McDavid v. McGuire

526 S.W.2d 474, 1973 Tenn. App. LEXIS 246
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 7, 1973
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 526 S.W.2d 474 (McDavid v. McGuire) 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
McDavid v. McGuire, 526 S.W.2d 474, 1973 Tenn. App. LEXIS 246 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

CARNEY, Presiding Judge.

Plaintiffs-appellants Edwin McDavid and son, Robert McDavid, have appealed from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Obion County dismissing their suit for mandatory injunction and allied relief. Plaintiffs-appellants had brought suit seeking an injunction against the defendants, Bennie Joe McGuire and wife, Carolyn McGuire, requiring them to remove a fence which they had constructed along the west side of property of the Fairview Baptist Church. The fence was constructed with the approval of and for the benefit of the members of the Fair-view Baptist Church for the express purpose of preventing plaintiffs and their tenants from using a short roadway or cut-off across the Church property. The cut-off was approximately 20 feet wide and 25 feet long and connected the old Elbridge-Clover-dale Road on which Robert McDavid lived with the Obion-Cloverdale Road on which a considerable portion of plaintiff Edwin McDavid’s farm was located. The old El-bridge-Cloverdale Road is used by only a few persons since a bridge washed out many years ago. There is no through traffic to Elbridge.

Plaintiffs, their tenants, members of the church, and the public generally, including school bus drivers, had used this cut-off continuously for over 20 years prior to the erection of the fence. The cut-off was graveled by the county at some unknown date in the past. The dispute arose when members of the McDavid family began making new cut-offs across the Church property north of the established cut-off killing the grass and making unsightly ruts in the Church yard or parking lot.

The Obion-Cloverdale Road merges with the old Elbridge-Cloverdale Road in a curving line leaving a sharp and narrow point between the two roads approximately 45 feet below the south margin of the cut-off. Because of the acuteness of the angle at which the roads merge, it is cumbersome for plaintiffs’ trucks, farm trailers, and farm equipment traveling south on the Obion-Cloverdale Road to make a sharp turn to the right in an angle which looks from the maps to be about 155° to go north on the old Elbridge Road to plaintiffs’ farm.

The small area between the two roads south of the cut-off tapera from 25 feet on the north to zero feet on the south within a distance of 45 feet. It is in grass and kept mowed by the Church but is too small for a parking lot. The property north of the cut-off lying between the two roads is used by the Church for a parking lot. The north boundary of the parking lot is about 100 feet long being the center line of the old [476]*476Obion-Cloverdale Road. The west line of the parking lot is the east margin of the old Elbridge-Cloverdale Road and is approximately 55 feet long. The south line of the parking lot is the north margin of the disputed cut-off and is about 25 feet long. The east margin of the parking lot is the west margin of the present Obion-Clover-dale Road.

All three parcels comprise less than one-fourth acre and were given to the Fairview Baptist Church by Mrs. Lessie Webb, a predecessor in title to the defendants, Bennie Joe McGuire and wife, Carolyn McGuire, more than 20 years prior to the erection of the fence.

Mrs. Webb never executed a deed to the one-fourth acre. When Mrs. Webb sold her 36-acre farm the one-fourth acre was not excluded from her deed to Larry McGuire and wife on September 15,1958, though the Church was in full and exclusive possession of the one-fourth acre less the cut-off. In 1958 the Church was in full possession of the property and using the same and the plaintiffs, their tenants, the Church members, and the public were using the cut-off. In September, 1970, Larry McGuire sold a 1½ acre lot out of the northwest corner of the 36-acre Webb land to his son, Bennie. Joe McGuire, and wife for a home. The deed to Bennie Joe and Carolyn McGuire did not exclude the Church parking lot and the disputed cut-off. Therefore, at the time of the trial Bennie Joe McGuire and wife, Carolyn McGuire, were the owners of the record title to the one-fourth acre parking lot and roadway though they had never had possession of any part of the one-fourth acre lot.

The plaintiffs sought damages and also sought as alternative relief to condemn the cut-off as an easement of necessity under T. C. A. Sections 54 — 1901 through 54-1917. The Trial Judge directed a verdict against the plaintiffs as to damages and the jury found that plaintiffs had an adequate and convenient outlet to the public road in answer to a special inquiry submitted to them by the Trial Judge. There was evidence to support the finding of the jury that the plaintiffs do have adequate access to the public road and we do not notice the question of easement by necessity further. Also we affirm the action of the Trial Judge in directing a verdict as to damages.

The principal question to be decided on this appeal is whether or not the plaintiffs have a prescriptive right to use the cut-off.

The jury answered “No” to the following question submitted to it by His Honor the Trial Judge:

“(2) Have the Plaintiffs, Edwin McDa-vid and his tenants and employees acquired the right of use by prescription over the property alleged to be owned by the Defendants, Bennie Joe McGuire and Carolyn McGuire, since the Obion-Clover-dale Road has been improved, graveled, and the corner rounded to its present condition?”

A more detailed statement of the facts leading up to the litigation is necessary:

Plaintiff Edwin McDavid has owned a tract of 150 acres in Obion County, Tennessee, since 1937. His son, Robert McDavid, is now the principal tenant and operator of the farm. Said farm, at the time of its purchase in 1937 and for many years prior thereto, was bounded on the west by what is now the old Elbridge-Cloverdale Road which was and is used by the plaintiff and his tenants as the principal means of egress and ingress to the home site on the farm. The farm was also bounded for a considerable distance on the south by the Obion-Clo-verdale Road.

In 1937 the Obion-Cloverdale Road ran westward from Obion along the south boundary line of the McDavid Farm, thence along the south boundary line of a tract of land owned by Marshall and finally, along the south boundary of the Fairview Baptist Church lot and intersected the old Clover-dale-Elbridge Road at the southwest corner of the Fairview Baptist Church property. This was a “T” intersection. Persons traveling to Elbridge from Obion would go'west [477]*477to the “T intersection, turn right and north past the west side of the Baptist Church property, past the west side of the Marshall property and then on past the west side of McDavid’s property to El-bridge.

A person going to Cloverdale from Obion would enter the same “T” intersection but turn left or south on the old Elbridge-Clo-verdale Road to go to Cloverdale. In 1937 when McDavid bought his 150-acre tract, the “T” intersection was also the northwest corner of a 36-acre tract of land then owned by one Witherington who is a predecessor in title to the defendants, Bennie Joe McGuire and wife. Witherington’s north boundary line was the center line of the Obion-Clo-verdale Road just as the center line was the south line of the Baptist Church property.

Sometime between 1939 and 1941 the Highway Department of Obion County graveled and improved the Obion-Glover-dale Road. The right angle “T” intersection mentioned above was by-passed by a broad curve in the road to the south which curve merged into the Elbridge-Cloverdale Road at an angle of about 25° instead of 90° as formerly.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
526 S.W.2d 474, 1973 Tenn. App. LEXIS 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdavid-v-mcguire-tennctapp-1973.