appeal arises from a dispute between three neighbors over the nature and permissible use of an easement created through a 1983 judgment of the chancery court. The plaintiffs own the property that is burdened by the easement and argue that the trial court correctly found that the 1983 judgment created an easement in gross in favor of the landowner directly north of their property. We find that the trial court erred in finding an easement in gross and hold that the 1983 judgment created an express easement appurtenant creating a dominant and servient tenement; however, the easement appurtenant was not capable of being conveyed to landowners who were not purchasing the dominant estate. Likewise, we find that there was no prescriptive or implied easement allowing the easement to be deeded from one neighbor to another. Because the trial court’s judgment lacked findings of fact relevant to the slander of title cause of action, we remand this issue to the trial court for the entry of specific findings of fact on the elements of slander of title. We affirm the trial court’s holding that defendants are responsible for the cost of re-installing a gate that they damaged. The chancery court’s order is reversed in part, vacated in part, and affirmed in part.

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

ANDY D. BENNETT, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D. MICHAEL SWINEY, C.J., and W. NEAL MCBRAYER, J., joined.

Donald N. Capparella and Patrick Byrne McAuley Riley, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellants, Brent Walker,1 Findley Mahaffey, Candace Kellogg, and Harry Kellogg.

1 During the pendency of this appeal, Nelle Powell Mahaffey passed away. On December 29, 2021, Brent Walker, Personal Representative of the Estate of Nelle Powell Williams Mahaffey, was substituted as a party in this case. John H. Richardson, Jr., Fayetteville, Tennessee, for the appellees, E. Joseph Robinson, II, and Brenda M. Robinson.

OPINION

FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND HISTORY

This case involves a dispute between neighbors over the use of an easement. In 1980, Nelle Powell Mahaffey acquired a 107-acre tract of farmland known as “Holt Farm” in Wartrace, Tennessee. The parcel was landlocked, but an existing lane or passageway, referred to in the record as “Historic Holt Lane,” traversed the eastern border of the 107- acre tract and intersected a portion of a neighboring property to the south, connecting Holt Farm to Horse Mountain Road, a public roadway. At issue in this case is a segment of Historic Holt Lane that runs from Horse Mountain Road across property now owned by Joseph and Brenda Robinson (collectively “the Robinsons” or “Plaintiffs”). The Robinsons’ predecessors in title were William H. Robertson and Jane Henderson Magill (hereinafter “Robertson-Magill”) from whom the Robinsons purchased the property in 2015. The Robinsons’ land is directly south of Holt Farm and directly north of and abuts Horse Mountain Road.

Of importance to this case is a prior lawsuit from the early 1980s that resolved a property dispute between Ms. Mahaffey (then known as Nelle Powell Williams) and Robertson-Magill. Robertson-Magill sued Ms. Mahaffey over Ms. Mahaffey’s use of certain property to the south of Holt Farm that she believed she owned. Ms. Mahaffey was apparently engaging in logging activities on the property in question.2 After a bench trial, the Chancery Court for Bedford County determined that Ms. Mahaffey did not own the land at issue; however, the court acknowledged that the Robertson-Magill tract was subject to an easement for the purposes of ingress and egress. Specifically, the chancery court’s 1983 judgment provided, in relevant part:

Plaintiffs, William H. Robertson and Jane Henderson Magill, are the owners in fee of said described land, subject, however, to an easement over and across said described land for the purpose of ingress and egress to and from land owned by the defendant, Nell[e] Powell Williams, which easement is described and limited to the following: An easement for a passageway, not exceeding twenty-two feet in width, along the same location as an existing passageway, the eastern boundary of said twenty-two ft. easement being defined as follows: Beginning at a fence corner post on the north margin of

2 We infer that logging activity was involved in the dispute for several reasons, including that a defendant in the litigation was “J.E. Smith Logging Company” as well as paragraph eight from Defendants’ Rebuttal of Petition for Declaratory Judgment of Easement & Petition for Injunction which states that the 1983 judgment “was a judg[]ment concerning property lines being crossed in logging.” -2- the Wartrace-Horse Mountain Road, 25 feet from its center; thence north 5 deg. 29 min. east 377.2 feet to a corner post; thence along the east boundary of said land belonging to William H. Robertson and Jane Henderson Magill north 6 deg. 27 min. east 802.8 feet to a metal post; thence, again along said east boundary line north 3 deg. 00 min. east 415.3 feet to a snag in old fence, the northeast corner of land belonging to the said Robertson and Magill, where said line intersections with the boundary of Williams.

It is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed by the Court that all claims of ownership in said land described by the defendant, Nell[e] Powell Williams, be, and the same are, hereby removed, and she and the other defendants, and their respective agents, successors in interest, are hereby perpetually enjoined from trespassing upon said land, or instituting any action or making any claim to said land, or interfering with plaintiff’s use and possession of said land.

(Emphasis added). This 1983 judgment was recorded in Deed Book 156, page 1 of the Register’s Office for Bedford County, Tennessee. When Robertson-Magill sold their land to the Robinsons in 2015, the Robinsons’ deed specifically referenced “Easements of record in Deed Book 156, page 1.”

In the late 1980s, Ms. Mahaffey, along with her husband, Findley Mahaffey, purchased other farmland that was adjacent to the 107-acre tract, thereby acquiring approximately 640 contiguous acres around and including Holt Farm. Specifically, the Mahaffeys purchased approximately 65 acres north and east of Holt Farm from Nannie B. and A.M. Donnell (“the Donnells”) in 1986, and in 1987, the Mahaffeys purchased approximately 467 acres east and south of Holt Farm from Mary Kate and John A. Cooper (“the Coopers”).

In 2007, the Mahaffeys sold Candice and Harry Kellogg (“the Kelloggs”) a 9.76- acre tract of the land the Mahaffeys acquired from the Donnells. The “Lot/Land Purchase and Sale Agreement” signed by the Kelloggs and Mahaffeys on April 9, 2007 includes a section entitled “Special Stipulations” which states: “Seller agrees to execute an easement agreement stating that the above property has use of the drive located off Horse Mountain Rd. owned by seller. Purchaser to have attorney initiate the agreement and seller will provide the signed easement agreement at closing.” The 2007 deed conveying 9.76 acres from the Mahaffeys to the Kelloggs states that the conveyance was “subject to any and all existing easements and restrictions of record” and “subject to that Easement of record at Deed Book 156, page 1, Register’s Office, Bedford County, Tennessee.”3

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E. Joseph Robinson, II v. Nelle Powell Williams Mahaffey, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/e-joseph-robinson-ii-v-nelle-powell-williams-mahaffey-tennctapp-2022.