Nancy Gates v. Katie Williams

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 28, 2011
DocketE2010-01192-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Nancy Gates v. Katie Williams (Nancy Gates v. Katie Williams) 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
Nancy Gates v. Katie Williams, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE February 2, 2011 Session

NANCY GATES v. KATIE WILLIAMS ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Cocke County No. 08-131 Telford E. Forgety, Jr., Chancellor

No. E2010-01192-COA-R3-CV - Filed February 28, 2011

As this action was pleaded and tried, it was (1) a claim by Nancy Gates (“the plaintiff”) seeking to be declared the owner of a life estate in a tract of property; and, as a consequence of her estate, seeking the removal of Katie Williams (“the defendant”), the widow of the plaintiff’s son, Tony, from the property; and (2) a counterclaim by the defendant alleging that she had become the owner of an interest in the property by adverse possession due to her having lived on the property since the late 1960s or early 1970s. The trial court held that, as to these claims, neither party was entitled to relief against the other. The court found, however, that the plaintiff did, in fact, have a life estate in the subject property, and that the defendant had not proven adverse possession because her entry onto the property was with the plaintiff’s permission. The court then held, sua sponte, that the defendant had a license in the property coupled with an interest therein that had been acquired by building numerous structures on the property with the plaintiff’s knowledge and that it would not be equitable to require the defendant to move. The plaintiff appeals. We affirm the trial court’s judgment in part and reverse in part and remand for a hearing on the issue of what it would take to do equity given the facts of this case.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed in Part and Reversed in Part; Case Remanded with Instructions

C HARLES D. S USANO, J R., J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D. M ICHAEL S WINEY and J OHN W. M CC LARTY, JJ., joined.

Jeffery S. Greene, Newport, Tennessee, for the appellant, Nancy Gates.

Thomas V. Testerman, Newport, Tennessee, for the appellee, Katie Williams.

OPINION I.

The plaintiff was married to Beecher Gregg. Beecher and the plaintiff had children, including two sons named Tony Gregg and David Gregg. Beecher Gregg also had children by a previous marriage. He died in 1966. Plaintiff’s interests in Beecher Gregg’s estate were determined in 1966 by the Cocke County Board of Commissioners to include a life estate in 3.31 acres in Cosby adjacent to Cosby Creek and a paved state highway. We will refer to the 3.31 acre tract as “the subject property.”

In the late 1960s or early 1970s, although the timing of which happened first is in dispute, two things happened. A young Tony Gregg and his wife Katie, the defendant, moved a small mobile home onto the subject property. The plaintiff moved from Newport to an old house that was already on the subject property. Eventually, her other son, David, and his wife also built a home on the subject property. The three homes were, and remain to this day, situated very close to one another.

Through the 1970s several things happened. Tony Gregg and his brother David Gregg reached an agreement to buy out the interest of their siblings in the subject property and to make mutual deeds dividing up the subject property, all subject to their mother’s life estate. That was accomplished and two deeds were made, both of which recite that the grants are subject to the plaintiff’s life estate. In the same time frame, Tony began doing mechanic work on the subject property. He found a small building and hauled it onto the subject property to use for shelter. Eventually he added onto the building with metal lean-to type construction. He built two additional buildings of about 500 square feet and 1500 square feet respectively although there is no testimony in the record of the type of construction, i.e., masonry, brick, rough lumber, or how substantial were the buildings. There is testimony that one of the buildings had a concrete floor. These buildings were used in Tony Gregg’s business which eventually included mechanic work, a salvage yard with wrecked cars stored on the subject property, selling parts, and towing. Also, over time, Tony Gregg and the defendant were able to trade their small mobile home, first, for a slightly bigger one, and, eventually, for a 24 foot by 56 foot “double-wide” mobile home that the defendant still lives in. Approximately 25 years ago, Tony Gregg built a fence around a part of the subject property. The fenced property is within the tract described in the deed from David Gregg to Tony Gregg. Approximately 15 years ago, Tony Gregg purchased the defendant a swimming pool and had it installed. Trial exhibits include photographs of select views of the outside of the buildings, the above-ground swimming pool, and parts of cars strewn across a portion of the property.

The defendant was never well-liked by the plaintiff and from the record it appears that the feeling is and has been mutual. The plaintiff counseled her son, Tony, against marrying the defendant, but, as life goes, he followed his own leanings rather than that of his mother’s

-2- advice. Tony Gregg died in November 2007 and the defendant remarried, apparently very soon after his death. The plaintiff believes, at least subjectively, although there is nothing in the record to prove or disprove her subjective belief, that the defendant had something to do with Tony Gregg’s demise. The defendant posted signs and stopped allowing the plaintiff to come onto the fenced portion of the subject property. At one point there was a physical altercation between the defendant’s new husband and the 80-year old plaintiff that led to an order of protection being issued against the plaintiff.

The plaintiff then filed this action, that, as amended, sought a declaration that the plaintiff is the owner of a life estate in the subject property and an order requiring the defendant to move off the subject property. The defendant, in her pleadings as ultimately amended, claimed that she owned a portion of the subject property through adverse possession. The proof at trial was at least ninety percent directed at whether or not the defendant and her husband moved on the subject property and did what they did against the plaintiff’s will or with her permission. The plaintiff testified that everything was done with her permission to help her son, and that she at times loaned him money to build things on the property and that he would pay her back as he was able to do so. The plaintiff’s son, David, testified that, in the buyout of the siblings and the mutual deeds with his brother Tony, he understood, and thought Tony understood, that their mother retained a life estate in the subject property. The plaintiff denied quarreling with Tony over the property. David denied ever hearing his mother and his brother quarreling over ownership or possession of the property and testified that had he been around when the quarreling occurred, he would have been aware of it. The defendant and her witnesses painted a much different picture. According to them, the plaintiff would often confront her son, Tony, telling him that he should clean up the “mess” of the wrecked cars, or objecting to the fence he had installed, and any number of other such confrontations. They testified that Tony would often tell his mother, the plaintiff, that he owned the property, that he would do with it as he pleased, and that she should leave. The defendant testified that her late husband told his mother that the fence, and locked gates, were there to keep her out.

At the end of the trial, the court rendered its decision. We will repeat the parts that are relevant to our review, with some elaboration as necessary. First, the court found that the plaintiff

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Bluebook (online)
Nancy Gates v. Katie Williams, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nancy-gates-v-katie-williams-tennctapp-2011.