Paschall v. Valentine

321 S.W.2d 568, 45 Tenn. App. 131, 1958 Tenn. App. LEXIS 118
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 18, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 321 S.W.2d 568 (Paschall v. Valentine) 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
Paschall v. Valentine, 321 S.W.2d 568, 45 Tenn. App. 131, 1958 Tenn. App. LEXIS 118 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

CARNEY, J.

The defendants below, Milburn Valentine and wife, L. D. Valentine, appeal from a decree of the Chancellor ordering them to remove fences which they had placed across a portion of an abandoned road in Henry County, Tennessee, known as the old Paris-Cross-land Road. This was a public road which ceased to be travelled by the public after the construction of U. S. Highway 641 some fifteen to twenty years ago. U. S. Highway 641 runs north and south and substantially parallel with the old Paris-Crossland Road. In this vicinity the new highway is only about 133 steps west of the old road.

The defendants, Valentine and wife, own farm land located on the east side of U. S. Highway 641 and which farm land extends east and across the old Paris-Cross-land Road. The old Paris-Crossland Road traverses the lands of Valentine for a distance of about 600 feet.

The complainants, Zenith Paschall and wife, own and live on a small tract of land containing two acres located on the west side of the old Paris-Crossland Road and [133]*133immediately south, of the property owned by defendants, Valentine and wife.

The property of Paschall and wife does not border the east margin of U. S. Highway 641. A narrow strip of land owned, by the defendants, Valentine and wife, extends southward between the west boundary of the complainants’ two-acre tract and the east boundary of U. S. Highway 641.

The Henry County Road Board has constructed a new road from the east margin of U. S. Highway 641 through the property of Valentine and wife along the north boundary line of the complainants’ property to their northeast corner so that complainants have a roadway directly from their home to U. S. Highway 641.

A substantial portion of the old Paris-Crossland Road located south of the home of the complainants has long since deteriorated, grown up and been fenced by the Kentucky-Tennessee Clay Company which owns land on each side of this portion of the old road. This portion of the road is not involved in this controversy.

In 1953 the Road Board of Henry County, Tennessee, declared the old road abandoned and authorized its closing by the following resolution:

£<Tke Henry County Road Board for Henry County, Tennessee
“Comes the Henry County Road Board at its regular meeting on the First Saturday in September, 1953, it being September 5, 1953, with the Chairman and all its members present, when the following resolution was passed and adopted, as follows:
[134]*134“Be it Resolved by the County Road Board, in session on this date, that the roadway formerly maintained by the Department of Highways for Henry County, consisting of 600 feet, more or less, and extending through the property now belonging to Allen Flanagan and wife, Mrs. Gladys Flanagan, in the Sixth Civil District of Henry County, Tennessee, and running vertically parallel with the Paris and Murray Highway, be discontinued, ceased, and disallowed, and the permission is hereby given for the complete closing of said road in accordance with the wishes and desires of the adjacent land owners thereto.
“This Resolution is based upon the fact, that the road has been practically non-existing since the construction of the Paris and Murray Highway, as it now exists, and the only person that could possibly be effected, by its closure, has a more adequate means of egress and ingress from and to his dwelling, to the main highway herein referred to.
“Be it further Resolved that this resolution take effect immediately upon and after the passage here- . in, the public welfare requiring it.
“Passed this the-day of September, 1953. “Howard Dumas Frank Howard R. L. Richardson “R. L. Cox C. T. Crutchfield”

However, Flanagan and wife did not fence any portion of this old road and conveyed their farm lands to the present defendants, Valentine and wife, in October, 1955.

Complainants, Paschall and wife, purchased their two-acre tract of land in 1950 and- from time to time Mr. [135]*135Paschall travelled northward from his home along the old Paris-Crossland Road through the lands of Flanagan and later Valentine for various purposes including the visiting of his granddaughter who lived just north of the Valentine property at the intersection of the old Paris-Crossland Road and a county road known as Loop Road. Also Mr. and Mrs. Paschall had their mail box located in front of their granddaughter’s home at this intersection.

About April, 1957, Mr. and Mrs. Valentine erected fences across the old Paris-Crossland Road at their north and south boundary lines and in July, 1957, complainants tiled this suit seeking a removal of the fences and damages for the obstruction of said road.

It was the contention of the defendants first, that they had express authority to fence that portion of the road under the resolution adopted by the Henry County Road Board; and second, that the road was abandoned and no longer a public road; and third, that the complainants had available to them the new road constructed by the Henry County Road Board from U. S. Highway 641 to complainants’ northeast corner which gave them adequate egress and ingress and that the use of the old Paris-Crossland Road by the complainants was not reasonably necessary.

The Chancellor held that the complainants as the owners of property abutting upon a public road had a vested interest in the use of said road and that the abandonment of said road by the Road Board of Henry County did not operate to divest the complainants q¡f their rights to use said road. He ordered the fences removed.

[136]*136The defendants have made six separate assignments of error. All of these assignments of error substantially raise only the one question as to whether or not under the proof the complainants were entitled to the relief sought and granted to them.

The Road Board of Henry County, Tennessee, was operating under the authority of Chapter 620 of the Private Acts of Tennessee of 1933. Section 5 of said Act reads in part as follows:

’“Be it further enacted, That the said Highway Commission shall meet at the call of the Chairman. It shall he the duty of the Commission, a majority being present, to designate the work to be done on the roads; to give instructions to the county supervisor and to provide funds which may be at their disposal for the carrying out of the things which have been authorized by them; said Commission is hereby given the authority to open, close, change or create a system of roads and bridges for the county, and for that purpose is given the power to exercise the right of eminent domain. * * *”

The general statutes of this state relating to the opening, closing and changing of county public roads are to be found in T.C.A. secs. 54-901 through 54-925.

In our opinion under the provisions of Chapter 620 of the Private Acts of 1933 the Road Commission of Henry County was not given any broader authority to open or close roads than the county is given under the general statutes and therefore, the defendants must prevail on tips appeal, if they prevail at all, under the authority of the general statutes and decisions of our courts relating to the opening and closing of public roads.

[137]

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Bluebook (online)
321 S.W.2d 568, 45 Tenn. App. 131, 1958 Tenn. App. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paschall-v-valentine-tennctapp-1958.