The River Oak, GP v. IOAN Bucse

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 25, 2016
DocketM2015-02208-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of The River Oak, GP v. IOAN Bucse (The River Oak, GP v. IOAN Bucse) 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
The River Oak, GP v. IOAN Bucse, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE September 22, 2016 Session

THE RIVER OAKS, GP, ET AL. v. IOAN BUCSE, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Sumner County No. 2014CV23 Joe Thompson, Judge ___________________________________

No. M2015-02208-COA-R3-CV – Filed October 25, 2016 ___________________________________

This property dispute involves adjacent commercial property owners. When defendants revealed their intent to erect a fence between the adjoining properties, plaintiffs sued under the theories of adverse possession, prescriptive easement, and implied easement to use a portion of defendants‘ property for parking, trash removal, and receiving deliveries. After a bench trial, the trial court found that plaintiffs failed to meet their burden of establishing their asserted rights over the area in dispute. Plaintiffs appeal the trial court‘s conclusions as to prescriptive easement and easement by implication only. Discerning no error, we affirm.

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

J. STEVEN STAFFORD, P.J.,W.S., delivered the opinion of the court, in which Brandon O. Gibson, J., joined, W. NEAL MCBRAYER, J., not participating.

Peter H. Curry, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellants, The River Oaks, GP, and Ray Morris.

Brandon R. Meredith, Gallatin, Tennessee, for the appellees, Ioan Bucse and Felicia Bucse.

OPINION

BACKGROUND

Plaintiffs/Appellants The River Oaks, GP (―River Oaks‖) and Ray Morris (―Mr. Morris,‖ and together with River Oaks, ―Appellants‖) and Defendants/Appellees Ioan Bucse (―Mr. Bucse‖) and Felecia Bucse (―Ms. Bucse,‖ and together with Mr. Bucse, ―Appellees‖) are adjacent commercial property owners in Hendersonville, Tennessee. Appellants‘ properties together make up a strip shopping center (―Shopping Strip‖). Specifically, Mr. Morris owns the two westernmost ―bays‖ of the Shopping Strip (―Morris property‖), while River Oaks owns the remaining bays (―River Oaks property‖). Each of the Shopping Strip‘s bays fronts State Highway 31E/West Main Street (―West Main Street‖); i.e., West Main Street borders the Shopping Strip to the north. Each bay also has a rear door leading to a paved area on the southern side. Appellees own a parcel of land (―the Bucse property‖) directly south of and abutting Appellants‘ property. Candy Lane abuts the eastern boundary of both the River Oaks property and the Bucse property.1

River Oaks is a partnership consisting of Conoly Brown (―Mr. Brown‖) and David Hood (―Mr. Hood‖). Mr. Brown and Mr. Hood each individually purchased the River Oaks property by deed2 dated March 8, 2007, and both partners subsequently conveyed the property to River Oaks on October 4, 2013. Mr. Morris purchased the Morris property by deed dated November 2, 1978.

Harold Vandercook originally owned the parties‘ properties and is the common grantor in all of the parties‘ chains of title. On November 2, 1978, Mr. Vandercook conveyed the River Oaks property to River Oaks‘s predecessors-in-interest and granted them by deed a sixteen-foot non-exclusive easement ―for ingress and egress and utilities‖ along the northern boundary of the Bucse property (―sixteen-foot deeded easement‖). On that same day, by deed, Mr. Vandercook also conveyed to Mr. Morris the Morris property and granted to Mr. Morris the same sixteen-foot deeded easement ―for ingress and egress and may also be used for the location of utilities provided that the same is restored.‖

By deed dated February 25, 1997, Mr. Morris became owner of a one-half undivided interest in the Bucse property; Mr. Vandercook retained the other one-half interest. On November 20, 1998, Mr. Morris conveyed by deed his one-half interest in the Bucse property to Appellees‘ predecessor-in-interest. Appellees purchased the Bucse property by deed dated March 3, 2006.

On February 11, 2014, Appellants filed a complaint and applied for a temporary injunction in the Sumner County Chancery Court (―trial court‖). The complaint alleged Appellants were entitled to ―use the alley at the rear of their property . . . for employee parking, trash storage, deliveries, and access to the street‖ because Appellees, ―upon whose property the alley is located, have stated their intention to fence the alley thereby blocking [Appellants‘] access.‖ In support of their claim over this portion of the Bucse

1 The parties agree that the only way to get to the northern part of the Bucse property abutting the Shopping Strip is via Candy Lane. In a pleading, Appellees contended that they own an easement over Candy Lane to access their property. 2 All of the deeds in this cause were admitted into evidence as part of the parties‘ joint stipulations.

-2- property, Appellants relied on the theories of statutory adverse possession pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated Section 28-2-103, common law adverse possession, prescriptive easement, and easement by implication. Appellants also requested an injunction enjoining Appellees from erecting a fence blocking access to ―the alley.‖ However, Appellants never specifically defined ―the alley‖ in the complaint but generally referred to the area as an ―alleyway‖ or the ―property in question.‖

On March 7, 2014, Appellees filed an answer denying Appellants‘ allegations that their use of a portion of the Bucse property was adverse and exclusive and opposing Appellants‘ application for the injunction. On March 10, 2014, the trial court issued a temporary injunction enjoining Appellees ―from erecting a fence, or placing any other obstruction, on or across that portion of their property described in the [c]omplaint which is currently used by the [Appellants] for access to the rear of their adjoining property.‖ On April 28, 2015, an agreed order was entered allowing Appellants to add an additional ground pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated Section 28-2-104 as an amendment to their complaint.

A bench trial took place on May 26 and 27, 2015. Prior to the presentation of the proof, Appellants‘ counsel defined for the trial court the ―area in dispute‖ as the area between the Shopping Strip‘s southern property line to a point 12.5 feet south of the Nashville Electric Service power lines (―NES power lines‖) located on the Bucse property. As discussed in detail, infra, Appellants‘ counsel often referred to this ―area in dispute‖ when questioning the witnesses.

Jackie Vandercook, daughter of Mr. Vandercook and owner of property near both the Shopping Strip and Bucse property, testified on Appellants‘ behalf. When questioned about Appellants‘ use of the ―area in dispute,‖ Ms. Vandercook testified that she observed the continuous uses of parking, trash removal, and truck deliveries since the early 1970s when development of the area concluded. On cross-examination, however, Ms. Vandercook testified that she was unsure of the exact location of the boundary separating the two properties or of the location of the easement. Specifically, Ms. Vandercook was unsure whether the cars that she observed were normally parked on the Shopping Strip, within the sixteen-foot deeded easement, or beyond the sixteen-foot deeded easement further into the Bucse property. She was also unsure as to the usual location of the dumpsters and was unsure of where and how often the delivery trucks made their deliveries.

Mr. Morris testified that he had been a tenant on the Morris property since 1972 and owned the property since 1978. When questioned about Appellants‘ use of the ―area in dispute,‖ Mr. Morris testified that he, his tenants, and their employees continuously used the area for dumpsters, parking, and deliveries. Mr.

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