Kenneth A. Weber v. Harold W. Kroeger

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 10, 2019
DocketM2019-00406-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Kenneth A. Weber v. Harold W. Kroeger (Kenneth A. Weber v. Harold W. Kroeger) 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
Kenneth A. Weber v. Harold W. Kroeger, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

10/10/2019 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE September 4, 2019 Session

KENNETH A. WEBER ET AL. V. HAROLD W. KROEGER ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Davidson County No. 16-1151-II Anne C. Martin, Chancellor

No. M2019-00406-COA-R3-CV

Two adjoining property owners disputed their shared boundary line. The contractor who renovated the houses on each of the parcels owned both properties before selling them to the parties, and he erected a privacy fence where he thought the property line was located. A survey conducted years after the parties had purchased the properties placed the boundary line in a somewhat different location than the location of the privacy fence. When one of the property owners began dismantling the fence in an effort to utilize the property that the survey showed belonged to them, the neighboring owners obtained a temporary restraining order to maintain the status quo and filed a declaratory judgment complaint to determine the boundary line. The trial court entered a judgment declaring that the privacy fence was the boundary line and that the parties jointly owned the fence. On appeal, we affirm the trial court’s ruling declaring the location of the boundary line, but we reverse the ruling that the fence is jointly owned.

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

ANDY D. BENNETT, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which W. NEAL MCBRAYER and ARNOLD B. GOLDIN, JJ., joined.

Hilary Claire Dennen and Alvin Scott Derrick, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellants, Harold W. Kroeger, Mary Kay Kroeger, and The Kroeger Family Trust Dated October 26, 2018.

Kenneth A. Weber, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee Shelley E. Munroe, and pro se.1

1 Mr. Weber is an attorney and is therefore able to represent Ms. Munroe. OPINION

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The two parcels of land at issue in this case were initially part of a larger tract that was divided into a northern property (2405 Oakland Avenue) and a southern property (2407 Oakland Avenue). Both parties purchased their respective lots from Robert Brady Fry, who renovated the houses situated thereon. Mr. Fry purchased 2407 Oakland Avenue (“2407”) on April 9, 2003, and he purchased the adjoining property to the north, 2405 Oakland Avenue (“2405”), on May 20, 2004. Mr. Fry renovated 2405 and sold it to Harold W. and Mary Kay Kroeger (“the Defendants”) on May 16, 2005.2

The Defendants’ deed describes their property as follows:

LAND in Davidson County, Tennessee, being the northerly half of Lot Number 167 on the Plan of Belmont Land Company’s Plan of Lots called Belmont Heights, of record in Plat Book 421, page 34, Register’s Office for Davidson County, Tennessee, to which plan reference is hereby made for a more complete description.

BEING the same property conveyed to Robert Brady Fry by deed from Brennan Chad Brown, an unmarried person, of record as Instrument No. 200405210059958, Register’s Office for Davidson County, Tennessee.

THIS CONVEYANCE IS SUBJECT TO: (1) Taxes which have been prorated and assumed by Grantee; (2) All restrictions of record; (3) All easements of record; (4) All visible easements; (5) All matters appearing on the plan of record; (6) All applicable governmental and zoning regulations.

The Defendants and Mr. Fry executed an addendum to their purchase and sale agreement (“the Addendum”) providing that $5,000 of the purchase price would be held in escrow until Mr. Fry (1) erected a privacy fence between 2405 and 2407 and (2) installed gutters and downspouts on the house. The language regarding the privacy fence is as follows:

Privacy fence to the rear of property and between 2405 and 2407 Oakland Avenue. Fence to the North side of property to be completed in coordination with completion of grading with owners of 2403 Oakland

2 The Kroeger Family Trust Dated October 26, 2018, is also a defendant, but it has no bearing on the proceedings.

-2- Ave. Seller agrees to complete this portion of the fence within 30 days of notice from buyers.3

Mr. Fry sold 2407 to Kenneth Weber and Shelley Munroe (“the Plaintiffs”) on July 27, 2006. The Plaintiffs’ deed describes their property as follows:

Land in Davidson County, Tennessee, being the south half of Lot number 167 on the Map of Belmont Land Company’s plan of record in Book 421, page 34, Register’s Office for Davidson County, Tennessee.

Said part of Lot number 167 fronts 50 feet on the westerly side of Oakland Avenue and runs back between parallel lines 175 feet to an alley.

Being the same property conveyed to Robert Brady Frye (sic) by deed of record as instrument 20030414-0049351, said Register’s Office. The said Robert Brady Frye is also known as Robert Brady Fry. His spouse, Sharma Fry, joins in this conveyance.

THIS CONVEYANCE IS SUBJECT TO: (1) Taxes which have been prorated and assumed by Grantee; (2) All restrictions of record: (3) All easements of record; (4) All visible easements; (5) All matters appearing on the plan of record: (6) All applicable governmental and zoning regulations.

The parties did not question the location of their shared boundary until sometime in 2011, when the Plaintiffs had a survey done for reasons unrelated to this case. As described more fully below, the 2011 survey indicated that the boundary line did not match up with the location of the privacy fence. The Defendants had another survey done in 2016, and based on the results of that survey, the Defendants decided to take down the privacy fence and make use of the property that the survey indicated belonged to them. The Plaintiffs objected to the Defendants’ removal of the fence and sought injunctive and declaratory relief to resolve the dispute.

The parties had a bench trial on November 28, 2018. The witnesses included Mr. Fry, Mr. Weber, and both defendants. Mr. Fry testified that he intended the privacy fence between 2405 and 2407 to be on the property line between the two properties and that, during the time that he lived in 2407, he considered the fence to be the boundary between 2405 and 2407. Mr. Fry explained how he decided where to place the privacy fence:

[T]he idea that a fence post - - the center of a fence will precisely be on a boundary is unlikely. . . . Belmont and Oakland, that neighborhood is

3 This language shows that Mr. Fry agreed to install two privacy fences, one on the north side of 2405 and one on the south side of 2405. Only the south fence, between 2405 and 2407, is at issue in this case. -3- almost exclusively 50-foot by 150-foot lots. Some rare exceptions. But almost every lot including all of them on Oakland and that lot are 50 by 150. The house is set - - the setback is 5-foot off the property line. . . . Our method for laying out the fence would be a measure between the houses. They had the same setback and split that difference. That would have been our method for laying out the fence.

Mr. Fry confirmed that he and his workers followed this practice when they installed the privacy fence at issue. The Defendants were living at 2405 when the privacy fence went up, and they did not express any objections to the location of the fence.

An alley runs behind the Plaintiffs’ and the Defendants’ houses that is parallel to Oakland Avenue. Both parties have an area on their respective properties, contiguous to the alley, where they can park their vehicles. Mr. Fry testified that 2407 had a cement parking pad next to the alley that was there when he purchased the property in 2003. Mr. Fry believed the northern edge of the parking pad marked the northern edge of the property belonging to 2407. Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Kenneth A. Weber v. Harold W. Kroeger, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenneth-a-weber-v-harold-w-kroeger-tennctapp-2019.