Shew v. Bawgus

227 S.W.3d 569, 2007 Tenn. App. LEXIS 91
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 20, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 227 S.W.3d 569 (Shew v. Bawgus) 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
Shew v. Bawgus, 227 S.W.3d 569, 2007 Tenn. App. LEXIS 91 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

D. MICHAEL SWINEY, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court, in which CHARLES D. SUSANO, JR., and SHARON G. LEE, JJ., joined.

Joseph W. Shew, Jr., Nyoka Shew, Kenneth L. Lewis, and Shirley A. Lewis (“Plaintiffs”) sued Michael A. Bawgus, C. Alan Longmire, and Carolyn Lindsey King (“Defendants”) seeking, in part, a declaratory judgment holding that an easement over Defendants’ properties is thirty feet wide, or in the alternative, a judgment that the easement in its present state is unsafe and, therefore, Plaintiffs are entitled to a prescriptive easement thirty feet in -width. After a bench trial, the Trial Court entered a Judgment finding and holding, inter alia, that the easement in question is thirty feet in width, or in the alternative, that an easement by prescription has been acquired by continued hostile, open, actual, and exclusive use of the easement by Plaintiffs and their predecessors in title since the establishment of the driveway within the easement in approximately 1950. Defendants appeal to this Court. We reverse.

Background

As is the case with many property disputes, the chains of title for the properties involved in this lawsuit involve numerous conveyances. As the details to most of these conveyances are not relevant to the issues involved on appeal, we will attempt to simplify the background facts as best as possible.

Each of the parties involved in this lawsuit owns property that once was part of a single tract deeded to L.L. Taylor in 1927. In 1932, L.L. Taylor and his wife deeded a portion of their property consisting of ap *571 proximately 4.64 acres to E.S. Taylor (“Servient Estate”). The deed from L.L. Taylor and his wife to E.S. Taylor provided, in pertinent part: “The party of the first part reserves the right of outlet over said property.”

Over the years, the Servient Estate was conveyed several times and each deed recited that L.L. Taylor reserved a right of outlet over the Servient Estate. In 1951, the owners of the Servient Estate, E.J. and Kathleen L. Shew, conveyed the Ser-vient Estate to J.A. and Flossie Shew. This deed did not specifically contain the recitation regarding the right of outlet.

By Clerk’s Deed, R.B. and Georgia Lee Bawgus acquired the Servient Estate in 1969. In 2002, Georgia Lee Bawgus, a widow, conveyed a portion of the Servient Estate to Michael A. Bawgus. The remainder of the Servient Estate was conveyed to C. Alan Longmire and wife, Carolyn Lindsey King. Thus, title to separate portions of the Servient Estate now rests in Michael A. Bawgus and in C. Alan Longmire and Carolyn Lindsey King.

As for the remainder of the single tract owned by L.L. Taylor in 1927, L.L. Taylor, a widower, conveyed approximately 45.3 acres (“Dominant Estate”) to Clarence W. and Estelle Taylor in 1952. As was the case with the Servient Estate, title to the Dominant Estate was conveyed numerous times over the years.

The Dominant Estate was divided in 1981, pursuant to a divorce decree involving the then owners, Clarence W. Taylor and Lillian K. Taylor. In 1992, Lillian K. Taylor conveyed her portion of the Dominant Estate to Stephen J. Barcik, III. This 1992 deed, provides, in pertinent part:

The Party of the First Part does by these presents further grant and convey unto the Party of the Second Part, his heirs and assigns, a perpetual easement or right-of-way over and across the existing joint driveway and right-of-way (30 feet in width) leading from Burton France Road to and along the westerly line of the property herein conveyed as shown by said plat prepared by Hale Surveys mentioned hereinabove. Neither the Party of the First Part, her heirs and assigns, nor the Party of the Second Part, his heirs and assigns, shall block or obstruct said common driveway or right-of-way from Burton France Road as shown by said plat. The property conveyed hereinabove is also conveyed subject to said joint non-exclusive driveway along the westerly line of the property hereinabove conveyed as shown by said plat.

A portion of the Dominant Estate owned by Clarence W. Taylor was, after several interim conveyances, conveyed to Stephen J. Barcik in 1993. This 1993 deed contains a description that states, in pertinent part: “PARCEL IV: BEGINNING at a point in the westerly boundary of a 30' wide driveway, ...” In 1994, Stephen J. Barcik conveyed his portion of the Dominant Estate to the current owners, Joseph W. Shew, Jr. and Nyoka R. Shew.

The remainder of the Dominant Estate that was owned by Clarence W. Taylor was conveyed to the current owners, Kenneth L. and Shirley A. Lewis, in 2002. Thus, title to a portion of the Dominant Estate rests in Joseph W. Shew, Jr. and Nyoka Shew, and a portion rests in Kenneth L. and Shirley A. Lewis.

The easement in question in this lawsuit (“the Easement”) contains a driveway (“the Driveway”) that runs between the Lewis and Shew properties, or the Dominant Estate, and continues on the land where the Bawgus and Longmire/King properties, or the Servient Estate, join and gives access to Burton France Road. Plaintiffs sued Defendants seeking a declarato *572 ry judgment holding that the Easement is thirty feet in width, or in the alternative, a judgment that the Easement in its present state is unsafe and, therefore, the Plaintiffs are entitled.to a prescriptive easement thirty feet in width. The case was tried without a jury.

Attorney D.R. Beeson, III testified as a expert for Plaintiffs. Mr. Beeson opined that the Easement was created in the 1932 deed from L.L. Taylor and his wife to E.S. Taylor, which provided, in pertinent part: “The party of the first part reserves the right of outlet over said property.” The specific parameters of the Easement were not defined in this deed. Mr. Beeson opined that the Easement encumbers the entire 4.64 acre Servient Estate.

A 2001 plat (“2001 Plat”) prepared by surveyor Charles T. Johnson shows the Easement as a ten-foot wide gravel lane for ingress and egress. The 2001 Plat declares that it was prepared to establish the boundaries when Georgia Bawgus split her property into two tracts. Mr. Beeson testified that the 2001 Plat was a re-plat and that the original plat also showed the Easement as a ten-foot wide gravel lane for ingress and egress. Mr. Beeson agreed that there are no other references to the width of the Easement that exist within the chain of title to the Servient Estate. The references to a thirty-foot wide driveway all appear within the chain of title to the Dominant Estate and first appeared long after the Servient Estate was severed from the Dominant Estate and the Easement was created.

Mr. Beeson agreed that the makers of the deeds within the chain of title to the Dominant Estate:

couldn’t expand the easement by a simple recitation. I don’t know whether the draftsman — my best guess is that the draftsman was referring to a survey upon which was located thirty feet in width. And again I don’t have any basis or any evidence as to the basis of that.

Mr. Beeson noted that a reference was made in the 1981 Quitclaim Deed between Lillian K. Taylor and Clarence W. Taylor to a 1981 survey prepared by George F.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
227 S.W.3d 569, 2007 Tenn. App. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shew-v-bawgus-tennctapp-2007.