Tidwell v. Van Deventer

686 S.W.2d 899, 1984 Tenn. App. LEXIS 2990
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 6, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 686 S.W.2d 899 (Tidwell v. Van Deventer) 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
Tidwell v. Van Deventer, 686 S.W.2d 899, 1984 Tenn. App. LEXIS 2990 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

MATHERNE, Retired Judge.

The plaintiffs Tidwell sue to remove cloud on their title to a tract of mountain land located in Monroe County, Tennessee. The plaintiffs allege that the defendants Van Deventer make claim to a portion of their land, and in the event the Van Deven-ters should prevail, the plaintiffs seek relief from the other defendants, plaintiffs’ predecessors in title under warranty deeds executed by those defendants. Cecil B. Newman, property assessor for Monroe County, was made party defendant so that the court could order him to make necessary changes on his official records.

The defendants Van Deventer, by answer, allege that they are the owners in fee of 189 acres of land in District 5 of Monroe County; that the Tidwells can show no source of title to the land they now claim; that they and their predecessors in title have had their assurancies of title recorded for more than 20 years; they and their predecessors in title have paid taxes on their land for more than 20 years prior to this lawsuit, and under Tennessee Code Annotated § 28-2-109 they are presumed prima facie to be the legal owners thereof; that the plaintiffs’ suit is barred by TCA § 28-2-110 in that they and those through whom they claim have failed to have taxes assessed and paid for more than 20 years prior to this lawsuit.

The defendants, heirs of Elmer Tate, by answer deny all material allegations of the complaint and deny that the plaintiffs are entitled to any relief.

The chancellor found that the defendants Van Deventer are the owners of 75 acres of the land claimed by the plaintiffs, and ordered a line established between the parties and vested title in the defendants Van Deventer to that 75 acres. The chancellor held that the plaintiffs bought their land by the boundary and not by the acre and, they having walked the boundaries, received what they bargained for and were entitled to no relief against their predecessors in title.

The plaintiffs appeal insisting that the chancellor erred in failing to find the plaintiffs owned their tract in fee simple; in finding the Van Deventers to be the owners of 75 acres of the land claimed by the plaintiffs; and in failing to grant the plaintiffs relief as against their predecessors in title under their warranty deeds.

In 1952, Christopher Van Deventer III, Elizabeth B. Van Deventer and Christopher Van Deventer IV owned land in District 5 of Monroe County, Fractional Section 12, which land adjoined a tract owned by Elmer Tate in the same District and Section. The parties settled a disputed common boundary by striking a line “Beginning at the Northeast corner of Fractional Section 12, Fractional Township 1 South, Range 5 East, and running in a Southwest direction in a straight line to an oak tree in the center of the Forest Service road at Sandy Gap.” The Van Deventers conveyed to Elmer Tate by warranty deed all the disputed land lying southeast of this line, and Elmer Tate, et ux conveyed to the Van Deventers all the disputed land lying north[901]*901west of this line. Each deed called for 75 acres and each deed recited the consideration as “One Dollar ($1.00) and other good and valuable considerations, including the exchange of real estate.” From that date until 1982 the Van Deventers paid taxes on 75 acres in Fractional Section 12. From 1954 to 1973, Elmer Tate paid taxes on 75 acres in Fractional Section 12. In 1974, after Elmer Tate’s death and a sale of 300 acres of land by his heirs to Appalachian, Inc., that corporation paid taxes on 75 acres in Fractional Section 12. In 1975, the plaintiffs Tidwell purchases the 300-acre boundary from Appalachian, Inc. The Tid-wells became aware that there was some question whether they owned 300 acres when they received a notice of tax reduction in 1979 or 1980, after the first tax map ever drafted for Monroe County was completed. Upon investigation, they found the Van Deventers’ claim and this lawsuit followed.

The problem of determining what property the parties exchanged in their 1952 deeds results from references in the deeds to “Sandy Gap.” The deed from the Van Deventers to Elmer Tate includes the following call in its description: “... thence following the North Carolina line to an oak tree in the center of the Forest Service road at Sandy Gap.... ” The 1952 deed from Elmer Tate to the Van Deventers includes the following call: “Beginning at the Northeast corner of Fractional Section 12, Fractional Township 1 South, Range 5 East, and running in a Southwest direction in a straight line to an oak tree in the center of the Forest Service road at Sandy Gap....”

The Van Deventers claim that “Sandy Gap” as used in the 1952 deeds refers to a location on the North Carolina line between Wolf Ridge and Hipps Ridge. The Tidwells and Appalachian, Inc. claim that “Sandy Gap” as used in the deeds refers to a point on the North Carolina line one-half mile to the northwest of the location between Wolf Ridge and Hipps Ridge.

Tennessee Valley Authority maps published prior to 1957 show Sandy Gap located at a point between Wolf Ridge and Hipps Ridge. After 1957, the location that had previously been called Sandy Gap was designated Hipps Gap; after 1957 the designation Sandy Gap was moved one-half mile to the northwest. United States Forest Service maps dated 1953 and earlier show Sandy Gap at a location between Wolf Ridge and Hipps Ridge. After 1968, the location was changed on those maps to a point one-half mile to the northwest.

There was considerable conflicting testimony on the location of Sandy Gap in 1952. The chancellor apparently could not resolve the discrepancies, but he did find that the Van Deventers proved their claim to 75 acres of land and so decreed. We agree with the chancellor that the Van Deventers prevailed.

The Van Deventers deraign their title back to the State Grant in 1847. The only land in Fractional Section 12 to which the Tidwells could show color of title was the 75 acres the Van Deventers conveyed to Elmer Tate in 1952, and a tract purchased by Elmer Tate from the heirs of Grayson Garrett by several deeds dating from 1945 through 1951. The Grayson Garrett land located in Fractional Section 12 was referred to as 75 acres in some deeds, but it could not have been the Van Deventers’ 75 acres deeded by Elmer Tate in 1952.

The deed from the heirs of Elmer Tate to Appalachian, Inc. recites:

This boundary known as the Grayson Garrett Tract and being all of the land owned by Elmer Tate in Fractional Section 12 and 7. This boundary is bounded Northwest by Vandiventer, (sic) Northeast by U.S. Forest Service, South by North Carolina and Tennessee State line, containing 300 acres, more or less.

This deed acknowledges Van Deventer land forming the northwest boundary of the land conveyed. That would be the location of the 75 acres deeded to the Van Deven-[902]*902ters by Elmer Tate in 1952. The position taken by the plaintiffs would result in Elmer Tate having conveyed to the Van De-venters about 75 acres of land belonging to the U.S. Forest Service. We hold that the evidence preponderates in favor of the finding of the chancellor that the Van Deven-ters own the 75 acres described in the chancellor’s decree, which tract lies to the northwest of the Tidwell property.

The Tidwells and Appalachian, Inc.

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Bluebook (online)
686 S.W.2d 899, 1984 Tenn. App. LEXIS 2990, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tidwell-v-van-deventer-tennctapp-1984.