Reinhart v. Parks

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 10, 1998
Docket01A01-9708-CH-00412
StatusPublished

This text of Reinhart v. Parks (Reinhart v. Parks) 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
Reinhart v. Parks, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE

FILED BOB PARKS, JOHN E. HARNEY, III, ) July 10, 1998 and GARY BOWMAN, ) ) Cecil W. Crowson Plaintiffs/Appellees, ) Appellate Court Clerk ) Appeal No. ) 01-A-01-9708-CH-00412 VS. ) ) Rutherford Chancery ) No. 97CV-180 WILLIAM J. REINHART and wife, ) JUDITH F. REINHART, ) ) Defendants/Appellants. )

APPEALED FROM THE CHANCERY COURT OF RUTHERFORD COUNTY AT MURFREESBORO

THE HONORABLE JAMES L. WEATHERFORD, JUDGE

JOHN G. MITCHELL, JR. 120 E. Main Street P. O. Box 1336 Murfreesboro, Tennessee 37133-1336 Attorney for Plaintiffs/Appellees

LAURA TEK 1994 N. Gallatin Road Madison, Tennessee 37115 Attorney for Defendants/Appellants

AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED AND REMANDED

BEN H. CANTRELL, JUDGE

CONCUR: KOCH, J. CAIN, J. OPINION

This is a dispute over a drainage easement. The Chancery Court of

Rutherford County reformed the deed from the defendants to the plaintiffs to include

a description of the easement. We affirm the lower court’s judgment, but we modify

the judgment to reflect the purchasers’ obligation to keep the easement cleaned out.

I.

Mr. and Mrs. William J. Reinhart owned a large tract of land on the

Manchester Highway just outside of Murfreesboro. They divided it into nine separate

tracts and held an auction. At the auction the auctioneer announced that the owners

(Mr. and Mrs. Reinhart) or the purchaser of Lot 9 would grant an easement across the

lot to accommodate the natural drainage of surface water from the other lots. The

plaintiffs, Bob Parks, John E. Harney, III and Gary Bowman, bought Lots 1-8 at the

sale. The owners and sellers signed a contract reflecting the transaction and

including the following provision: “Easement will (be) granted to purchaser across (#)

9 tract for development of Tracts 1-8.” Mr. and Mrs. Reinhart retained Lot 9.

The deed to the purchasers, however, did not mention the easement,

and the Reinharts refused to sign a letter consenting to the purchasers’ drainage plan

for the property. The purchasers then filed this action for a mandatory injunction

requiring the Reinharts to sign the letter or something similar. The chancellor treated

the complaint as one to reform the deed to the purchasers and entered a decree

reforming the deed to include the description of a drainage easement across the front

of Lot 9.

II.

-2- The record shows that the front part of the property drains naturally to

the south through a highway drainage ditch running alongside Highway 41 and across

the front of Lot 9. The state does not always keep the ditch clear, and the brush

growing in it impedes the flow of water from the north.

Mr. and Mrs. Reinhart were fearful that a high density development on

the property they sold would substantially increase the runoff across the property they

retained. They testified that the purchasers assured them that they would not further

subdivide the eight lots, but then they found out that the purchasers intended to build

sixteen houses on the eight lots. Therefore, they refused to sign the drainage letter.

The engineering proof in the record shows that the development

proposed by the plaintiffs would increase the runoff from the property by fifteen

percent, but the additional water would raise the level in the drainage ditch only one

inch. The one inch increase in the water level would increase the width of the water

stream across Lot 9 by approximately three feet.

After hearing the proof, the chancellor made the following findings:

THE COURT: Well, considering everything that has been presented in this case, I am confident that Mr. and Mrs. Reinhart understood that this water was going to be coming down on their property, and they needed to give some sort of easement for that . . . So, I am convinced that there needs to be something concerning the drainage from this other property across Mr. Reinhart’s property.

* * *

I certainly don’t think it was intended by anybody to let these folks just run water wherever they want to on Mr. Reinhart’s property. I assume it was to take the natural flow. Evidently that’s the natural drainage there right now and has been. And that that’s what he intended that they could keep on using that.

Rather than issuing a mandatory injunction, I would be more inclined to say that this warranty deed needs to be reformed so as to contain an easement about this. I do think that an engineer or somebody that knows how

-3- needs to kind of show where this drainage, if it is a natural drainage, and I take it from the testimony that it is, that that could have some description to it.

I really wouldn’t feel comfortable in granting a mandatory injunction for Mr. and Mrs. Reinhart to sign this consent letter. I would be inclined, and I take it this is all of the proof that either of you could submit on this issue; I feel like it would be proper for me to treat this as a complaint to reform the deed. Put in the deed a description of the natural drainage of this water. And when that is done, then I think that everybody will have done exactly what they meant to starting out with.

That’s the way I am going to treat this. Rather than a petition for mandatory injunction, I am going to treat it as a complaint to reform the deed. I am going to require an order that the deed be reformed so as to contain this easement. I think that’s the easement that Mr. and Mrs. Reinhart had in mind when they signed this contract consenting to an easement.

The final judgment contained an order reforming the plaintiffs’ deed to

include a drainage easement across Lot 9. The description roughly follows the ditch

along Highway 41.

III.

Mr. and Mrs. Reinhart insist that the chancellor erred in finding that they

agreed to grant the plaintiffs a drainage easement across Lot 9. The finding is, of

course, presumed to be correct, unless the preponderance of the evidence is

otherwise. Rule 13(d), Tenn. R. App. Proc. We think the evidence fully supports the

chancellor’s findings -- even without the presumption. The evidence from the

auctioneer, the provision in the contract (even though it does not mention a drainage

easement), and the testimony from the parties, make it clear that Mr. and Mrs.

Reinhart agreed that the property they were selling had to drain to the south across

the property they intended to keep.

-4- The puzzling thing about this whole controversy is the fact that the

development of the property sold will not change the natural drainage. The surface

water now flows in a southerly direction, basically down the highway side ditch. It is

true that the development planned by the plaintiffs will increase the surface water

runoff by fifteen percent, but the expert testimony in the record indicates that the

impact on Lot 9 will be minimal.

The Reinharts also complain that the contract did not contain a

description of the easement. We find, however, that the chancellor’s location of the

easement will have the least impact on the Reinharts’ property. It seems to be

obvious that locating the easement along the existing drainage ditch is preferable to

locating it at any other place on the property.

IV.

The Reinharts also insist that the chancellor erred in treating the

complaint for a mandatory injunction as a complaint to reform the deed. We note,

however, that the complaint contained a prayer for “such other further and general

relief to which they may be entitled in equity and good conscience . . . .” Gibson’s

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Related

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