Wanda Banker v. George, David, Charles, Terry, and Clifford Foster, Nancy Shannon, Patrick Kirk, Carolyn Foster, as Gaurdian of Black Foster, Brandon Foster, Ashley Foster and Lyndall L. Daniel

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 20, 2010
DocketW2009-00214-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Wanda Banker v. George, David, Charles, Terry, and Clifford Foster, Nancy Shannon, Patrick Kirk, Carolyn Foster, as Gaurdian of Black Foster, Brandon Foster, Ashley Foster and Lyndall L. Daniel (Wanda Banker v. George, David, Charles, Terry, and Clifford Foster, Nancy Shannon, Patrick Kirk, Carolyn Foster, as Gaurdian of Black Foster, Brandon Foster, Ashley Foster and Lyndall L. Daniel) 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
Wanda Banker v. George, David, Charles, Terry, and Clifford Foster, Nancy Shannon, Patrick Kirk, Carolyn Foster, as Gaurdian of Black Foster, Brandon Foster, Ashley Foster and Lyndall L. Daniel, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON October 13, 2009 Session

WANDA BAKER v. GEORGE FOSTER, DAVID FOSTER, CHARLES FOSTER, TERRY FOSTER, CLIFFORD FOSTER, NANCY SHANNON, PATRICK "JEREMY" KIRK, CAROLYN FOSTER, as Guardian of BLAKE FOSTER, BRANDON FOSTER, ASHLEY FOSTER and LYNDALL L. DANIEL

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Henderson County No. 14225 James F. Butler, Chancellor

No. W2009-00214-COA-R3-CV - Filed January 20, 2010

This boundary dispute appeal involves an indispensable and necessary party. The plaintiff and the defendants own adjoining tracts of land in a rural area. After questions about their common boundary arose, the defendants hired a surveyor. The defendants’ surveyor concluded that the common boundary lay further west than the plaintiff believed. The plaintiff filed a lawsuit seeking a judicial determination of the proper boundary and an award of damages for timber that the defendants had cut. After some delay, a bench trial was held. During the trial, surveyors for both parties testified that the trial court’s resolution of the boundary dispute could affect the owner of the parcel to the east of the defendants. After the trial, the trial court issued an order specifying where the boundaries of the defendants’ land should be staked out. After the boundaries were marked in accordance with the trial court’s order, the defendants filed a motion to reopen proof, arguing that the boundaries established by the trial court encroached on land owned by the defendants’ neighbor to the east. The trial court denied the motion and rendered a final judgment. The defendants appeal. We vacate the trial court’s order, concluding that the landowner to the east of the defendant was an indispensable and necessary party and that the trial court erred in declining to join him as a party once the proof indicated that the neighboring landowner could be affected by the resolution of the boundary dispute between the plaintiff and the defendants. Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Vacated and Remanded

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

James Stephen King, Memphis, Tennessee, for the Defendants/Appellants, George Foster, David Foster, Charles Foster, Terry Foster, Clifford Foster, Nancy Shannon, Patrick “Jeremy” Kirk, Carolyn Foster, as Guardian of Blake Foster, Brandon Foster, Ashley Foster and Lyndall L. Daniel.

Ricky L. Wood, Parsons, Tennessee, for the Plaintiff/Appellee, Wanda Baker.

OPINION

F ACTS AND P ROCEEDINGS B ELOW

In August 1951, H.W. Foster and his wife, Berna Foster, purchased two contiguous tracts of land (“Fosters’ tracts”) in Henderson County, Tennessee. One tract was trapezoid- shaped (“Trapezoid tract”) and the other was rectangle-shaped (“Rectangle tract”). The southern boundary of the Fosters’ Trapezoid tract lay along a portion of the northern boundary of the Rectangle tract, such that the Fosters’ tracts together formed a reversed Z- shaped boundary with the adjoining parcel of land to the northwest.

In 1993, Floyd Baker and his wife, Wanda Baker, purchased the adjoining parcel to the northwest (“Baker tract”). In 1996, Floyd Baker conveyed full title in the Baker tract to Plaintiff/Appellee Wanda Baker, via quitclaim deed, for estate planning purposes.

