Milton G. Humberd, Jr. v. Wanda N. Fitzsimmons

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 26, 2013
DocketE2013-00246-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Milton G. Humberd, Jr. v. Wanda N. Fitzsimmons (Milton G. Humberd, Jr. v. Wanda N. Fitzsimmons) 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
Milton G. Humberd, Jr. v. Wanda N. Fitzsimmons, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE September 18, 2013 Session

MILTON G. HUMBERD, JR. v. WANDA N. FITZSIMMONS

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Bradley County No. 08-301 Jerri S. Bryant, Chancellor

No. E2013-00246-COA-R3-CV-FILED-NOVEMBER 26, 2013

This is a boundary line dispute involving the placement of a new fence and the location of a corner. The suit involves a small triangular piece of property approximately two-tenths of an acre out of two adjoining 40-acre tracts owned by the parties. The value of the land in dispute is approximately $200. The trial court found the boundary line runs along a tree line essentially synonymous with the agreed upon old fence line as indicated on the Lawson survey. The court then located the corner as a car axle in the southwest corner of the plaintiff and the southeast corner of the defendant. The plaintiff appeals. We affirm the findings of the trial court.

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 C HARLES D. S USANO, J R., P.J., and D. M ICHAEL S WINEY, J., joined.

Ginger Wilson Buchanan, Cleveland, Tennessee, for the appellant, Milton G. Humberd, Jr.

Barrett T. Painter, Cleveland, Tennessee, for the appellee, Wanda N. Fitzsimmons.

OPINION

I. BACKGROUND

The family of Milton G. Humberd, Jr. (“Plaintiff”)1 obtained his property in 1940.

1 Humberd owned his property with his wife, Susan Petty Humberd, at the time this dispute arose. (continued...) The land was acquired from J.J. Fitzsimmons, the father-in-law of Wanda N. Fitzsimmons (“Defendant”).2 The Fitzsimmons family obtained their parcel in 1957. These properties do not go back to the same chain of title. The placement of the original fence (“the Old Fence”) between these properties was initially agreed upon by family members more than fifty years ago and was the agreed upon boundary line. The parties in this action continued to recognize the Old Fence as the boundary.

In 1978, the Fitzsimmons family was involved in a dispute with another adjoining landowner – the Jordans – regarding a right-of-way that ran across Defendant’s property parallel to the Old Fence. At that time, Neal Sanders was hired to prepare a survey. His survey shows the location of the Old Fence and indicates the disputed southern corner is marked by a fence corner. It also shows the call and distance from the northern corner to the southern corner as South 27 degrees 46 West 1,319.6. It appears Mr. Sanders then prepared a drawing that identified the disputed corner as an “iron pin near fence post.” The drawing has a line pointing in the direction of the disputed corner and ‘axle’ written beside the line. The drawing shows the call and distance as North 27 degrees 46 minutes East 1,319.6 – the reverse of the call and distance denoted on the survey. Mr. Sanders did not stamp or sign the drawing. As a result of the right-of-way dispute, the record reveals additional fencing was installed to set out the 16 foot right-of-way.

The Fitzsimmons family eventually acquired the Jordan property from a local bank after a foreclosure proceeding.3 The right-of-way ceased being used at that point. In 2005, Defendant’s husband, Hoyt Fitzsimmons, hired Larry Layne of Cleveland Surveying Company (“CSC”) to survey the former Jordan property and his own tract in order to partition off a parcel for sale. Mr. Layne testified that he identified and found several iron pins and monuments, looked at adjoining property owners’ deeds, and reviewed the survey, drawing, and notes of Mr. Sanders. As to the northern corner between the current parties, he located the corner at a post and drove a nail into the center of it. Mr. Layne related that he found the car axle identified by Mr. Sanders and concluded it was the southern corner. He noted that Mr. Sanders’s notation regarding the car axle was “not unusual to see” and that

1 (...continued) Prior to the filing of the action, Mrs. Humberd quit claimed her interest in the property to her husband. Thus, at the time the action was filed, the property was solely in his name. 2 Fitzsimmons previously owned her property with her husband, Hoyt Fitzsimmons, now deceased. Prior to the action being filed by Plaintiff, Mr. Fitzsimmons had quit claimed his interest in the property to his wife. 3 The record reveals the Jordan and Fitzsimmons tracts previously had been part of one parcel originally totaling 130 acres.

-2- it was “clear” to him that Mr. Sanders was “saying that car axle is the corner.”

By 2006 the Old Fence was in disrepair, and Defendant’s cattle were crossing over onto Plaintiff’s land. Hoyt Fitzsimmons hired Junior Keith and Philip Whitted to build a new boundary fence. According to the deposition testimony of Hoyt Fitzsimmons, he asked Plaintiff if he wanted to establish the corner in dispute and Plaintiff informed him that he did not have time. Mr. Fitzsimmons related that he told Plaintiff, “I’ll put it up there where it was.” Mr. Keith and Mr. Whitted thereafter began erecting new posts six inches to one foot near the Old Fence on what they believed was the Fitzsimmons side of the property. The next day, however, the posts had been cut down. John Humberd, Plaintiff’s son, admitted responsibility for the act. The Humberd family asserted that Hoyt Fitzsimmons had torn down a portion of the Old Fence and built a new fence without any advance notice to, or the consent of, Plaintiff.4

Because of the dispute concerning the placement of the new fence, CSC was hired again by Mr. Fitzsimmons to mark the boundary line. According to Defendant, the new fence eventually was constructed according to CSC’s survey that utilized the axle as the southern corner.

Plaintiff opined that the original southern corner had been a fence post, not the axle, and that the new fence encroached upon his land and took in up to three feet of his property in some areas. In October 2007, after the new fence was erected, Plaintiff hired Patrick Lawson of Southeast Tennessee Land Surveying, a licensed surveyor, to prepare a survey showing the Old Fence in relation to the new fence. Mr. Lawson testified at the eventual trial that he did not refer to any other surveys prior to beginning his work. He used the southern corner claimed and shown to him by Plaintiff to establish the boundary line. Mr. Lawson noted that he found the metal stake but could not identify it as a car axle. He admitted that he could not determine if the post hole Plaintiff pointed out to him as the location of the original corner was old or new. He depicted in a drawing remnants of the Old Fence he found both in remaining trees and on the ground. Further, Mr. Lawson purportedly found remnants of fence in the hole Plaintiff claimed as the original corner.

In locating the line, Mr. Lawson testified that he identified a northern corner between the parties marked with a nail driven into the top of a fencepost. He related that there was no call in any of the deeds for that but it appeared to be the accepted corner. Mr. Lawson acknowledged on cross that if the northern corner has moved since 1979, the distances and bearings indicated in the original survey would be thrown off. From the northern corner, he ran a line to the fence post hole identified by Plaintiff as the southern corner. Comparing his

4 The record reveals the relationship between the parties was somewhat strained.

-3- survey with Mr. Sanders’s survey, Mr. Lawson found the distance of the line he measured from the northern corner to the southern corner to be within one-tenth of a foot of Mr. Sanders’s measurements (Mr. Lawson measured 1,319.5 and Mr. Sanders measured 1,319.6.). Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
Milton G. Humberd, Jr. v. Wanda N. Fitzsimmons, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milton-g-humberd-jr-v-wanda-n-fitzsimmons-tennctapp-2013.