Hughes v. Cowan Stone Co.

766 S.W.2d 188, 106 Oil & Gas Rep. 133, 1988 Tenn. App. LEXIS 556
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 9, 1988
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 766 S.W.2d 188 (Hughes v. Cowan Stone Co.) 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
Hughes v. Cowan Stone Co., 766 S.W.2d 188, 106 Oil & Gas Rep. 133, 1988 Tenn. App. LEXIS 556 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

F. LLOYD TATUM, Special Judge.

This is an appeal by the plaintiffs below from the action of the Chancery Court of Franklin County granting a motion for summary judgment. The plaintiffs present issue that the Chancellor erred in sustaining the motion.

In the first count of the complaint, the plaintiffs allege that they are owners of a tract containing 550 acres of land in Franklin County which was leased to the defendant, Cowan Stone Company, on November 10, 1956. It is charged that there is a 15-pole strip of land extending from the main tract to the L & N Railroad and that this 15-pole strip is a part of the 550 acres tract (referred to in the record as 548 acres). It is alleged that the defendant has placed extensive improvements on the 15-pole strip. The complaint alleges that the lease has expired and that the plaintiffs are entitled to the possession of the 15-pole strip. The first count is brought in ejectment to recover said land, including the 15-pole strip.

In count 2 of the complaint, it is alleged that the defendant has mined and removed limestone from the leased property of 550 acres without paying royalty according to the terms of the lease. It is prayed that the defendant be required to furnish a survey of the outside boundaries of the leased premises and an underground survey and accounting. The plaintiffs sue in the second count for an accounting, damages, and unpaid royalties.

Answering count 1 of the complaint, the defendant denied the material allegations therein. The defendant denies that the plaintiffs own the 15-pole strip. The defendant states that it has a deed to the 15-pole strip, has paid taxes on it continuously for more than 20 years and it pleads adverse possession and the Statute of Limitations contained in T.C.A. § 28-2-101, et seq.

Pleading to the second count, the defendant states that it has complied with the terms of the lease and that the claim is barred by the statute of limitations. The defendant also states that plaintiffs have waived any requirement to make the initial survey as required by the lease. The defendant also denies that it mined and removed limestone from the property without paying all royalties due. The defendant denies that it was bound to make an underground survey and that it had concealed or neglected to furnish adequate accountings to the plaintiffs. The defendant pleads the 6-years Statute of Limitations.

The defendant filed a motion for a summary judgment pursuant to Rule 56 of the [190]*190Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure. The parties filed numerous affidavits with over 40 exhibits.

The Chancellor found that the lease was for only mineral rights and that the Statute of Limitations could therefore run on surface rights. The Chancellor observed that according to the affidavits, the defendant was paying taxes on the property, was holding it under color of title, and was utilizing the surface for building, machinery, storage, and in a manner that was adverse to the plaintiffs’ interest. The court found there was no permissive use of the surface except for mine entries. Consequently, the Chancellor held that the defendant had adverse possession of the 15-pole strip which defeated the first count of the complaint (ejectment from the surface).

The Court also held:

“Let us assume for the purpose of this motion that the defendant occupied the plaintiffs’ land. The plaintiffs allege that such occupation is with their consent because of the Lease. For this purpose, it is extremely important that the Lease was for only mineral rights. Therefore, since there has been a separation of mineral rights and surface rights, the Statute of Limitation could run on the surface rights, provided the defendant was holding itself out for an adequate period of time as the owner. Certainly the defendant was doing just that. Under the affidavits it was paying tax on the property; it was holding under the color of title; and most important, it was utilizat-ing [sic] the surface for building, machinery, storage, all in a manner that was adverse to the plaintiffs’ interest. There was no permissive use of the surface. This Court is cognizant of the fact that a leasing of mineral rights allows the lessee to have mine entries and do that which is consistent with taking the ore from the ground, but in the instant case, the defendant totally utilized, to the exclusion of others, the surface rights. Consequently, it is held that regardless of all else, the defendants have a protective shield under adverse recession [sic] to defeat this action of ejectment for the surface.
It is important that we remember a controversy is involved as to where the property lines run. The plaintiffs allege that the defendant has not paid them for the ore or limestone which was beneath the surface of the 15 pole strip. If this is trust (sic), it shows that the area which the defendant was holding was held adversely outside the scope of the Lease. The plaintiff brought no action for any limestone that was mined. Consequently, the Court also holds the sub-surface was being held adversely and also rules in favor of the defendant.
Thirdly, after reviewing the statements of the parties and attempting to analyze the deeds the plaintiffs have filed to support their chain of title, the Court is of the opinion they also fail in this respect. There is no need, however, to go into this issue, which might require proof.”

In summary, the Chancellor held that an issue existed as to who had legal title to the 15-pole strip; but, assuming that legal title was vested in the plaintiffs, as they allege, then the defendant had more than 7 years adverse possession under color of title and therefore, would own the properly by adverse possession if it did not have legal title.

In 1956, the plaintiffs entered into a mineral rights lease with the defendant, allowing the defendant to mine limestone from the sub-surface of the large tract of land referred to in the complaint. The lease contained two descriptions of the land, one of which did not mention a 15-pole strip, but the other description concluded with the following:

"... including also the piece of land 15 poles wide running from said tract of land to the railroad and indicated on what is known as the John F. Anderson map.” (No further description of any 15-pole strip was mentioned in the lease.)
The lease stated its purpose as follows: "PURPOSES. The purpose for which the land demised hereby is the underground mining of, and the right to re[191]*191move, all limestone under said land, and in order to so quarry, mine and remove said limestone, the lessee is granted all necessary rights-of-way across said land, and the right to make all necessary excavations for mines, and install all necessary air shafts, ventilators, and entrances and exits, to and from said underground mine.”

We have no difficulty in finding that the lease was for sub-surface rights only, except for ingress and egress and mine entrances.

The lease terminated according to its terms in November, 1978. This suit was filed February 1, 1980.

Before proceeding further, we will again examine Buie 56, Tenn.R.Civ.P.

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Bluebook (online)
766 S.W.2d 188, 106 Oil & Gas Rep. 133, 1988 Tenn. App. LEXIS 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hughes-v-cowan-stone-co-tennctapp-1988.