Phillip Isaacs, Jr. v. Brennon Fitzpatrick

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 8, 2019
DocketM2018-01863-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Phillip Isaacs, Jr. v. Brennon Fitzpatrick (Phillip Isaacs, Jr. v. Brennon Fitzpatrick) 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
Phillip Isaacs, Jr. v. Brennon Fitzpatrick, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

08/08/2019 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE May 8, 2019 Session

PHILLIP ISAACS, JR., ET AL. v. BRENNON FITZPATRICK, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Perry County No. 5139 Deanna B. Johnson, Judge ___________________________________

No. M2018-01863-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________

This appeal involves a dispute between neighboring landowners over the use of a driveway that crosses the land of a third neighbor. Two of these landowners were previously involved in a separate lawsuit that resulted in an agreed declaratory judgment establishing an easement for one landowner at the location of the driveway. In the case at bar, the trial court found that the prior declaratory judgment is not binding on the neighboring landowners who were not parties to that earlier proceeding. After a two-day bench trial and on-site view of the premises, the trial court found that these neighbors had established an easement implied from prior use, and alternatively, an easement implied by necessity, enabling them to use the driveway as well. The other landowner, who was granted an easement by the earlier agreed order, has appealed, insisting that he has the exclusive right to use the driveway. For the following reasons, we affirm the decision of the chancery court.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed and Remanded

CARMA DENNIS MCGEE, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which J. STEVEN STAFFORD, P.J., W.S., and KENNY W. ARMSTRONG, J., joined.

Sean R. Aiello, Franklin, Tennessee, for the appellant, Brennon Fitzpatrick.

Douglas Thompson Bates, III, Centerville, Tennessee, for the appellees, Phillip Isaacs and Vanessa Isaacs.

OPINION

I. FACTS & PROCEDURAL HISTORY This case involves parcels of property that border the Buffalo River in Perry County, Tennessee. All of these parcels were originally part of a large farm owned by the Cunningham family since at least the 1930’s. The Cunningham family used an old farm road to drive their cattle and move farm equipment through the farm. At some point, this old farm road became commonly known as “Cunningham Lane.”

Betty Stofel grew up on the farm and eventually acquired much of the land from her mother, Mable Cunningham. In 1999, Ms. Stofel subdivided the farm and sold one of the vacant lots along the Buffalo River to Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Smith. The Smiths’ property had some road frontage along a gravel road, but the portion of their property abutting the road was very steep, and there was no driveway running from the gravel road directly onto their property. Instead, an old roadbed extended from the Smiths’ property back across land retained by Ms. Stofel, where it connected to the same gravel road. According to Mr. Smith, this old roadbed had chert rock on it and appeared to have existed for a long time.1 Before the sale of the property was completed, Mr. Smith was told by Ms. Stofel that this old roadway connecting their property to the gravel road would be their driveway. Notably, Ms. Stofel told Mr. Smith, “Where the chert is, is the driveway, the easement.” The Smiths’ deed from Ms. Stofel expressly provided that the property would be “accessed by a 30 foot in width right-of-way from a 50 foot in width right-of-way north of Cunningham Ridge Road,” and Mr. Smith believed that this language encompassed his driveway easement. Years later, at least by the time of trial, the parties discovered that the language in the deed actually provided for a means of accessing the river, by going farther down the main gravel road and through the back part of the property and ending at the river. However, at the time of the conveyance, the Smiths believed that the language in the deed provided for an easement at the driveway.

Mr. and Mrs. Smith bought a cabin and placed it on the property such that the driveway leads directly to it. The cabin was not the Smiths’ primary residence, but they traveled to the cabin every weekend and sometimes for week-long vacations. During this time, Ms. Stofel paid for maintenance of the main gravel road but not maintenance of the separate driveway to the Smiths’ cabin. Ms. Stofel repeatedly told the Smiths that it was their driveway and that they were responsible for the cost of maintaining it. The Smiths hired someone to bring in a dump truck with seventeen tons of stone to improve the driveway and adjacent ditch. Every spring, the Smiths had to add some additional gravel due to the rains washing the driveway and forming ruts.

The property adjacent to the Smiths’ property was apparently a vacant lot with the exception of a fence running along the property line. There was an old gate at the corner of the property line fence near the driveway that the Smiths used, but the gate did not

1 Over the years, the parties have taken differing positions on whether “Cunningham Lane” continues on with the main gravel road or refers to the separate old roadbed leading off the gravel road and onto the Smiths’ property. -2- touch the driveway. Grass separated the driveway and the old gate. Despite the existence of the gate, from 1999 to 2007, no one used the driveway except for the Smiths.

In 2007, the Smiths sold the property to Mr. and Mrs. Isaacs. Mr. Smith admittedly told Mr. and Mrs. Isaacs that the driveway “was their drive.” Like the Smiths, Mr. and Mrs. Isaacs used the cabin as a weekend home and traveled to it on a weekly basis. Mrs. Isaacs is an avid kayaker and frequently pulls a kayak trailer to the cabin. Mr. and Mrs. Isaacs added a “drop-down” drive on the very steep slope of their property abutting the gravel road such that the drop-down drive runs from the gravel road and connects to their main driveway “to make a loop.” This enables them to pull their kayak trailer down the drop-down drive onto the main driveway so that they can exit out their main driveway when they leave. Without the loop, there is not enough space on the property to pull in the driveway and turn around with the trailer. However, according to Ms. Isaacs, the drop-down drive is simply too steep to use for exiting the property unless one has a four-wheel drive vehicle. Instead, Mr. and Mrs. Isaacs use the main driveway to exit the property and get back to the gravel road.

Mr. and Mrs. Isaacs used and maintained the driveway regularly and without incident from 2007 until 2015. In 2015, Brennon Fitzpatrick bought the adjacent three- acre lot next to Mr. and Mrs. Isaacs, where the fence and the old gate were located. Mr. Fitzpatrick had purchased a two-acre lot past the adjacent three-acre lot several years earlier, and he had a cabin on the two-acre lot. Mr. Fitzpatrick wanted the contiguous three-acre lot next to the property owned by Mr. and Mrs. Isaacs to further complement his existing lot. Mr. Fitzpatrick was aware of the fact that Mr. and Mrs. Isaacs regularly used the driveway across Ms. Stofel’s land to access their cabin. However, Mr. Fitzpatrick believed that he had a right to utilize the same driveway to access the adjacent three-acre lot at the location of the old gate. The deed to his property, which was originally sold by the Cunninghams to his predecessors in title in 1974, included a “perpetual right-of-way easement over an existing road known as Cunningham Lane for the purpose of ingress and egress to the property herein conveyed.”

After he purchased the adjacent lot, Mr. Fitzpatrick took a bulldozer onto the driveway, which led to a heated exchange with Ms. Stofel and Mr. and Mrs. Isaacs. Ms. Stofel told Mr. Fitzpatrick that the driveway belonged to her and that she was not going to allow him to use it. Mr. and Mrs. Isaacs also told Mr. Fitzpatrick that they had always used the driveway. Thereafter, Mr. and Mrs. Isaacs continued to use the driveway without incident for several months.

On June 8, 2016, Mr.

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