Tommy Hinton and wife, Jean Marie Hinton v. Jerry L.Edmonds and wife, Susan D. Edmonds

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 7, 2012
DocketW2011-01392-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Tommy Hinton and wife, Jean Marie Hinton v. Jerry L.Edmonds and wife, Susan D. Edmonds (Tommy Hinton and wife, Jean Marie Hinton v. Jerry L.Edmonds and wife, Susan D. Edmonds) 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
Tommy Hinton and wife, Jean Marie Hinton v. Jerry L.Edmonds and wife, Susan D. Edmonds, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON March 21, 2012 Session

TOMMY HINTON and wife, JEAN MARIE HINTON v. JERRY L. EDMONDS and wife, SUSAN D. EDMONDS

Direct Appeal from the Chancery Court for Hardin County No. 7460 James F. Butler, Chancellor

No. W2011-01392-COA-R3-CV - Filed May 7, 2012

Adjoining property owners dispute the validity of an Agreement which placed restrictions upon a roadway across one property which provided access to the other property. The trial court, after making specific factual findings, found the Agreement invalid and non-binding upon the parties. We affirm the trial court’s factual findings as well as its ultimate determination of invalidity.

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

A LAN E. H IGHERS, P.J., W.S., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D AVID R. F ARMER, J., and J. S TEVEN S TAFFORD, J., joined.

J. Gilbert Parrish, Jr., Savannah, Tennessee, for the appellants, Jerry L. Edmonds and wife, Susan D. Edmonds

Terry Abernathy, Selmer, Tennessee, for the appellees, Tommy Hinton and wife, Jean Marie Hinton OPINION

I. F ACTS & P ROCEDURAL H ISTORY

The parties in this case are adjoining landowners. In 1993, Tommy and Marie Hinton purchased, as tenants by the entirety,1 unimproved Lot #23 in the Lakeshore Estates Subdivision in Hardin County, Tennessee, from Paul Callens and Ron Harmon d/b/a C & H Development Company. The Hintons’ lot remains unimproved.

The Hintons’ property partially borders a public road; however, access from this road has been described as “unusable” or “unreasonable” due to the existence of a deep ravine. Thus, in 1997, the Hintons, at their own expense, had a roadway and “turnaround” cut and graveled across adjoining Lot #31 to access their own lot. At the time the roadway was constructed, Lot #31 was owned by Ron Harmon, who consented to, and was present at, the roadway construction.

In 1996 or 1997, Ron Harmon had a personal residence constructed on Lot #31. In 2001, he sold the residence on Lot #31 to Jerry and Susan Edmonds. A Warranty Deed was recorded on August 1, 2001, which recited the following relevant encumbrance:

the same is unencumbered except by . . . an easement for a driveway and turnaround for the benefit of Lot 23, Lake Shore Estates, Phase I, along the southern and western boundaries of Lot 31, and this conveyance is made subject to all of the same.

It is undisputed that when the Edmonds purchased Lot #31 the roadway across the property was “plainly visible” and “plainly graveled.” In fact, Mr. Edmonds concedes that he “understood that [the roadway] was there for the owners of the lot next to [his] to use.”

Between 1997 and 2007, the Hintons used the roadway across Lot #31, without objection, to periodically access their own property. In 2007, the Hintons decided to move to Nashville, necessitating the sale of both their home in Cordova and their lot in Lakeshore Estates. The parties first met when the Hintons visited the Edmonds’ home to notify them of their decision to sell their lot.

1 A conveyance to a married couple–silent as to the type of ownership–creates a presumption of a tenancy by the entirety. Dickson v. Long, No. M2008-00279-COA-R3-CV, 2009 WL 961784, at *13 (Tenn. Ct. App. Apr. 8, 2009) (citing In re Estate of Russell, No. 01A01-9611-PB-00516, 1997 WL 249961, at *7 (Tenn. Ct. App. May 14, 1997); Bost v. Johnson, 175 Tenn. 232, 133 S.W.2d 491 (1939); Young v. Brown, 136 Tenn. 184, 188 S.W. 1149 (1916)).

