Reider v. Orme

68 S.W.2d 960, 17 Tenn. App. 497, 1933 Tenn. App. LEXIS 85
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 21, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 68 S.W.2d 960 (Reider v. Orme) 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
Reider v. Orme, 68 S.W.2d 960, 17 Tenn. App. 497, 1933 Tenn. App. LEXIS 85 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

DeWITT, J.

The bill in this cause was filed by F. M. Reider and his son ITenry Reider against the trustees and manager of Wonder Cave, for the purpose of compelling the removal of gates and fences at the termini of a strip of land thirty feet wide and about half a mile long, which for some time prior to 1922 had been used as a private toll road in connection with Wonder Cave by R. M. Payne. Upon a hearing the chancellor sustained the bill on the basis of certain provisions of a deed from F. M. Reider and wife to R. M. Payne, executed on June 1, 1917, and which will be hereinafter described. In the bill and amendment thereto the complainants relied upon said deed and upon an alleged easement over the roadway by prescription.

The defendants answered denying that complainants had an easement over the roadway in question, either by deed or by prescription. Their contention is that the evidence does not show any easement by prescription, and that the deed did not create such an easement in behalf of the complainants or any one else. They averred that they had the right to maintain gates and fences across the termini of the roadway. A map showing the general location of the strip of ground or old roadway, and the property of the complainants, is a part of the record in this cause.

*499 The assignments of error are as follows:

“ (1) Tlie Court erred in bolding that tbe complainants were entitled to an easement over tbe land involved by virtue of tbe terms of the deed between F. M. Reider and his wife and R. M. Payne, deceased.
“(2) The Court erred in refusing to the defendants the right to maintain gates and fences at the termini of the land in question.”

■By reference to the map in the record, the substantial accuracy of which is not disputed, it will be seen that all these properties lie in a cove just north of the base of the mountain where the state highway running along them on the east and south approaches and begins to ascend the mountain going up to Monteagle; except that on the side of the mountain and adjoining the state highway on the north is a tract of land belonging to complainant F. M. Reider. Wonder Cave, which is a place of attraction, is on the opposite side of the cave to the north from this land of Reider.' Before the state highway was constructed about 1921 or 1922, a road led down the mountain from Monteagle to this cave at the eastern end of Reider’s said tract on the side of the mountain, and adjoining it this road ran, and just at this eastern end of Reider’s land was a toll ante. From this point this road operated as a toll road by R. M. Payne, runs northwestwardly to near the southern end of the strip herein involved, where one of the gates in controversy is located; thence it runs northwardly about half a mile to where it joins the route of a mountain road, but just before it reaches that road it has another gate, at the north end of the strin in con-troversv. On the west side of this strip, which is a part of the old toll roadway, and fronting on it. are tracts of land owned and occupied for residences by complainant Henry Reider and his brother. Ben Reider: and just north of them are two other tracts owned bv William Cox and Ben Reider respectively. Complainant F. M. Reider owns and occupies for residence a tract of land still further north and across the present road leading from the state highway to Wonder Cave, and where it adjoins Reider’s said tract it runs east and west. The most direct and convenient way for complainant F. M. Reider to go from his home place to his tract on the mountain side is through the strip of land in question and then along the old toll road to his land. F. M. Reider has lived at his present home for many vears, even prior to 1922. and has lived in that immediate neighborhood since the year 1292. When the state built the highway, R. M. Pa.vne discontinued the operation of the toll road. It appears that F. M. Reider was accustomed to use this toll road without paying toll when he walked or rode •horseback, but did pay when he went along it in a conveyance. The strip of land in controversy was not closed by the gates from about the year 1922 until the spring of 1932, when the manager *500 for the trustees of Wonder Cave erected the gates and undertook to keep the strip of land inclosed, claiming that he needed it for pasture and a place in which to keep his cow and calf. It appears that the property is not really fit for pasture as the land is overlaid with rock and there is very little, if any, vegetation on it.

It. M. Payne died a number of years ago having devised his Wonder Cave property and whatever rights he had in the roadway to a board of trustees.

It appears that some years before June, 1917, R. M. Payne made an agreement with F. M. Reider to sell to him a tract of one and one-tenth acres of land for $27.50 and Reider agreed to convey to Payne a strip of land described as follows:

“A strip of land 30 feet wide, 15 feet on each side of the center of the Wonder Cave toll road, and about 300 yards long, and being a part of our tract of land on the side of the mountain between Sentinel Rock and the foot of the mountain, said entire tract being about 300 yards long and 150 yards wide.”

This strip of land became a part of the old toll road operated by Payne.

The deed of June 1, 1917, was executed years after the agreement was made and pursuant thereto, as Mr. Payne was in poor health and requested Mr. Reider that they settle their agreement by deed, which was drafted and duly acknowledged.

After the habendum clause and covenants of warranty, this deed contains the following paragraph:

“It is further understood and agreed that the said F. M. Reider and family and his son Henry Reider and family are to have the right of ingress and egress over the strip of land conveyed herein, to R. M. Payne to the remainder of said tract, that is, the said Reidera may pass over the said strip of land herein conveyed in order to reach any other part of said tract about 300 yards in length and about 150 yards wide, not herein conveyed. But it is further stipulated and agreed on the part of F. M. Reider and son Henry Reider that no stock of theirs is to be fed on the right of way of said Wonder Cave toll road at any time or any place on said road.”

The anpellants insist that this provision did not constitute a reservation of a right of way over the strip of land in question, but only over that strip which was conveved in the deed to R. M. Pavne. The complainants used the strip in controversy for many years without interruption in going to and from the tract of land on the mountain side, and were only obstructed in their use of it when these gates were erected in the spring of 1932. The evidence shows that after the agreement was made, which was finally evidenced by the deed, the complainants did use this strip of land and the old roadway freely and without hindrance in this manner. *501

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 S.W.2d 960, 17 Tenn. App. 497, 1933 Tenn. App. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reider-v-orme-tennctapp-1933.