Maxwell v. Lax

292 S.W.2d 223, 40 Tenn. App. 461, 1954 Tenn. App. LEXIS 168
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 25, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 292 S.W.2d 223 (Maxwell v. Lax) 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
Maxwell v. Lax, 292 S.W.2d 223, 40 Tenn. App. 461, 1954 Tenn. App. LEXIS 168 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

AVERY, P. J.,

(Western Section). In this cause the complainants seek to have a large advertising sign removed from a street in the city of Paris, Henry County, Tennessee, designated as Beil Avenue, erected by the defendants, through the Chancery Court’s mandatory injunction.

Len Maxwell and his wife, Prances Maxwell, J. W. Barton and his wife, Eline Barton, four of the complainants own property adjacent to U. S. Highway 79 and Bell Avenue. Bell Avenue, as now located separates the properties of the complainants Maxwell at and north of said highway, and the complainants Barton own property on [463]*463both sides of Bell Avenue adjoining the property of the Maxwells. That part of the Barton property lying between Beil Avenue and Lavenia Street adjoins said highway on the north.

Bell Avenue is not located along the route originally dedicated for it, but by and with the consent of the proper authority complainants Maxwell and the complainant C. B. Smith, who was the survivor of two trustees to whom the streets and avenues shown on a plat of what is known as the “Currier Addition” in which the land of the Max-wells is located, and the defendants entered into a contract and conveyance, copy of which is shown at pages 175, 176 and 177 of the record, whereby Bell Avenue was changed so as to cause it to intersect said highway at a point “65 feet northeast from the northeast corner of that property conveyed to J. W. Barton and wife, Eline Barton” and a width of 40 feet therefrom along the northwest margin of said highway, thus creating a deviation from the original dedicated route of Bell Avenue so as to cause it to intersect said highway at right angles at the point above described. The entire portion of Bell Avenue as changed crosses the property of complainants Maxwell.

The conveying clause of that instrument is as follows:

“Whereas, Robert T. Lax, J. R. Hays and W. H. Wilson desire to open a street in the vicinity of the east boundary of lot No. 10 in the Currier Addition in the city of Paris, a plat of which addition is of record in deed book 26 at page 508 in the register’s office of Henry County at Paris, Tennessee, to which reference is here made, connecting Bell Avenue with U. S. Highway 79, the same to be used by the said [464]*464Robert T. Lax, J. R. Hays and W. H. Wilson and those having business with them; therefore, we, L. W. Maxwell and wife, Frances Maxwell, hereby deed, transfer and convey to C. B. Smith, as trustee, a parcel of land described as follows:”

After the description, and references to the prior records of conveyance this instrument further provides:

“The same to be held in trust by said trustee and his successors for the use of whoever may now be, or may become the owners of lots in said Currier Addition and for the use of the public, it being the intent and purpose of this instrument to dedicate the -for street purposes as under the common law. The said street shall be subject to the control of all public authorities, which may from time to time exercise jurisdiction over said territory, whether it be state, county or municipal authority.”

By said instrument, which is also signed by the defendants, they agree to construct a surface of asphalt and gravel on said described street and to prevent any dust from being caused by the use of the street.

Defendants owned the Sky-View Drive-In Theatre located on Gail Avenue just north of Bell Avenue, and it is clear from the entire record that the change in the location of Bell Avenue where it intersects the said highway was made for the purpose of affording a better entrance to and from the Sky-View Drive-In Theatre and said highway. The record indicates that the distance from the end of Bell Avenue at the highway to the entrance on Gail Avenue of the Sky-View Theatre is about 500 feet.

[465]*465After Bell Avenue was changed and opened, as above indicated the defendants constructed an advertising sign about 30 feet north of said highway pavement and on the 40 foot strip constituting that portion of Bell Avenue. This sign was constructed in said street about 5 feet from its northwest boundary. It is 21 feet high from the street surface level and 36 feet from end to end, near the top of which is the lettered advertisement of the Sky-View Drive-In Theatre, and the lower part of which is hoarded for a distance of 7 feet 7 inches high and 22 feet wide. A reasonably accurate plat showing the location of the properties, the streets, avenues and highways is filed as an exhibit to the original bill. This advertising sign is brightly lighted, the electrical current being carried to it by a cable laid under the surface of the street along the west side of the sign, the electric power being furnished by the Board of Public Utilities of the City of Paris.

The bill alleges that the defendants, by the construction and lighting of the sign have created a nuisance in that the lights shine into the dwelling of complainants Maxwell, interrupt and destroy their rest and sleep; that the sign cuts off, at certain angles, the view of complainants to their several properties and that it causes great annoyance to persons who occupy their property; is so constructed and so glaring and spectacular that it renders further development of their properties impractical; that the sign obstructs the public highways, streets, alleys etc. and that it endangers the safety of travelers along Bell Avenue and the highway, constitutes a dangerous hazard to the safety of persons and vehicles, and unlawfully interferes with the safe enjoyment of the public easement.

[466]*466The answer denies the material allegations of the hill with reference to the alleged nuisance, avers that at the time Bell Avenue was so changed all the parties understood there would be a sign constructed at or near the highway, that it cost defendants $3,000, that complainants saw it being constructed over a period of about three days and took no steps to prevent it, and that the construction was authorized by the public road supervisor of Henry County.

The case was heard before the Chancellor, by consent, upon oral testimony, and the Chancellor, in a lengthy decree, which sets out his findings of facts, granted the injunction as prayed for, commanded the defendants “to remove said sign and every device connected therewith, including said cables and wires connecting with said electric facilities from said street and the properties owned by complainants Maxwell, and defendants are enjoined and prohibited from allowing said obstructions to remain where they are now or on, above or underneath, the surface of said street or within the area thereof or on or affecting the property of complainants.”

The decree provides that the defendants will forthwith comply.

Exceptions were duly taken to the decree by the defendants, an appeal prayed and perfected to this Court, and they have assigned what they designate as ten assignments of error. Assignments of error Nos. I, III, IY, V, YI and YII are practically treated as one assignment in the argument of counsel for appellants or defendants below. They simply state that the Court erred by granting the mandatory injunction because the proof failed to show sufficient grounds for such, that the Court [467]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
292 S.W.2d 223, 40 Tenn. App. 461, 1954 Tenn. App. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maxwell-v-lax-tennctapp-1954.