Melvin B. Smith v. Gary Hankins

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 30, 2011
DocketE2010-00733-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Melvin B. Smith v. Gary Hankins (Melvin B. Smith v. Gary Hankins) 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
Melvin B. Smith v. Gary Hankins, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE Assigned on Briefs February 1, 2011

MELVIN B. SMITH, ET AL. v. GARY HANKINS, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Bledsoe County No. 2908 Jeffrey F. Stewart, Chancellor

No. E2010-00733-COA-R3-CV-FILED-AUGUST 30, 2011

This appeal involves a boundary line dispute raised by the plaintiff, Melvin B. Smith and his wife, Charlotte E. Smith (“the Smiths”) and a request for an easement by the defendants, Gary Hankins and Stanley Hankins (“the Hankinses”). After a trial, the court entered rulings in favor of the Hankinses as to both the establishment of the boundary line and the easement. The Smiths appeal. We affirm.

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

J OHN W. M CC LARTY, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which H ERSCHEL P. F RANKS, P.J., and C HARLES D. S USANO, J R., J., joined.

Keith H. Grant, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the appellants, Melvin B. Smith, Jr. and Charlotte E. Smith.

Howard L. Upchurch, Pikeville, Tennessee, for the appellees, Gary Hankins and Stanley Hankins.

OPINION

I. BACKGROUND

The dispute between the parties concerns the location of a disputed boundary line and whether an easement exists across the property of the Smiths. The real property is located on the Cumberland Mountain in Bledsoe County near the Tom Hale Flats Road. The Smiths purchased their 50-acre tract from Pauline Reiber in August 2002, approximately four and a half years after the Hankinses purchased a neighboring 50-acre tract from Neva B. Swafford in March 1998.

Both properties were formerly owned by Elisha Webb. Mr. Webb had purchased the Smiths’ tract in April 1927. The property description in Mr. Webb’s 1927 deed was the same as the one noted in the Smiths’ deed. Mr. Webb purchased what is now the Hankinses’ property roughly two months later in June 1927. The deed describing the Hankinses’ property has likewise remained unchanged since 1927. The properties remained joined in Mr. Webb’s name until 1952, when he sold the tract now belonging to the Smiths to Robert Pendergrass and Arthur Pendergrass (“the Pendergrasses”).

The Smiths’ tract “fronts” the Hankinses’ tract, and is between the nearest access road, Tom Hale Flats Road, and the Hankinses’ property. Thus, to access the Hankinses’ tract from Tom Hale Flats Road, one must cross the Smiths’ property. The record reveals that a visible roadway across the Smiths’ property from Tom Hale Flats Road to the Hankinses’ property has been in existence for over 60 years. The Smiths, however, since they obtained the property have denied the Hankinses use of the roadway.

The Smiths dispute the location of the boundary between the two properties. Their deed describes the disputed boundary line as “South 70 degrees east 57 poles.” As noted above, all deeds’ in the Smiths’ chain of title contain the same boundary description; no owner in the chain of title was ever granted more than 57 poles. The Smiths suggest that their property actually extends an extra 21 poles, based on another grant from the 1800s known as the Rankin grant,1 which adjoins the properties.

In 2002, the Hankinses hired surveyor Gene Reid to survey their property. In 2004, after the Hankinses allegedly encroached onto the Smiths’ property, a complaint was filed by the Smiths for injunctive relief. Two years later, the Smiths hired Arnold Boynton, another registered surveyor, to survey the disputed area. In 2008, the Smiths hired Mr. Reid, who had performed the 2002 survey for the Hankinses, to survey the property. Mr. Reid’s efforts produced a different result from his work in 2002, due to his review of deeds that were in neither parties’ chain of title and also the use of calls not mentioned in either parties’ deeds – namely a planted stone.

One deed relied upon by Mr. Reid that is not in the chain of title is the Myers and Noone deed.2 Regarding it, Mr. Reid testified as follows:

1 The original land grant. 2 During Mr. Boynton’s testimony, he related the following: (continued...)

-2- Q . . . [T]ell me why the Myers and Noone deed is, therefore, significant in your surveying, in your second survey of the property, your 2008 survey.

A Because it runs with the original – it’s describing the same lines as the original Samuel Rankin grant.

Q Okay. What is different about those two? Why don’t you just use the land grant, then?

A Well, because the land grant didn’t give the distance from the center of the creek.

Q Okay. And why is the distance from the center of the creek important?

A Because that’s the only established corner that everybody agreed to is the stone that’s in the center of the creek, so we needed a measurement from that in order to find that stone we found.

Q Okay.

A And the only place that measurement was given is in the Myers and Noone deed.

***

A If I . . . [d]idn’t look at the chain of title and go back to when Tom Hale got it from Samuel Rankin and if I didn’t look at the original land grant and I didn’t find the stone that was there [in the southeastern corner] then I would have used . . . the same opinion that I did in 2002.

Q Okay. Using the Myers and Noone deed and that stone, does the rest of the survey match up with the eastern boundary, the rest of the eastern boundary of

2 (...continued) Q Do you know what the significance of that Myers and Noone deed is? A It was a mineral tract is the best I can tell. The Myers and Noone owned a lot of this and they actually took over the Sequatchie . . . Valley Coal and Coke Company property and they were the ones that distributed it.

-3- the Smith property match up with the eastern boundary of the land grant?

A Yes.

Mr. Boynton, the surveyor utilized by the Hankinses, testified as follows:

Q . . . As a surveyor, Mr. Boynton, I realize that everything is significant, but did you elect to accept, in other words, to agree with or adopt that rock and that call regarding the rock as the corner of the Hankins property?

A No, I didn’t.

Q . . . [E]xplain to His Honor why you decided that that rock was not material or not the corner here of the Hankins property.

A Because that stone that it refers to, I’d have to look back at the numbers, but I believe it called for it being 121 poles in all from a stone that’s back in the Hankins property that is not there anymore. The only reference to that with the measurement is a passing call, passing this stone in the center of the creek to the Old Mill Dam. The Smith deed had a direct measurement of 57 poles from that and this other one was passing it at 64 poles which left 68 poles. I chose to use the direct measurement over the passing call and that’s pretty standard with most boundary recommendations and most of all textbooks that I know referring to that.

A . . . [D]irect measurement takes precedence over a passing call.

Later in his testimony, Mr. Boynton noted as follows:

Q Does that create some doubt in your mind that – or some thought in your mind that the eastern boundary of the Smith property should also follow the eastern boundary of the land grant and the Myers and Noone deed?

A Not terribly. Not – no, because Mr. Webb owned both of those properties at one time and has tried to divide them into two 50-acre tracts.

-4- On redirect, Mr. Boynton observed

A It’s very important to me that that chain of title has carried on for . . . [over] 130 years[.]

Q Yes, sir.

A It’s over a hundred years and it’s been, apparently measured to be that distance once. Someone should – if there was an error in it, someone should have caught that in that length of time.

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Melvin B. Smith v. Gary Hankins, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/melvin-b-smith-v-gary-hankins-tennctapp-2011.