Jean E. Hood v. J. Daniel Freemon

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 3, 2007
DocketM2004-01889-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jean E. Hood v. J. Daniel Freemon (Jean E. Hood v. J. Daniel Freemon) 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
Jean E. Hood v. J. Daniel Freemon, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE September 14, 2005 Session

JEAN E. HOOD v. J. DANIEL FREEMON, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Lawrence County No. 11984-04 Robert L. Holloway, Chancellor

No. M2004-01889-COA-R3-CV - Filed on January 3, 2007

The owner of a tract of undeveloped commercial property in the city of Lawrenceburg asked the trial court to enjoin the lessees of that property from subletting it to the city for the purpose of building a retention pond. She claimed that such a use would constitute waste or create a permanent and private nuisance on the land. The trial court declined to issue the injunction and certified its decision as final for purposes of appeal. We reverse.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Reversed

PATRICIA J. COTTRELL, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which WILLIAM C. KOCH , JR., P.J., M.S., and FRANK G. CLEMENT , JR., J., joined.

H. Anthony Duncan, Franklin, Tennessee, for the appellant, Jean E. Hood.

J. Daniel Freemon, Lawrenceburg, Tennessee, Pro Se for the appellees, J. Daniel Freemon and Ron Mayes.

OPINION

I. A LEASE OF LONG DURATION

The property that is the subject of this dispute is part of a larger tract of 5.8 acres fronting on North Locust Street in Lawrenceburg, which was owned by Viola Ellingson White and her daughter, Jean Ellingson Hood. On March 22, 1972, Ms. White and Ms. Hood leased the entire 5.8 acre tract to Howard J. Freemon. The duration of the lease was ten years, with possible renewals at the end of each term at the sole option of the lessee or his heirs and assignees, “for a total period not to exceed ninety-nine (99) years.” The lessee was to pay a monthly rental of $300 and all taxes assessed against the property. The rent was to increase to $500 after twenty years. Given the modest rent, the limited increase in rent, the lease duration, and the fact that Mr. Freemon had the sole option to extend, the lease was favorable to the lessee. Only in the event of condemnation are the terms favorable to the lessors. Specifically, the lease provides as follows:

In the event that the state, county, or city wish to exercise their right of eminent domain and condemn any of the herein leased property, it is specifically contracted and agreed that the payment for this land will be made to the Lessors. However, any damages to the property because of the business or improvements located thereon shall be paid to the Lessee, Howard Freemon, or his heirs and assigns.

Therefore, if the property were condemned, the landowner would receive the proceeds and the lessee would be compensated only to the extent the improvements were damaged by the taking.

Mr. Freemon was able to make good use of the part of the property that fronted on the road. He constructed buildings for a Taco Bell, a car wash, and a used car lot, and the owners of those businesses signed subleasing agreements which generated between $4,000 and $5,000 per month for Mr. Freemon. The portion of the property behind the businesses was not sublet. It consists of 4.13 acres of undeveloped land which is the subject of this dispute. This back 4.13 acre tract is characterized as low and swampy, but is not in a flood zone.

Ms. White passed away in 1989, and Ms. Hood became the sole owner and lessor of the property. Howard Freemon also passed away before the current dispute arose. His interest in the property as lessee passed to his five sons. One of the sons, Daniel Freemon, is the attorney for the lessees, and he also acts as a managing partner on behalf of his brothers.1

II. A FLOOD CONTROL PROJECT

The City of Lawrenceburg has suffered from serious flooding in recent years, and the city authorities decided that a flood control project was essential. After a study by the Corps of Engineers, they purchased property in one area of the city upon which they constructed two large storm water retention ponds. Another phase of their project involved construction of a retention pond in the vicinity of Ms. Hood’s property. The city purchased a tract that adjoined her property and commissioned a design for a seven acre pond that would encompass the city’s newly-acquired property and the 4.13 acres in dispute.

In order to include Ms. Hood’s property as part of the retention pond, three to four feet of dirt must be excavated from the surface of the 4.13 acre tract and removed to another site so the parcel would flood. The city manager testified that the retention pond is intended to be permanent.

1 Daniel Freemon’s brothers were not named as defendants, but an injunction would presumably bind them. Mr. Freemon also represents the interests of Ronald M ayes, a defendant who apparently holds a 50% stake in the lease.

-2- The city initially began discussions with Mr. Freemon about acquiring the property. When they realized that he held a lease that would expire in the year 2070 at the latest, they decided they needed to communicate with the property owner as well. On November 26, 2003, Joe Baxter, the city’s flood control manager, sent an offer of just compensation in a letter to Ms. Hood, which proposed that the city purchase the 4.13 acres for its fair market value, which an appraiser had found to be $153,000.

The letter offered to disburse the proceeds in accordance with the appraiser’s opinion of the value of the Freemon leasehold interest and Ms. Hood’s reversionary interest. The terms offered would have netted the lessee $129,000, while Ms. Hood would have received $24,000. Ms. Hood rejected the city’s offer, presumably because under the lease she would receive the entire proceeds from a condemnation since the frontage with the improvements was not implicated.

After some subsequent unsuccessful negotiation attempts with Ms. Hood, Mr. Freemon then proposed that he sublet the property directly to the city, thereby eliminating any need for Ms. Hood’s participation. Mr. Freemon proposed that the city pay $500 per month in rent and assume the tax payments on the 4.13 acres. The testimony at trial indicated that Mr. Freemon and the city anticipated that the sublease agreement would require the city to pay the $500 monthly rent directly to Ms. Hood, thereby relieving Mr. Freemon of his financial obligations to her and eliminating any risk to the city arising from non-payment of the underlying master lease.

III. PROCEEDINGS IN THE TRIAL COURT

Jean Hood was determined to prevent the consummation of a deal she believed damaged her land from which she would derive no benefit. She filed a complaint in the Lawrence County Chancery Court asking the court for a temporary restraining order (T.R.O.), a permanent injunction, a finding that Mr. Freemon’s actions breached the lease, and any other relief to which she is entitled. She argued among other things that the proposed arrangement between the city and Mr. Freemon to sublease the property to build the planned retention pond involved impermissible waste to her reversion interest.2 Ms. Hood asked the court to enjoin the lessees from negotiating with the city for a sublease and/or from committing waste on her property. She also filed a lien lis pendens with the Lawrence County Register of Deeds.

Mr. Freemon filed an Answer and Counterclaim. He denied that the lessees’ actions constituted waste, but asserted that if they did, Ms. Hood had an adequate remedy at law. He also asked the court for a mandatory injunction to remove the lien lis pendens from the property.

The court granted the T.R.O., but required Ms. Hood to pay a bond of $150,000 into the court. Counsel for Ms. Hood moved the trial court to reduce the amount of the bond.

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Bluebook (online)
Jean E. Hood v. J. Daniel Freemon, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jean-e-hood-v-j-daniel-freemon-tennctapp-2007.