Richard E. Riegel, Jr. v. Patricia A. Wilkerson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 11, 2014
DocketW2013-01391-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Richard E. Riegel, Jr. v. Patricia A. Wilkerson (Richard E. Riegel, Jr. v. Patricia A. Wilkerson) 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
Richard E. Riegel, Jr. v. Patricia A. Wilkerson, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON January 22, 2014 Session

RICHARD E. RIEGEL, JR. v. PATRICIA A. WILKERSON

Direct Appeal from the Chancery Court for Madison County No. 69727 James F. Butler, Chancellor

No. W2013-01391-COA-R3-CV - Filed February 11, 2014

This is an easement case in which the Appellant, the servient estate owner, appeals the trial court’s grant of injunctive relief in favor of the Appellee, the dominant estate owner. Specifically, the trial court found that Appellant had interfered with Appellee’s use of the easement by erecting a gate across it. The trial judge ordered the Appellant to remove the gate, and enjoined her from further interference with the Appellee’s use of the easement. Discerning no error, we affirm and remand.

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

J. S TEVEN S TAFFORD, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D AVID R. F ARMER, J., and H OLLY M., K IRBY, J., joined.

Scott G. Kirk, Jackson, Tennessee, for the appellant, Patricia A. Wilkerson.

Jay Dustin King, Jackson, Tennessee, for the appellee, Richard E. Riegel, Jr.

OPINION

Appellee Richard E. Riegel, Jr. owns a tract of real property located at 385 Raines Spring Road in Jackson. Mr. Riegel purchased his property from Nancy Williams LaPlace on or about August 6, 2007. Mr. Riegel’s approximately thirty-four-acre property is part of a one-hundred-acre tract that was purchased by Ms. LaPlace and her late husband from Mr. Billy Haynes. At the time the LaPlaces purchased the property, they entered into a Deed for Joint Easement with Mr. Haynes, which states, in relevant part:

Haynes hereby grants and conveys to LaPlace a perpetual non- exclusive easement for ingress and egress over and across the following described property [Exhibit “B” to the Deed for Joint Easement is a meets-and-bounds description of the 100 acres purchased by the LaPlaces; Exhibit “C” to the Deed for Joint Easement is a plat-map of the easement that is being conveyed]. TO HAVE AND TO HOLD said perpetual non-exclusive easement for egress and ingress, unto the said [LaPlaces], their heirs and assigns forever. This easement for ingress and egress is for the benefit of the 100.00 acres conveyed by Haynes to LaPlace as recorded in Deed Book 575, Page 197. . . and this easement for ingress and egress shall run with the land and benefit this property and burden the property retained by Haynes [i.e., the fifty-acre tract, of which Ms. Wilkerson ultimately purchased a portion]. . . .

The Deed for Joint Easement was recorded in the Register’s Office of Madison County in Deed Book 575, Page 199. The August 6, 2007 Warranty Deed from Ms. LaPlace to Mr. Riegel states that “[t]his property has access to and is subject to a joint ingress and egress easement as described in Deed Book 575, page 199. . . .” This easement is the subject of the instant appeal.

Appellant Patricia A. Wilkerson purchased her property from Paul and Kelly Little on or about March 27, 2003. Ms. Wilkerson’s approximately six-acre property is part of a fifty-acre tract that was purchased by the Littles from Mr. Haynes. The Warranty Deed from Mr. Haynes to the Littles specifically states that the property is encumbered by a fifteen-foot- wide, ingress/egress easement:

The above property [i.e., the approximately six-acre portion of the fifty-acre tract purchased by Ms. Wilkerson] is encumbered by a 15 foot wide easement for egress and ingress along the north of a line from the southeast corner of the above described tract to a point south 84 degrees 38 minutes west 751.9 feet from the southeast corner.

This deed was recorded at Book 531, Page 328 in the Madison County Register’s Office. The deed from Haynes to Little also references a second fifteen-foot, ingress/egress easement along the south property line. These “mirror” easements were granted to allow both the Littles and Haynes access to their respective properties. At trial, Mr. Little testified, in relevant part, as follows:

Q. Mr. Little, at the time you said that you bought the property,

-2- the easement was created so that you and Mr. Haynes—Mr. Haynes would be able to get to his farmland and you would be able to build a house up there (i.e., the house that was ultimately purchased by Ms. Wilkerson)? A. Yes, sir. Q. Now, the boundary line between the property he sold you, the easement was 15 feet on either side of the boundary line is what I’m asking you. A. Yeah.

***

Q. So [Mr. Haynes] retained 15 feet, the ability to use 15 feet on your side of the property line; is that correct? A. That’s correct. Q. And you retained 15 feet on [Mr. Haynes’] side of the property line? A. That’s correct.

Mr. Little further testified that although the original easements were fairly equally located on his and Mr. Haynes’ property (i.e., approximately 15 feet on each), there were some erosion issues on Mr. Haynes’ easement. When the LaPlaces purchased this property from Haynes, they did some work on the road and Mr. Little testified that as a result, the road was limited to ten-feet wide, with the majority of the road on his property, which was ultimately sold to Ms. Wilkerson. So, it appears from the record that although Haynes and Little each initially enjoyed a fifteen-foot easement on the other’s property, the total of thirty- feet was eventually narrowed to just ten-feet of useable easement, which was located mostly on Ms. Wilkerson’s side of the boundary line. Mr. Little testified that this road work was completed well before Ms. Wilkerson purchased the property from him. An August 18, 2006 survey performed by Jack McAdoo on behalf of Ms. Wilkerson (Trial Exhibit 5) indicates that although the used portion of the easement is more on Ms. Wilkerson’s property, it does not extend past the original grant of a fifteen-foot easement on her side of the boundary line. Regardless, the easement (wherever it lies) is now used by both Ms. Wilkerson and Mr. Riegel to access their respective properties.

The Warranty Deed from the Littles to Ms. Wilkerson describes the property being conveyed, in relevant part, as “a portion of same real property conveyed to [the Littles], appearing of record in Deed Book 531, Page 328 in the Register’s Office of Madison County.” Although the deed from the Littles to Ms. Wilkerson references the conveyance from Mr. Haynes to the Littles, which as described above specifically notes the easement, the

-3- deed from the Littles to Ms. Wilkerson does not specifically reference the easement recorded at Book 531, Page 328. Rather, Ms. Wilkerson’s deed states that the property is unencumbered except for various utility and transmission line easements, and an “easement of record in Deed Book 182, page 343. . .,” and a “[r]ight-of-way easement of record in Deed Book 171, page 549.” The easement at issue in this case was recorded at Book 531, Page 328 and so is not specifically referenced in the Little to Wilkerson deed. Ms. Wilkerson avers, in pertinent part, that because her deed does not reference the easement, she cannot be held to abide by its terms.

According to the record, the easement was an old field road that was used by Mr. Haynes to access his property. After the Littles purchased the property, they used the easement for a driveway to their house, which was ultimately sold to Ms. Wilkerson. Ms. Wilkerson’s driveway extends beyond the easement as it forks toward her property. After Mr. Riegel purchased his property, certain issues concerning the use of the easement arose between him and Ms. Wilkerson. As a result, on October 19, 2012, Mr. Riegel filed a complaint for temporary and permanent injunction against Ms. Wilkerson. The complaint specifically alleged:

4. [Ms.

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Richard E. Riegel, Jr. v. Patricia A. Wilkerson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richard-e-riegel-jr-v-patricia-a-wilkerson-tennctapp-2014.