Horton v. Shacklett

95 S.W.2d 936, 20 Tenn. App. 72, 1936 Tenn. App. LEXIS 4
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 18, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 95 S.W.2d 936 (Horton v. Shacklett) 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
Horton v. Shacklett, 95 S.W.2d 936, 20 Tenn. App. 72, 1936 Tenn. App. LEXIS 4 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

CROWNOVER, J.

This suit involves an easement in a spring. The original bill asked for a mandatory injunction commanding the defendants to remove a fence which obstructed complainants’ use of the spring, and for damages sustained by complainants as the result of being deprived of the use of the water of the spring*.

Complainants contend that their easement entitles them not only to the use of the water of the spring, but also to have their livestock to go upon or over defendants’ land to drink water at the spring branch.

Defendants conceded the fact that complainants had an easement in the spring, but contended that they had traced the spring to its source, which was outside of their fence, and had constructed a concrete basin there, and this concrete basin was the place where complainants were entitled to get their water supply and not the old rock basin which defendants had fenced in. They further contend that complainants are not entitled to have their livestock go upon their (defendants’) lands to drink at the spring branch.

The chancellor held that complainants were entitled to use the waters from the original spring, known in the record as the “rock basin, ’ ’ for stock and domestic purposes, but that this did not include the right to have their livestock go upon the defendants ’ land to procure water at the spring branch; and that complainants are entitled to this water in such way as they deem necessary, and which may be a reasonable use thereof for these purposes. He decreed that injunction issue directing defendants to erect gates' in said fence or make other provision for complainants’ ingress and egress to the rock basin.

Complainants excepted to that part of the decree in which it was decreed that they were not entitled to have their livestock go upon defendants’ land to procure water at the spring branch, and to the court’s failure to decree damages, and appealed to this court and have assigned as errors the court’s said action.

On February 11, 1888, C. A. Thompson and others, children and heirs at law of Felix Compton, deceased, conveyed to Emily G. Comp *74 ton a 100-aere tract of land on the Granny White pike, about five miles from Nashville.

Emily G-. Compton conveyed said land to Kate Thompson K'irkma.n on October 1, 1895.

Mrs. Kate T. Kirkman conveyed to Josephine Hirsig, on September 27, 1911, the north half of said tract, containing 51.6 acres, reserving the-following easement:

“Reserving and retaining for the use and benefit of the owner of southern half of said Compton tract and any present and future owner thereof, the right and easement to use water .from the spring on the above described premises and of ingress to and egress from said spring over, upon and across said premises hereby conveyed for the purpose of obtaining and using’ said water and for the purpose of installing and maintaining a pumping system by laying pipes on said premises between said spring* and the south half of said tract and repairing same from time to time as may be necessary to the end that the owner of the south half of said Compton tract shall enjoy a free and perpetual easement of use of water from said spring for stock and domestic purposes, such easement to be grantable by me to any purchaser of said south half and operate as a covenant running with the land.”

Josephine Hirsig and husband conveyed to Emerson E. Horton, on October 15, 1918, a part of said tract, containing' 9.08 acres at the southeast corner of said tract, designated lot 25, Zenaida place. The deed dontained the following provision:

“And the said Mrs. Josephine Hirsig and husband W. G-. Hirsig agree thereby that the said Emerson E. Horton shall have the right and easement to use water from the spring on Lot No. 20 for stock and domestic purposes.”

Josephine Hirsig conveyed the west 30.74 acres of this tract, designated lot No. 20, Zenaida place, on May 14, 1928 to Sam W. Shaeklett and wife; the deed reciting:

“The property above described is conveyed subject to easement set out in deed from Mrs. Josephine Hirsig and husband, W. G-. Hirsig, to Emerson E. Horton, recorded in Book 519, page 217, to which reference is hereby made.”

Emerson E. Horton died intestate in Davidson county, March 23, 1929, leaving surviving him his widow and three children, who are the complainants in this cause.

The Hirsig tract was a parallelogram, containing 51.6 acres, fronting on the Granny White pike. It is now owned as follows: (1) Shaeklett owns three-fifths of same, 30.74 acres, lot No. 20, fronting on the Granny White pike; its southern boundary is Battery Lane. (2) The Hortons own 9.08 acres, lot No. 25, at the southeast corner of the tract, at the rear of the Shaeklett tract; their western boundary *75 being part of tbe Shacklett eastern boundary. The Horton place fronts on Battery lane. (3) Mrs. Hirsig still owns 11.78 acres, lot No. 24, at the northeast corner of the track; its southern boundary being the northern boundary of the Horton tract and its western boundary being a part of the Shacklett eastern boundary. A branch runs along the Shacklett eastern boundary, just inside of same. There is a large spring on the eastern bank of the branch, also within the Shacklett boundaries. This is the spring in which the Hortons, the Hirsigs, and the owners of the southern half of the old Compton tract have easements. It is a large spring with an almost inexhaustible supply of water. It appeared to originate or rise in a large rock basin near the bank of the branch, and the water flowed northeast-wardly to an old rock spring house, and thence into the branch. The rock basin has been located there for many years.

There was formerly an old road or passageway, running diagonally across the tract, between the Shacklett tract and the other two tracts, but it has been abandoned. The center of this road is the boundary line between the tracts.

After Emerson E. Horton purchased the 9.08-acre tract in 1918 (which was ten years before Shacklett bought the front tract), he rented from Mrs. Hirsig the rest of the tract and conducted a dairy, his cattle on the whole tract drinking at the branch where the water from the spring ran into same.

After Shacklett purchased lot No. 20, the Hortons continued to rent lot 24 from Mrs. Hirsig until about May, 1933. Since that time Mrs. Horton has rented the Cheek place, several miles off, for pasture for her cows.

Shacklett testified that when he purchased lot No; 20 the spring was full of mud; that he had the water analyzed and found it contained bacilli; that a big rain caused the creek to rise around the rock basin; that he noticed water bubbling out of the ground in a low place several feet from the rock basin; that he dug from that point to the rock basin and found a stream of water; that he followed the stream back to a point where the water came out between two rocks; that he constructed a concrete basin over this outlet, the basin about three and one-half feet deep, the top about level with the ground; that he laid a tile connection from the concrete basin to the rock basin; that the concrete basin is 23.3 feet east of the rock basin.

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Bluebook (online)
95 S.W.2d 936, 20 Tenn. App. 72, 1936 Tenn. App. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horton-v-shacklett-tennctapp-1936.