-2- Following his first meeting with the Hintons, Mr. Edmonds reviewed his Warranty Deed and the included easement reservation. Based upon his belief that the easement described in the Warranty Deed did not match the roadway’s actual location, Mr. Edmonds proposed to Mrs. Hinton that “it would probably be in both of our best interest[s] to get it descripted [sic], platted and laid out and move the easement up to equate to where the driveway is.” Thus, in February 2008, Mr. Edmonds sent Mrs. Hinton a proposed set of “easement rules,” which limited the easement’s use to ingress and egress only and which required the Hintons to bear the costs of a survey, any improvements or maintenance to the roadway, and the drafting and recordation of any agreement reached.

The Hintons had the easement surveyed in March 2008 and Mrs. Hinton and Mr. Edmonds continued to have “very sporadic” discussions regarding the proposed agreement. In April 2009, Mr. Edmonds recorded an “Ingress/Egress Easement” signed only by Mr. and Mrs. Edmonds, because the Hintons had not yet agreed to its contents, and because he “wanted to make sure that . . . [the Hintons’] selling agent knew there was an issue with the easement.”

According to Mrs. Hinton, the Hintons were “under a lot of financial pressure” and “desperately needed to sell the[ir] property” in order to finance their home under construction in Nashville. Thus, to avoid “any problems with selling the lot[,]” Mrs. Hinton ultimately signed an “Ingress/Egress Easement Agreement” (the “Agreement”) on November 17, 2008. She also claims that she signed Mr. Hinton’s name to the Agreement without his permission and against his wishes. The Agreement acknowledged a permanent easement across Lot #31 for ingress and egress purposes, only, expressly prohibiting parking vehicles or placing recreational equipment thereon. It further provided that: 1) any improvements to the easement must be completed by a licensed engineer approved by the owners of Lot #31; 2) any improvements to the easement must be completed prior to the commencement of construction on Lot #23; 3) any construction of a residential dwelling on Lot #23 must be completed within 18 months of construction commencement; and 4) the owners of Lot #23 must bear the cost of any easement construction, improvements, or maintenance. Finally, the Agreement provided that if the owners of Lot #23 violate the above-stated provisions, with the exception of the ingress/egress access only provision, that the owners of Lot #31 may revoke the Agreement.

Upon execution, Mrs. Hinton forwarded the Agreement to Mr. Edmonds’ attorney, as requested; however, the document “fell through the cracks” and Mr. Edmonds did not learn of its execution until the summer of 2009, when he spoke to Mrs. Hinton regarding his opposition to her plan to re-gravel the roadway. Upon discovering execution, both Mr. and Mrs. Edmonds signed the Agreement in July 2009 and Mr. Edmonds had it recorded in September 2009.

-3- In November 2009, the Hintons filed a Complaint seeking to have the Agreement declared a nullity and further seeking “full and unrestricted use of the involved Easement[.]” Specifically, the Hintons challenged the Agreement’s validity based upon their contention that Mrs. Hinton had signed Mr. Hinton’s name to the Agreement without his “knowledge or permission or authority” and contrary to his “advice and position,” and based upon the alleged lack of consideration to support it. Additionally, they argued that the Edmonds had unreasonably denied their request to re-gravel the roadway, rendering it “virtually useless” and “potentially hazardous and dangerous[,]” and “depriving them of any reasonable opportunity to market their property for sale to any third party.”

The matter was heard before the Hardin County Chancery Court on March 14, 2011, Chancellor James F. Butler presiding.2 On April 26, 2011 the trial court entered its written ruling, which provided in relevant part:

Mr. Hinton did not agree with the proposal and he would not sign it, nor give his permission for his wife to sign it for him, nor was he aware when it was actually signed. Mrs.

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Tommy Hinton and wife, Jean Marie Hinton v. Jerry L.Edmonds and wife, Susan D. Edmonds, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tommy-hinton-and-wife-jean-marie-hinton-v-jerry-le-tennctapp-2012.