Jerry D. Carmack v. Louis W. Oliver, III

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 26, 2007
DocketM2006-01873-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jerry D. Carmack v. Louis W. Oliver, III (Jerry D. Carmack v. Louis W. Oliver, III) 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
Jerry D. Carmack v. Louis W. Oliver, III, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE April 9, 2007 Session

JERRY D. CARMACK ET AL. v. LOUIS W. OLIVER, III

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Sumner County No. 25190-C Hamilton Gayden, Jr., Judge

No. M2006-01873-COA-R3-CV - Filed November 26, 2007

Landowners who hired an attorney to defend their property rights brought suit for legal malpractice against that attorney related to his representation in the litigation over disputed property. The defendant attorney filed a motion for summary judgment, claiming that the one-year statute of limitations for malpractice claims had passed before the landowners filed their suit against him. The trial court granted the attorney’s motion. We affirm the grant of summary judgment to the defendant attorney as to any allegations of delay in seeking an injunction against a trespassing neighbor, since the landowners had complained about the delay to several official bodies over two and a half years before they filed their complaint against their attorney. However, we reverse the trial court as to any alleged acts of legal malpractice that occurred within one year of the filing of the plaintiffs’ complaint.

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

PATRICIA J. COTTRELL, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which WILLIAM C. KOCH , JR., P.J., M.S., joined. WILLIAM B. CAIN , J., not participating.

August C. Winter, Brentwood, Tennessee, for the appellants, Jerry D. Carmack, Georgia Kay Carmack Brooks, and Brenda Gail Carmack Thomas.

Douglas Fisher, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Louis W. Oliver, III.

OPINION

I. A PROPERTY DISPUTE

The genesis of this case lies in a dispute pitting three siblings who owned a forty-seven acre tract of land in Sumner County against the owner and developer of an adjoining property. Jerry Carmack, Kay Carmack Brooks, and Brenda Carmack Thomas (“the Carmacks”) discovered that their neighbor Kenneth Earp was removing large quantities of topsoil from an area at the edge of their property. Mr. Earp apparently believed that the property he was removing the soil from belonged to him. In April of 1999, the Carmacks retained attorney Louis W. Oliver III to vindicate their property rights.

Mr. Oliver sent a certified letter to Mr. Earp on April 23, 1999 giving him notice that his activities were encroaching on the Carmacks’ property. Mr. Earp did not respond to the letter, but continued his excavations. The Carmacks wanted Mr. Oliver to act as quickly as possible to obtain an injunction to prevent Mr. Earp from removing any more topsoil from the property. However, Mr. Oliver apparently believed that he first had to take some steps to ensure that the Carmacks had sufficient title to the property to successfully challenge Mr. Earp.

At the time Mr. Carmack first contacted Mr. Oliver, life tenants were in possession of the property from which Mr. Earp was removing topsoil.1 Mr. Oliver advised the Carmacks that they needed to obtain fee simple title to the property in order to proceed effectively against Mr. Earp. Mr. Oliver filed a petition in chancery claiming that the life tenants were committing waste. The life tenants relinquished their tenancy in September of 2000, leaving the Carmacks with a fee simple title.2

Mr. Earp was apparently acting in reliance on a survey he had commissioned. On the advice of Mr. Oliver, Jerry Carmack hired a different surveyor to perform his own survey of the property. That survey was originally scheduled to take ten days, but it was not completed for twenty-one months. Mr. Carmack testified in deposition that he believed that the surveyor stopped work for eleven months at Mr. Oliver’s request. The survey of the property was finally completed in 2001, and Mr. Oliver obtained an injunction to prevent Mr. Earp from trespassing on the Carmack land. By that time, Mr. Carmack had decided he also wanted to sue some other parties for encroachments that had occurred while the life tenants were in possession of their land.

Mr. Oliver asserts that he had reservations about adding additional defendants to the case, but Mr. Carmack was insistent, and Mr. Oliver acceded to his wishes. The complaint, filed in June of 2001, named not only Mr. Earp, but also the Tennessee Electric Power Company, which had installed utility poles in 1927; the Castalian Springs-Bethpage Water Utility District, which had installed water lines and meters beginning in 1967, the North Central Telephone Cooperative, which had added its lines to the power company’s utility poles, and Sumner County, which had allegedly taken some of the Carmacks’ land by inverse condemnation in 1956 to build a road.

Prior to the trial of the case, the above named quasi-governmental and governmental bodies filed motions for summary judgment, each of which was based at least in part on the passing of the relevant statutes of limitations. Relying on a case from 1899, Mr. Oliver argued in opposition to the motions that the statutes of limitations did not run against the Carmacks until the life tenants’ interest

1 In Gregory v. Alexander, 367 S.W.2d 292 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1962), this court first ruled on a dispute as to the land in question and declared that the Carmacks (who were minors at the time) held a remainder interest in the property. 2 Mr. Oliver also told the Carmacks that he wanted to deal with only one person, not three. At his recommendation, Kay Carmack Brooks and Brenda Carmack Thomas transferred their interests in the property to Jerry Carmack by quitclaim deed on September 10, 2003

-2- was extinguished and their remainder interest was perfected. The trial court ultimately granted the defendants’ motions.3

The hearing of the remainder of the underlying case took place over two days, on June 2 and 3, 2003, during which the trial court heard testimony by ten witnesses, including the two surveyors. The court found both surveyors to be credible, but held that the correct boundary was the line identified by the Carmacks’ surveyor, because Mr. Earp’s surveyor relied upon a fence line that was not referenced in any deed or description of the property.

The court accordingly declared that the property in dispute belonged to the Carmacks. The court also found that Mr. Earp had removed 662 loads of topsoil and twenty loads of creek gravel from the Carmack property, and it valued the soil and gravel at $20 per load. The total judgment amounted to $13,740.4 The Earp defendants were also required to restore an access road on one side of the Carmack property. In response to a subsequent motion, the court awarded the Carmacks their discretionary costs in the amount of $2,956.80

II. THE MALPRACTICE LAWSUIT

The record indicates that Mr. Carmack had become frustrated with the slowness of his attorney’s attempts to secure his rights through the legal process by the fall of 1999. In 2001, he had contacted other attorneys in an unsuccessful attempt to find someone to replace Mr. Oliver. He also reported his dissatisfaction with Mr. Oliver to the Office of the Attorney General, the Tennessee Bar Association, the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, and the Board of Professional Responsibility. The Board informed him that he was entitled to file a written complaint with them, but Mr. Carmack declined to do so. Mr. Oliver was apparently unaware of Mr. Carmack’s actions, and he continued to represent the Carmacks.

On February 24, 2004, the Carmacks filed a legal malpractice complaint against Louis Oliver Although they had prevailed on their claim against Mr. Earp, they alleged that Mr. Oliver’s service to them fell below the standard of care.

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