Roger Noble v. Jerry Gray

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 8, 2024
DocketE2022-01356-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Roger Noble v. Jerry Gray (Roger Noble v. Jerry Gray) 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
Roger Noble v. Jerry Gray, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

01/08/2024 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE Assigned on Briefs June 1, 2023

ROGER NOBLE ET AL. V. JERRY GRAY ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Rhea County No. 2020-CV-11278 Melissa Thomas Willis, Chancellor

No. E2022-01356-COA-R3-CV

Five easement holders filed suit against two other easement holders and the servient estate owners seeking a declaratory judgment regarding whether the easements could be used for commercial logging activities. The trial court concluded that commercial logging activities were not a permissible use of the easements and entered an order restraining and enjoining use of the easements for such activities. Discerning no error, we affirm.

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

ANDY D. BENNETT, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D. MICHAEL SWINEY, C.J., and J. STEVEN STAFFORD, P.J., W.S., joined.

Howard Luxon Upchurch and Stacy H. Farmer, Pikeville, Tennessee, for the appellants, Jerry Gray and Sharon Gray.

Rebecca Lynn Hicks, Dayton, Tennessee, for the appellees, Roger Noble, Sherry Carter, Joan Conner, Gerald Davis, and Bobby Williams.

Howard B. Jackson, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Taner Timber Co. Inc.

OPINION

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

At the heart of this case are two private roads in rural Rhea County known as Memory Lane and Lick Hollow Drive. Both roads are narrow, single-lane gravel roads that are approximately eight to twelve feet wide. The land which they traverse, as well as the other real properties discussed in this opinion, originally existed as one large parcel that belonged to Virgil Cox. Eventually, his sons, Jerry Cox and Jeffrey Cox, along with their spouses, acquired an ownership interest in this land. Over the years, the Coxes divided much of the land into smaller tracts that they sold to various buyers, typically after constructing a home on the tract. Most of the deeds conveying these smaller tracts included easements granting the purchaser ingress and egress for his or her respective tract. The easement holders constructed Memory Lane and Lick Hollow Drive in accordance with the easements in those deeds, and they have maintained the roads by regularly putting down gravel and clearing ditches. Additionally, many of the easement holders had their utility lines buried along and under Memory Lane and Lick Hollow Drive.

The Easement Holders

As relevant to this appeal, the easement holders are Roger Noble, Joan Conner, Gerald Davis, Bobby Williams, Sherry Carter, Jerry Gray, and Sharon Gray. The following map1 depicts Memory Lane and Lick Hollow Drive in relation to the pertinent easement holders’ properties:

Court.) ( Bed BY

Lick Hollow

Old Railroad

Beginning at the bottom of the map, Memory Lane connects to Wassom Memorial Highway (“Highway 68”). Two properties abut the entrance to Memory Lane from Highway 68. The small, darkly shaded, square-shaped property to the right of entrance to

1 This map appears in the record as Exhibit 1. The text identifying the roadways and the easement holders’ various properties was not included on the exhibit when entered into evidence. We have added the identifying text to assist the reader. During the parties’ testimonies at trial, Plaintiffs’ counsel had each easement holder indicate his or her property by shading it in on the map with colored pencils or crayons. The identifying text we have added is based on this testimony. -2- Memory Lane belongs to Mr. Noble and Ms. Conner, and the larger, rectangular-shaped property to the left of the entrance to Memory Lane belongs to Mr. Davis.

Mr. Noble purchased his property from Leon Sneed2 on June 29, 2009, and the warranty deed conveying this property to Mr. Noble granted him a “non-exclusive right of way easement as recorded in Deed Book 289, Page 8, in the Register’s Office of Rhea County, Tennessee.” The easement recorded in Deed Book 289, Pages 8-10 (“the 1998 Easement”) was a conveyance from Virgil Cox to Jerry Cox on February 2, 1998, giving the grantee a right of ingress and egress for a 5.02-acre tract of land from Highway 68. The 1998 Easement contains language defining it as being for “pedestrian and vehicular ingress and egress from the Grantor’s property over and across that part of the driveway presently located on the Grantor’s property,” and the last page of the 1998 Easement is a survey portraying it as measuring 17 feet in width. Memory Lane originated from the 1998 Easement.

Mr. Davis acquired his property through two separate conveyances. The first conveyance was a warranty deed from Virgil Cox that described the property as “BEING Lot No. One (1) of Virgil Cox Subdivision as shown by plat of record in Plat Book 3, Page 598, Register’s Office of Rhea County, Tennessee.” The referenced plat shows access to the property from Highway 68 via Memory Lane. The second conveyance was a warranty deed from Jerry and Lavonne Cox for the one-acre tract between Lot 1 and Highway 68. Like the plat referenced in the first deed, a survey recorded with the second deed depicts access to the property from Highway 68 via Memory Lane, but this survey notes that Memory Lane measures thirty feet in width. There is no dispute, however, that the width of Memory Lane has always been less than thirty feet.

Turning again to the map above, Mr. Williams and Ms. Carter own the large, shaded tract in the middle that is outlined in black. They purchased this 8.319-acre tract from Jerry and Lavonne Cox pursuant to a land sale contract. A 2011 survey recorded with the land sale contract provides the legal description of the property and shows access to the property via a path at the end of Memory Lane that is labeled “Old Railroad Bed.” A legend that appears on the 2011 survey indicates that Old Railroad Bed is approximately twenty-five feet wide and approaches the Williams property from the northwest. At the northwest corner, the path turns east and runs along the northern boundary of the Williams property. The 2011 survey notes that the section of the path running along the northern border of the property is Lick Hollow Drive and that this section measures fifty feet in width.

The large, darkly-shaded tract adjacent to the Williams property is owned by Mr. and Ms. Gray. The Grays acquired their property through two separate conveyances from Jeffrey Cox and his wife, Vickie Cox: (1) 95.14 acres by a warranty deed and (2) 3.42

2 The record does not contain a thorough chain of title for this property, but the parties do not dispute that the property was once part of the large parcel owned by the Coxes. -3- acres by a quit claim deed. The warranty deed contained no reference to an easement or right-of-way, but the quit claim deed conveyed to the Grays a “50-foot non-exclusive right- of-way (roadway) from the property of Jeffrey Cox to Highway 68 where said driveway is presently located, and the 50-foot right-of-way (roadway) is located 25 feet on each side of the center line of the present roadway.” Although the deed purported to create a fifty- foot easement, all of the foregoing easement holders agree that a fifty-foot easement does not exist on the ground because none of the roadways measure more than twelve feet in width.

The Dispute

In late 2019, Mr. Noble, Ms. Conner, Mr. Davis, Mr. Williams, and Ms. Carter (collectively, “the Plaintiffs”) learned that the Grays had entered into a timber cutting agreement with Taner Timber, Inc. (“Taner”) for Taner to harvest all merchantable timber from fifty-one acres of the Grays’ property.

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Bluebook (online)
Roger Noble v. Jerry Gray, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roger-noble-v-jerry-gray-tennctapp-2024.