Lawrence County v. George Shaffer, et ux

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 12, 2009
DocketM2007-01696-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Lawrence County v. George Shaffer, et ux (Lawrence County v. George Shaffer, et ux) 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
Lawrence County v. George Shaffer, et ux, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE July 10, 2008 Session

LAWRENCE COUNTY v. GEORGE SHAFFER, ET UX, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Lawrence County No. 12934-06 Stella L. Hargrove, Judge

No. M2007-01696-COA-R3-CV - Filed February 12, 2009

After Lawrence County landowners installed a gate across an unpaved rural road, the County filed a declaratory judgment action to determine the rights of all the parties whose properties adjoined that road, as well as the right of the County to remove the obstruction. The landowners who installed the gate argued that the road had never been legally declared a county road and that the gate was necessary to prevent their neighbors from trespassing on their property. After a hearing, the trial court found (1) that the road was a county road and (2) that its entire length was contained in an easement which no one was allowed to obstruct. The court accordingly ordered the landowners to remove the gate. We affirm.

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

PATRICIA J. COTTRELL, P.J.,M.S., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ANDY D. BENNETT and RICHARD H. DINKINS, JJ., joined.

Robert D. Massey, Pulaski, Tennessee, for the appellants, George Shaffer and Pat Shaffer, et al.

Charles William Holt, Lawrenceburg, Tennessee, for the appellee, Lawrence County.

OPINION

I. A ROADWAY EASEMENT

In March of 1974, the heirs at law of Lottie Taylor sold George Shaffer and his wife Pat a 149 acre tract of farm property in Lawrence County. Ms. Taylor had owned the property and made it her home until her death at the age of 79 on January 12, 1974. Access from the nearest paved road, Brace Road, to her property and to other property owned by Ms. Taylor’s children, was by way of an unpaved road called Jarel Lane.1

By prior arrangement, Ms. Taylor’s heirs also conveyed a roadway easement to the Shaffers in April of 1974, said easement extending from Brace Road to the property they had purchased. The instrument of conveyance described the easement by metes and bounds, but it is undisputed that the roadway located within the easement is the aforesaid Jarel Lane. The conveyance declared the easement as “. . . the same being designated as a free and undisturbed roadway forever for said George W. Shaffer and wife, Pat Shaffer, their heirs, successors, and assigns forever without right in themselves or said heirs, successors and assigns in anywise to obstruct or stop up the same.”

On August 12, 1985, the Shaffers purchased an additional 21 acre tract of land from W.I. Keeton and Ollie Keeton. Mr. Keeton was a son and heir of Lottie Taylor. On December 6 of the same year, the Shaffers purchased yet another tract from Thomas J. Lester and his wife Mello Jo Lester. That tract had once been owned by Lottie Taylor and had been purchased by the Lesters in 1977. It included land on both sides of the easement. The Lesters’ warranty deed stated that their property contained “ten acres more or less including and excluding from this conveyance a roadway on the S side of this place.”2 The sale to the Shaffers of the almost four acres south of the roadway left the Lesters with 6.19 acres along its northern boundary. A house and three mobile homes were located on the property retained by the Lesters.

Unfortunately, the roadway proved to be a continuing point of friction between the Shaffers and the Lesters. George Shaffer complained that Ms. Lester’s son-in-law sometimes left his eighteen wheel tractor-trailer parked on the road, thereby impeding traffic. The Lesters complained that Mr. Shaffer refused to allow them to build a fence along the boundary between the road and what they deemed to be their property. Mr. Shaffer had insisted that since the easement was forty feet wide, any fence built by the Lesters would have to be at least twenty feet from the center of Jarel Lane.

In December of 2005, Mr. Shaffer erected a gate (“the first gate”) and a cattle guard across the road at a distance of about 410 feet from the intersection of Brace Road and Jarel Lane. He also built a fence along the northern side of the road beyond the first gate, extending an additional 131 feet to another gate (“the second gate”) which leads into the 149 acre tract that he bought in 1974 from the heirs of Lottie Turner. Mr. Shaffer testified that he had maintained that second gate for more than twenty years.

1 The proof showed that the unpaved road was also called Lottie Taylor Road and Brewer Road at different times, and that it was designated as Jarel Lane at about the time that 911 service was extended to that area of Lawrence County.

2 Similarly, a 1959 deed from Lottie Taylor to her son Donald Taylor to land on both sides of the road specifically excluded the roadway from the conveyance.

-2- The existence of the new gate and fence limited ingress and egress from the Lester property to Jarel Lane and made it nearly impossible for the Lesters’ daughter and son-in-law, who lived on the end of the property beyond the first gate, to use their driveway. Ms. Lester was very indignant about Mr. Shaffer’s installation of what she called “a spite fence,” and on several occasions she cut the chain that Mr. Shaffer had placed on his gate.

II. TRIAL PROCEEDINGS

On May 8, 2006, Lawrence County filed a Complaint for Declaratory Judgment. The Complaint named all the landowners whose property touched Jarel Road as defendants, asserted that Jarel Lane had been on the list of county roads since 1988, and asked the court for a declaration of the rights of the parties, including the right of the County to order the removal of the obstruction placed on Jarel Lane by the Shaffers.

The trial court filed a Restraining Order on May 15, 2006 in order to maintain the status quo. The court ordered that no fences or gates were to be taken down, cut, removed or destroyed until further orders of the court. A subsequent order, filed on May 23, 2006, directed the Shaffers to leave the first gate open until further orders of the court.

The hearing on the Complaint was conducted on October 16 and November 28, 2006. The County called Lawrence County Road Superintendent Donnie Joe Brown as its first witness. Mr. Brown testified that Jarel Lane was on the County Road list when he began his duties in 1998, and that the county had maintained it up to the area of the Lesters’ driveway, which was also where the first gate was subsequently erected. He testified that the county could not do any maintenance beyond that point because the road was too narrow for its heavy equipment to turn around.

Mr. Brown had no personal knowledge as to exactly when Jarel Lane became a County Road. The earliest documentary evidence admitted into the record as to that question was in the form of the Minutes of the Lawrence County Quarterly Court of July 1988, approving a County Road List. Jarel Lane was included on that list, as well as on the lists approved in every subsequent year. The road was consistently described as being of chert, .1 miles in length, and running from Brace Road to a dead end.

The only other witnesses called to testify by the County were defendants Dean Taylor and Mello Jo Lester.3 One corner of the Taylors’ property abuts Jarel Road. Ms. Taylor testified that she lived on that property in 1954 and 1955, and that at that time the disputed road connected to Three Oaks Road. She stated “that road was maintained by the County when we lived there all the way to the creek; all the way to the creek. The grader came down that road.”

3 Dean Taylor is the wife of Lottie Taylor’s son Donald Taylor, who was unable to attend the trial because of illness. Mello Jo Lester is the widow of Thomas J. Lester, who died in 1999.

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Bluebook (online)
Lawrence County v. George Shaffer, et ux, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawrence-county-v-george-shaffer-et-ux-tennctapp-2009.