Meanwhile, at some point in the early 1960s, H.W. Foster’s son, George Foster, assisted his uncle in constructing a fence purportedly along the boundary between the Fosters’ Trapezoid tract and the Baker tract.1 To distinguish it from other fences in the area, for purposes of this appeal, this fence will be referred to as “the dividing fence.”

Berna Foster survived H.W. Foster and died intestate in February 1999, at which time the Fosters’ tracts passed by intestate succession to her heirs, Defendants/Appellants George Foster, David Foster, Charles Foster, Terry Foster, Clifford Foster, Nancy Shannon, Patrick

1 The record is unclear on whether this dividing fence remained wholly intact when the dispute between Baker and the Fosters arose.

-2- Jeremy Kirk,2 Blake Foster, Brandon Foster and Ashley Foster (“Fosters”). When the Fosters inherited the property, they decided to divide it among themselves and share the money earned from selling the timber on the land. To that end, the Fosters hired licensed surveyor Lyndall Daniel to prepare a survey of the property.

Daniel gathered the deeds to both of the Fosters’ tracts as well as the adjacent Baker tract, surveyed the land, and marked the boundaries in accordance with his survey. According to Daniel’s survey, the boundary between the Fosters’ tracts and the Baker tract lay to the west side of the dividing fence, on the Baker tract. Relying on Daniel’s survey, the Fosters apparently cut timber in the contested area. That act gave rise to the instant boundary dispute between Baker and the Fosters.

On July 24, 2000, Wanda Baker filed a lawsuit naming the Fosters and Daniel as defendants. Baker’s complaint sought a determination of the boundary between the two properties and damages for trespass and cutting of timber. The Fosters and Daniel answered and counterclaimed for damages for trespass and interference with the lawful survey of property. The counterclaim added Floyd Baker as a third party defendant. Discovery ensued. During the pendency of the case, Baker hired her own surveyor, Eddie Coleman, to survey the disputed boundary.

After some delay,3 a bench trial was held January 22 and 29, 2004. At the trial, the trial court heard testimony from, among others, the Fosters’ surveyor, Daniel, and Baker’s surveyor, Coleman.

In his testimony, Daniel explained that he surveyed the Baker tract, the Fosters’ Trapezoid tract and the Fosters’ Rectangle tract because he could not ascertain the correct boundaries without surveying all of the tracts. From his survey, Daniel concluded that the disputed boundary line should be on the west side, or Baker side, of the dividing fence. He opined that the disputed boundary line should be drawn from the southwestern corner of the Trapezoid tract, advancing to the northeast, to the northwestern corner of the Trapezoid tract. While Daniel acknowledged this boundary would shift the entire Trapezoid tract to the west, he noted that the parties did not dispute the length of the Trapezoid tract’s northern border,

2 In the proceedings below, it was disputed whether Patrick Jeremy Kirk was an heir of Berna Foster. This is not an issue on appeal. 3 The record indicates that the parties unsuccessfully attempted mediation. Additionally, the trial court issued an injunction requiring the Fosters to remove a plastic fence placed upon the contested property during the pendency of the case. The record also includes a letter to the parties from the original trial judge, Chancellor Joe C. Morris, indicating that the case would be referred to a special master; however, the record does not include a report of the special master. These are not raised as issues on appeal.

-3- only where it began. On cross examination, Daniel admitted that, if the trial court adopted the boundaries in his survey, this would encroach on land claimed by the landowner to the east of the Trapezoid tract, Denny Beecham.

In response to Daniel’s testimony, Coleman testified about the survey of the disputed boundary that he conducted at the request of Baker. He noted that the deeds for both the Baker tract and the Fosters’ Trapezoid tract contained identical calls, bearings, distances and monuments. His testimony appeared to indicate that he and Daniel agreed on the northwestern and northeastern corners of the Fosters’ Trapezoid tract, because their surveying pins were located next to each other in the field.

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Wanda Banker v. George, David, Charles, Terry, and Clifford Foster, Nancy Shannon, Patrick Kirk, Carolyn Foster, as Gaurdian of Black Foster, Brandon Foster, Ashley Foster and Lyndall L. Daniel, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wanda-banker-v-george-david-charles-terry-and-clifford-foster-nancy-tennctapp-2010.