Eric Magness v. Terrell W. Couser

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 24, 2008
DocketM2006-00872-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Eric Magness v. Terrell W. Couser (Eric Magness v. Terrell W. Couser) 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
Eric Magness v. Terrell W. Couser, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE Assigned on Briefs September 21, 2007

ERIC MAGNESS ET AL. v. TERRELL W. COUSER ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Williamson County No. 30722 Russ Heldman, Chancellor

No. M2006-00872-COA-R3-CV - Filed January 24, 2008

This case involves a property dispute between neighbors. Property owner and her son who resides on her property brought an action to quiet title and for ejectment against a neighboring property owner. The trial court imposed sanctions against the defendant under Rule 37 of the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure for failing to comply with its order compelling discovery responses. The court subsequently granted the plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment and, after a hearing on damages, issued a permanent injunction against the defendant and her son and a judgment for damages and costs against the defendants. The defendants have appealed. We affirm the trial court’s judgment in part, reverse in part and remand.

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

ANDY D. BENNETT, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which PATRICIA J. COTTRELL, P.J., M.S., and FRANK G. CLEMENT, JR., J., joined.

Brian O. Bowham, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellants, Edith G. Couser and Thomas Couser.

J. Todd Moore, Brentwood, Tennessee; T. Holland McKinnie, Franklin, Tennessee, for the appellees, Eric Magness and Kathleen S. Magness.

OPINION

Kathleen Magness is the owner of a tract of land approximately 3.5 acres in size located on Talley Hollow Road in Fairview, Williamson County, Tennessee. Her son, Eric Magness, lives on the Magness property. Edith G. Couser is the owner of an adjacent tract of land approximately 40 acres in size that abuts Ms. Magness’s property on three sides. Ms. Couser’s son, Thomas Couser, lives on the Couser property. In June 2004, Kathleen and Eric Magness filed suit to quiet title, for ejectment, and for injunctive relief against Edith and her husband Terrell Couser and Williamson County.1 The complaint included the following allegations:

7. The Cousers are attempting to possess a portion of Plaintiff’s property and to appropriate it to their use and are trespassing upon said lands and causing their personal property to trespass upon the same. The Cousers have erected a stone wall or a rock pile and placed posts on the Plaintiff’s property and have moved dirt onto the public right-of-way of Talley Hollow Road, impeding the Plaintiffs’ use of their property and access to their property.

8. The Cousers have also interfered with the placement of land surveyor’s markers on the property lines between the properties, having buried at least one marker.

The plaintiffs requested that title to the disputed land be decreed and quieted, that the Cousers be ordered to return the land to its character prior to the alleged trespass, and that the plaintiffs be awarded damages and a permanent injunction requiring the Cousers to “cease, terminate, and remediate” the described trespass upon the property and refrain from future trespassing. Williamson County filed an answer and was eventually granted summary judgment based upon the court’s finding that Talley Hollow Road was not and never had been a county road.

After the plaintiffs filed a motion for default judgment in August 2004, Ms. Couser filed an answer and counterclaim. In her answer, Ms. Couser alleged that Talley Hollow Road was owned by her or by the county and that she had moved stones to address erosion issues caused by the plaintiffs’ “malicious and willful destruction and alteration of said road and defendant’s property.” She denied that the plaintiffs had been impeded in any legitimate use of the road. Ms. Couser further alleged that the burial of one marker had been necessary because of problems with the marker; she stated that the marker had never been moved and accurately marked the property line. Ms. Couser’s answer set out several defenses. Ms. Couser also filed a motion for a temporary injunction against the plaintiffs, which the court granted. The temporary injunction enjoined the plaintiffs from “permitting or causing further erosion of fill dirt and gravel from the construction site of their property onto the property of Defendant Edith G. Couser.”

In December 2004, the plaintiffs filed a motion to compel based upon the defendant’s failure to answer interrogatories and requests for production of documents alleged to have been served upon her in September 2004. After a hearing on January 3, 2005, the trial court entered a consent order2

1 Terrell Couser, Ms. Couser’s husband, died prior to the initiation of this lawsuit. 2 This order is not included in the record on appeal, which does not contain any filings for the time period between December 20, 2004 and June 1, 2005. Because other parts of the record and the briefs of the parties make reference to the omitted filings, and because the omitted filings are included as appendices to the appellee’s brief, this Court will consider them as necessary.

-2- requiring the defendant to serve her discovery responses upon the plaintiffs by January 14, 2005.3 The plaintiffs filed a motion for sanctions dated January 24, 2005, and an amended motion for sanctions dated March 9, 2005, based upon the defendant’s failure to comply with the court’s order. The defendant filed a response alleging that long-term health problems had prevented her from meeting with counsel. On April 7, 2005, the court entered an order4 imposing sanctions pursuant to Rule 37 of the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure due to the defendant’s failure to comply with the court’s January 11, 2005 order. In its order, the court stated:

2. The Defendants, Terrell W. Couser and Edith G. Couser, are hereby disallowed from supporting or opposing any of their claims or defenses in this matter related to any matter upon which discovery was compelled under the Court’s January 11, 2005, Order.

3. The Defendants, Terrell W. Couser and Edith G. Couser, are hereby disallowed from introducing into evidence at any of the proceedings in this matter anything the discovery of which was compelled under the Court’s January 11, 2005, Order.

The Court reserved the issue of monetary sanctions for a future hearing.

In June 2005, the plaintiffs moved for partial summary judgment, citing the April 7, 2005 order “which prohibits the Cousers from introducing any evidence that could dispute any of the material facts alleged and proven by the Plaintiffs.” The plaintiffs also filed an affidavit by Eric Magness and a statement of undisputed facts. Ms. Couser filed a response in opposition to the plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment and a response to the plaintiffs’ statement of undisputed facts. The defendant also filed a motion requesting leave to present evidence on the basis that Ms. Couser had now complied with the court’s order regarding discovery. After a hearing, the court entered an order on July 7, 2005, denying the defendant’s motion for leave to present evidence (and a motion to amend order) and granting the plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment. The court decreed the plaintiffs to be the owners of the property in question and found Ms. Couser to have been guilty of trespass on the property. The issue of damages and the terms of a permanent injunction to be issued against Ms. Couser were to be determined at the final hearing. The defendant’s counterclaim was dismissed pursuant to Tenn. R. Civ. P. 41.02. In January 2006, the defendant filed a motion in limine for leave to present evidence and to amend the order.

The final hearing was held on February 2, 2006.

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Bluebook (online)
Eric Magness v. Terrell W. Couser, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eric-magness-v-terrell-w-couser-tennctapp-2008.