Natalie Hornbeak-Denton v. Gary Myers

361 F. App'x 684
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 19, 2010
Docket08-6382
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 361 F. App'x 684 (Natalie Hornbeak-Denton v. Gary Myers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Natalie Hornbeak-Denton v. Gary Myers, 361 F. App'x 684 (6th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

SANDRA DAY O’CONNOR, Associate Justice (Ret.).

This case involves a property dispute over 6.4 acres on the shoreline of Reelfoot Lake. Natalie Hornbeak-Denton and Anne Hornbeak (Appellants) claim ownership of the land and have taken various measures consistent with that claim (such as excluding the public from the property and soliciting buyers for portions of it). Tennessee also asserts ownership of this 6.4-acre parcel of land. Officers of the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Commission and Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency (TWRA 1 ) informed Appellants of Tennessee’s ownership claim. They also threatened to bring a lawsuit against Appellants if they continued to exert control over the disputed territory. Appellants struck first and filed their own § 1983 suit against TWRA, arguing that their First and Fourteenth Amendment rights were violated when TWRA officials threatened to file a lawsuit against them. Appellants argue that the threat constituted a final determination of property rights without due process of law and amounted to retaliation for exercising their First Amendment rights to criticize TWRA. The district court granted TWRA’s motion to dismiss on the pleadings, and we affirm.

I.

“The beauty of Reelfoot Lake is a natural resource unparalleled in its region.” Bunch v. Hodel, 793 F.2d 129, 130 (6th Cir.1986). Despite its beauty, Reelfoot Lake has been the source of considerable conflict (both human and natural) since its beginning. The lake was formed in the aftermath of the devastating New Madrid earthquakes in 1811 and 1812. A century later, it was the focus of national headlines when violence broke out. One night in 1908, a group known as the “Night Riders of Reelfoot Lake” killed a prominent attorney and left another for dead as a lingering dispute between public and private property interests came to a head. Night Riders Slay Lawyers, N.Y. Times, Oct. 21, 1908, at 1. Another of the Night Riders’ intended targets that night was a man by the name of Judge Harris. Rider Defies Death, Wash. Post, Dec. 25, 1908, at 1 (“[T]he riders proposed to ‘get’ Judge Harris to whip him and cut off his head.”). One year before the violence broke out over ownership of Reelfoot Lake — and three years before meeting his own suspicious demise at the bottom of the lake, Friends Say Harris Was Poisoned, N.Y. TIMES, June 13,1910, at 1 — Judge Harris sold tracts of this embattled land to P.D. Hornbeak, Appellants’ ancestor and prede *686 cessor in interest. Now, a century and several generations later, the dispute over that land resurfaces.

It is undisputed that Appellants own a significant amount of land on the perimeter of Reelfoot Lake, which has been in their family since the 1907 land transfer between Harris and P.D. Hornbeak. What is disputed is who owns a particular 6.4-acre strip of land directly abutting the lake. TWRA claims that Tennessee purchased this “buffer strip” through condemnation proceedings in 1930, and that this state-owned strip now sits between Appellants’ property and the lake. Appellants disagree. The disagreement apparently never came to light until June, 2006, when TWRA sent a letter to Appellants demanding that they purchase a “lake use permit” for a dock Appellants maintained on the disputed land. It is unclear from the pleadings if Appellants had previously paid this permit fee since they built the dock in 2000. In any event, they paid it in 2006 under a letter of protest, complaining that similarly situated owners were not required to pay the permit fee.

A few months later, in October, 2006, Appellants sent letters to adjacent property owners claiming ownership of the disputed land and offering to sell portions of it. TWRA received notice of the solicitation letters and sent a letter explaining to Appellants that they were claiming property beyond their lots; as proof, TWRA attached a copy of a 1930 court order purporting to condemn the disputed land in Tennessee’s favor. The letter explained that a TWRA official “would be glad to sit down with [Appellants] at [their] convenience and go over the agency’s documentation and would be very interested in reviewing [Appellants’] survey and any other documentation.” The letter also made clear that, “[i]n the meantime, it is the agency’s position that the buffer property is state owned property” and that if Appellants were to “proceed with any action which affects state property, the agency [was] prepared to proceed with any necessary legal actions in order to protect it.” The letter requested that Appellants “notify any person to whom [they had] sent a form letter claiming the state’s buffer property that [they did] not own the property.” In a follow-up phone call, a TWRA official told Appellants that “the State had plenty of lawyers and would sue [them] for fraud if [they] attempted to sell this land.”

Appellants then sent TWRA a letter on November 14, 2006, disputing the validity of the alleged condemnation on the grounds that their family was never paid following the condemnation proceeding. In May, 2007, Appellants posted signs on the disputed land, reading: “Private Property: Hunting, fishing, trapping or trespassing for any purpose is strictly forbidden; violators will be prosecuted.” TWRA sent yet another letter in June, 2007, claiming to have uncovered proof of payment for the 1930 condemnation and attaching a certified copy of the receipt proving the disputed land was purchased by Tennessee. TWRA again demanded that Appellants cease their claims to the disputed property and refrain from posting signs or attempting to sell the land. The letter concluded:

If, after reviewing the enclosed documentation, you feel that you still have a claim to this State land and you are going to proceed with your attempt to sell, lease, or deny public access to property owned by the State, please send the name and address of your attorney to me. The State plans to proceed with any legal action deemed appropriate for the situation directly with your legal representative.

At that point, letters gave way to litigation.

Appellants filed a § 1983 suit against various TWRA officials. They alleged *687 abridgments of “specific property rights without due process” in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment, and they argued that TWRA’s threats to sue constituted government retaliation for Appellants’ earlier criticisms of TWRA’s permit system, in violation of their First Amendment rights. The district court granted TWRA’s motion to dismiss. It held that the Fourteenth Amendment due process claim was unripe because the letters were not a final decision purporting to divest Appellants of property rights, but merely notified Appellants that legal proceedings would be necessary if no accord could be reached. It also rejected the First Amendment argument on the basis that TWRA did not take any adverse action against them sufficient to sustain a retaliation claim. Appellants now dispute these two rulings on appeal.

Shortly after the notice of appeal was filed in this case, Tennessee filed a state-court action to settle the property dispute; it is currently pending in the Chancery Court for Obion County.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
361 F. App'x 684, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/natalie-hornbeak-denton-v-gary-myers-ca6-2010.