Evans v. Wheeler

348 S.W.2d 500, 209 Tenn. 40, 13 McCanless 40, 1961 Tenn. LEXIS 349
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 26, 1961
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 348 S.W.2d 500 (Evans v. Wheeler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evans v. Wheeler, 348 S.W.2d 500, 209 Tenn. 40, 13 McCanless 40, 1961 Tenn. LEXIS 349 (Tenn. 1961).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Tomlinson

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case has been in our Courts for a number of years. One issue thereof, and renewed here, was decided by this *43 Court in the early part of 1955 in the case of Evans v. Mayberry et al., 198 Tenn. 187, 278 S.W.2d 691, 279 S.W. 2d 705. The Court of Appeals is in accord with the findings and decree of the Chancellor. Evans seeks certiorari. It was granted.

Evans owned 43 acres on the East side of Cooper Lane and 33 acres on its West side, all in Davidson County. The tract on the East is now quite suitable for subdivision into residential lots. A few lots thereon have already been sold. Had Evans’ suit in this case been sucsessful, it would have made adjoining tracts belonging to respective defendants unsuitable for subdivison or useless as a sub-division by blocking these lands from reasonable access to public roads.

As a matter of fact, however, one of the two roads claimed by Evans has been found to be dedicated to public use, and this finding is supported by substantial evidence. Evans undertook to prevent its use, however, by building fences across it. The Davidson County Highway Department tore these fences down. An injunction against that was unsuccessfully sought by Evans.

As to the other road, while the County considered itself to be the owner, its rights seemed doubtful. Therefore, to acquire same as a public road, it filed in this cause a petition for condemnation thereof. The usual eminent domain proceedings were had by orders of the Chancellor and damages fixed.

Ordinarily Chancery Court has no jurisdiction of eminent domain proceedings. However, Evans commenced this suit in that Court for the purpose of procuring equitable relief by way of injunction, etc. to which he alleged he was entitled. Since the Chancellor acquired *44 jurisdiction for those proceedings, so, “upon familiar maxims of equity” it was authorized to retain “jurisdiction for the purpose of assessing damages” etc. in so far as the case turned into eminent domain proceedings. Armstrong v. Illinois Central Railroad Company, 153 Tenn. 283, 302, 303, 282, S.W. 382, 387; Chambers v. Chattanooga Union Railroad, 130 Tenn. 459, 463, 464, 171 S.W. 84.

Evans labels these condemnation proceedings a conspiracy between these defendants, adjoining property owners, and the County Highway Department and the Planning Authority of Davidson County. His insistence is that the condemnation was not for a public use, hut for the benefit of the defendant adjoining property owners. The Courts have found to the contrary on substantial evidence. That finding is conclusive in considering this certiorari.

Evans sought to procure a decree directing that all costs of the condemnation proceedings be paid by the individuals who in their capacity as officials of Davidson County instituted and prosecuted these proceedings. This, too, was based on the theory of conspiracy. The Courts denied him such relief, and further held that he could not maintain that suit as a taxpayer in any event. The reasons are stated in the opinion. No error is found in such action of the two preceding Courts.

One of the several branches of this suit grows out of the fact that some years before any litigation started Evans procured his brother to purchase an adjoining 40 acres and says that his brother then orally agreed to sell it to him for $8,000 and that he paid his brother $1,000 thereon. Subsequently, his brother sold the property to one of the defendants herein for $11,000. This too is *45 charged by Evans to have been a part of the conspiracy. He brought suit, not against his brother, but against the one who purchased the property from Evans on the ground that he wrongfully persuaded his brother to breach this contract.

The Circuit Court sustained a demurrer directed to the proposition that the contract, being unenforceable between the actual parties to the suit, the action would not lie against defendents. This Court in affirming that action said:

“If the party to such oral agreement would not be liable for noncompliance therewith, it is legally incomprehensible that another person would be liable for procuring him not to perform.” [198 Tenn. 187, 278 S.W.2d 692.]

In the instant case the liability of the other defendants, as parties to this alleged conspiracy, is again urged upon the Court. Evans v. Mayberry, supra, wherein the point is decided, is violently attacked.

Evans v. Mayberry affirmatively recognized that the view' stated by it was perhaps the minority view, but it regarded the same as the better view. Whether that decision be right or wrong, it is certainly the law of this case, as the two preceding Courts have held. Hence, the insistence here renewed for liability of these parties was necessarily rejected by these Courts, and must be rejected here.

Unless it be as to the one issue now to be discussed, all the insistences of Evans have been correctly decided by the Court of Appeals, and the reasons for such decision clearly stated in its opinion. Nothing is to be *46 gained by prolonging that discussion. It was for this reason that this Court, in granting the writ, limited the argument to this remaining issue.

The physical situation out of which this issue grew is correctly described in the Clerk & Master’s report made in response to the Chancellor’s order of reference. The order of reference, in so far as here pertinent, is this:

“After careful deliberation this Court finds that Cooper Creek was upon the land of complainant and Davidson County was in violation of complainant’s right in rechanneling the creek so as to remove it from complainant’s land. The complainant was damaged by the County’s action but his proof on this issue is so highly speculative that this Court cannot make a finding of damages. A reference to the Clerk and Master is proper on this item.”

The report of the Clerk & Master responsive thereto is this:

“On August 25,1958, an order was entered in Minute Book 183, page 403, requiring the Master to hear proof and report as to what damages, if any, the complainant is entitled to recover against Davidson County for the diversion of that portion of Cooper Creek that formerly ran under Cooper Lane to the easterly side of said Lane.
“Pursuant to said order I report as follows. At one time a few years ago Cooper Creek ran in a southerly direction on the westerly side of Cooper Lane. At a point in or near the boundary line of property owned by the complainant this creek ran under the Lane to the easterly side and for a distance of something like a *47 hundred feet continued down the easterly side of the right of way and then ran hack under the lane to the westerly side. The complainant owned land on both sides of Cooper Lane, 43 acres on the easterly side and 33 acres on the westerly side of said lane.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
348 S.W.2d 500, 209 Tenn. 40, 13 McCanless 40, 1961 Tenn. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-wheeler-tenn-1961.