Moore v. Memphis Stone & Gravel Company

339 S.W.2d 29, 47 Tenn. App. 461, 1959 Tenn. App. LEXIS 136
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 21, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 339 S.W.2d 29 (Moore v. Memphis Stone & Gravel Company) 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
Moore v. Memphis Stone & Gravel Company, 339 S.W.2d 29, 47 Tenn. App. 461, 1959 Tenn. App. LEXIS 136 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

CARNEY, J.

Defendants below, Memphis Stone & Grravel Company and Joe Shankman, appeal from the Chancellor’s action in sustaining complainants’ bill and ordering an injunction restraining Memphis Stone and Grravel Company, as lessee, and Joe Shankman, as lessor and owner, from excavating and mining gravel from the Shankman property on the grounds that such mining operations were in violation of the “Five mile County-City Zoning Regulations” passed by the joint action of Shelby County and the City of Memphis pursuant to authority of Chapter 613 of the Private Acts of the General Assembly of Tennessee for the year 1931. The complainants are property owners generally residing on the Raleigh-Bartlett road east of its intersection with the Covington pike and on the Covington pike south of its intersection with the Raleigh-Bartlett road. This area is located in Shelby County, Tennessee, outside but within five miles of the city limits of Memphis, Tennessee.

*463 The area is well-developed as residential property though the area is zoned under Section 7 of the Zoning Ordinance as an agricultural district. (Exhibit 4.)

The defendant, J oe Shankman, owns approximately 65 acres of land located immediately south of residences fronting on the south side of the Raleigh-Bartlett road which runs east and west and immediately east of the residences fronting on the east side of the Covington pike which runs north and south.

By contract dated June 3, 1958, the defendant, Joe Shankman, executed a lease authorizing the defendant, Memphis Stone and Gravel Company, to mine sand and gravel from said property.

By letter dated October 15, 1958, addressed to the chairman and members of the Board of Commissioners of Shelby County, Tennessee, Memphis Stone and Gravel Company requested a permit “to extract sand, gravel, top soil and other natural resources from land owned by Joe Shankman and leased to applicant.” The letter further described the location of the real estate in detail and recited that the mining operations would be located some 700 feet off the Raleigh-Bartlett road and that said operations would be almost unobserved from the road. Attached to said letter of Memphis Stone and Gravel Company was a formal application for permit on a regular form furnished for such purposes.

We copy the salient portions of said application as follows :

*464 “Application for Use and Occupancy Permit and Building Permit
‘ ‘ County of Shelby ‘‘ Office of
‘ ‘ County Building Commissioner
“Application is hereby made for a use and occupancy permit under the provisions of a joint ordinance and resolution of the Board of Commissioners of the City of Memphis and the Shelby County Court zoning the territory outside of the corporate limits of the City of Memphis, and the undersigned applicant hereby represents that all answers to questions herein propounded and maps and drawings attached are true; that the permit applied for, if granted, is granted on the representation herein made; and that any permit issued hereunder may be revoked without notice on any breach of representation or condition :
Premises located on the South side of Baleigh-Bart-lett road 500 feet West of Chaucer Lane and known as House No. 5359 Name of Subdivision-Lot No. --— Name of owner of premises (lot, parcel or tract) Joe Shankman Address - Tel. - To be occupied by owner - Tenant -Por Sale-Address Memphis Stone & G-ravel Co., as tenant Tel.-Present Use-Vacant - Use under permit to be To extract sand, gravel, top soil & other natural resources
*465 Route in transporting materials in accordance with, attached letter
*******
“ Buildings
no buildings
*******
“Estimated cost of total improvements contemplated $ no construction cost
***** * *
“Date construction to be started immediately.
“If This Building Is Not Started In Six Months, This Permit Is Void.
“It is understood that any permit issued on this application will not grant any right or privilege to erect any structure or to use the premises herein described for any purpose that- is prohibited by the Zoning Regulations.
“All provisions of the ordinance and resolution governing the use of property and the height, area and bulk of buildings will be complied with whether herein specified or not except any variations ordered by the Shelby County Board of Adjustment.
“Dated at Memphis, Tennessee, this 16 day of Oct., 1958. ~
“/s/ Herbert B. Moriarty
(Owner or Authorized Agent)
Atty. for Memphis Stone & Gravel Co.
*466 “Permit refused — Reason-
Permit granted by Board of Adjustment, Yes-
No-Date-
Permit No. 50,166 Wm. J. Bussjaeger
Permit Cost $2.00” County Building Commissioner

A receipt for the $2 application fee was issued on October 16, 1958, reciting that the permit was issued by Lelia Edwards for William J. Bussjaeger, County Building Commissioner.

Memphis Stone and Gravel Company, immediately after receipt of the permit, moved onto the property and began mining operations. Generally speaking in this case the removal of the sand and gravel is accomplished by digging and pushing aside the overburden of dirt ranging from fifteen to twenty feet deep and then excavating and removing the sand and gravel deposits by means of a crane and shovel. The shovelfuls of sands and gravel are dropped through a screen to remove the larger lumps into dump trucks and then hauled away to stock piles or construction jobs throughout Shelby County.

On November 12, 1958, the complainant landowners filed the present suit seeking an injunction against the defendants on two grounds: (1) That the mining operations and the attendant noise and dust therefrom along with the trafile hazard of the gravel trucks going to and from the pit constituted an actionable common law nuisance which should be abated and (2) that the defendants were mining gravel in violation of the Five Mile County-City Zoning Ordinance.

*467 As to the nuisance feature of complainants’ bill we quote from the Chancellor’s finding as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
339 S.W.2d 29, 47 Tenn. App. 461, 1959 Tenn. App. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-memphis-stone-gravel-company-tennctapp-1959.