United States v. Caylor

159 F. Supp. 410, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2641
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 17, 1958
DocketCiv. A. 3334
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 159 F. Supp. 410 (United States v. Caylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Caylor, 159 F. Supp. 410, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2641 (E.D. Tenn. 1958).

Opinion

ROBERT. L. TAYLOR, District Judge.

The Government has moved for summary judgment in its favor on the ground that the pleadings, affidavits and the Court’s order of October 15, 1957, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that it is entitled to the relief sought in the complaint as a matter of law. The complaint was filed on September 5, 1957, by the Government upon the relation and for the use of the Tennessee Valley Authority against the defendants, Caylor and wife, for the purpose of requiring them to remove a house that was located on a tract of land in Blount County, Tennessee, described as Tract CKA-264, which was located entirely within the limits of plaintiff’s right of way, or easement, in said property. The easement rights were acquired by the Government by deed from Dave F. Trotter and wife in 1943 for a consideration of $100, which deed was recorded in the Register’s office of Blount County, Tennessee. The grant, which is described in detail in the instrument filed as Exhibit “A” to the complaint, conveyed to the Government a permanent easement and right of way for electric power transmission line purposes over the strip of land described in the deed, 100 feet wide with the right to keep it “clear of brush, timber, inflammable structures and fire hazards.” The transmission line was under construction at the time the complaint was filed and was scheduled to be energized on November 1, 1957.

Defendants purchased the parcel of land which is subject to plaintiff’s easement on January 17, 1955, as shown by recorded deed in Volume 185, page 511, of the Register’s office in Blount County, Tennessee. The house was on the property and within the limits of plaintiff’s easement at the time of acquisition by defendants. Defendants7 predecessor in title erected the house on the property in 1946.

Written notice was given defendants on August 26, 1957, to remove the house from the right of way because it was an inflammable structure and would create *412 a fire hazard located under a high power energized transmission line.

Defendants refused to remove the house and the Government filed the suit asking for a mandatory injunction requiring defendants to remove the structure before the transmission line was energized. An answer was filed to the complaint on September 23, 1957, in which defendants denied that they unlawfully maintained the house within plaintiff’s right of way. The answer admitted that defendants had been requested to remove the house from the right of way but that they had refused to do so upon the ground that plaintiff did not have any title or right to the parcel of land on which the house was located. The answer states that any title claim or right that the plaintiff had in the property was abandoned and thereby reverted to the defendants.

A jury was demanded to try the issues. A hearing was held in Greeneville, Tennessee, on October 4, 1957, on the Government’s motion for a mandatory injunction to require the removal of the house forthwith. At that time counsel for the defendants contended that the injunction should not issue without giving defendants the time to exhaust the discovery procedures in an effort to develop facts to support their contention that the Government had lost their easement by failing to use it for power line purposes for a period of several years, or from 1943, the date of acquisition, until 1957, the year in which the construction of the power line commenced, and that there was an abandonment of the easement because of non-user.

By order entered October 15, 1957, with the consent of the parties, either expressed or implied, the Court directed the removal of the house from the easement right of way forthwith in order to avoid irreparable injury, subject to the proviso that the removal would in no way prejudice defendants’ legal rights to the property on which the house was located.

The order further provided that if defendants’ contentions that plaintiff had lost its easement by abandonment are sustained, it was agreed that the just compensation for removal and relocation of the house shall be $3,500.

Since the entry of this order interrogatories have been submitted by defendants and answered by the plaintiff. In brief, the answers and the exhibits, the latter being copies of various resolutions passed by the Board of Directors of the Tennessee Valley Authority, show that the right of way, or easement, was not abandoned by the Board of Directors, or anyone authorized by the Board. On the contrary, the resolutions show that the Board of Directors of the Tennessee Valley Authority never abandoned the plan to build the electric transmission line that traverses the property, and which was actually built in 1957.

The affidavit of Leona L. Malkemus, Assistant Secretary of the Tennessee Valley Authority, shows that the Board of Directors did not take any action to abandon the right of way, or easement.

Defendants’ predecessors in title purchased the property in 1950 from William W. Williams and wife and they were aware that the plaintiff owned the easement and right of way for transmission line purposes over the property and that the house was located entirely within the. Government’s right of way. The easement was brought to their attention in May 1954, after they had negotiated a contract to sell the property for approximately $12,600, which failed of consummation due to the fact that the prospective purchaser could not secure a loan on account of the house being located on Government property. At that time the owners were advised of the Government’s plan to build a 154,000-volt transmission line over the right of way. The owners obtained an estimate of the cost for removal of the house and the purchase of an additional 40 feet on the west side of the parcel to facilitate relocation of the house. Mr. Williams informed defendant Glenn F. Caylor that the house was in the limits of the Government’s easement and that it would have to be moved prior to the construction of a transmission line. Mr. Caylor stated that he *413 would take his chances on the line never being built and that if he had to move his house he could relocate it. Williams sold the house to defendants for $2,500 less than he had been offered for it on account of it being within the limits of the Government’s right of way.

The sole issue for determination of the Court as shown by the record and the briefs for the respective parties is whether the United States has lost its easement or right of way which it acquired by deed in 1943, by abandonment.

Counsel for the defendants discuss at considerable length in their brief situations where the Court should and should not issue mandatory injunctions without trial on the merits.

This court recognizes the fact that the mandatory injunction is an extraordinary remedy and should not be issued on affidavits if the record presents doubtful questions of law or fact.

Counsel for defendants state that since title to the property on which the house was located is in question, that a preliminary mandatory injunction should not be issued until evidence is heard on the disputed questions of fact which are presented by the answer.

The challenge of the Government’s title to the easement by the defendants is based on the contention that the easement was abandoned and the Government thereby lost its rights therein.

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Related

Sherwood v. Tennessee Valley Authority
925 F. Supp. 2d 906 (E.D. Tennessee, 2013)
United States v. Ballard
184 F. Supp. 1 (D. New Mexico, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 F. Supp. 410, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2641, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-caylor-tned-1958.