Wattenbarger v. Powers

10 Tenn. App. 584, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 11
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 7, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 10 Tenn. App. 584 (Wattenbarger v. Powers) 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
Wattenbarger v. Powers, 10 Tenn. App. 584, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 11 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinions

SNODGRASS, J.

This is an injunction bill, in the nature of an ejectment proceeding. It sought to restrain the defendants from trespassing on land claimed by complainant. The bill averred that complainant was the owner of the land it sought to protect, that defendants were cutting timber thereon, felling upon the land timber from adjoining lands, and erecting and maintaining a pipe line across complainant’s land and taking water from his creek, all of which it sought to enjoin. It sought damages for the trespass, for all timber cut and removed, and prayed for specific and general relief.

An injunction issued and was served, but later modified, upon the execution of a bond, so as to allow the use of the pipe line and water.

Defendants answered, admitting the cutting of timber, the erection and use of the pipe line and getting of water, but denied complainant’s title to the property described in the bill, or in dispute. The defendant Powers set up title in himself to the land in dispute, claiming to have sold the timber thereon to defendant Rayl, who had a sawmill adjacent on the undisputed property of said defendant, and required the water in its- operation. The other parties mentioned were connected in some minor unimportant relation either to Powers or the owners of the sawmill, and will not be noticed further.

Proof was taken and the cause submitted to the Chancellor, who sustained the bill and decreed that:

“The boundary line between the complainant and defendant in the Fourth district of Meigs county, Tennessee, be decreed to be the boundary as set out in deed from J. R. Gettys to R. H. Gettys, registered in Book A, page 381 of the register’s office of Meigs county, Tennessee, which said deed is as follows in regard to lands in controversy: ‘thence down said creek (Mill creek of Sewee creek), and three rods from its east bank to the mouth of the lane nearly opposite my mill dam, and thence [586]*586on westwardly with said.lane or road dividing the Boggess and Gettys land, to center of the road leading from Sewee to Sweetwater, thence with said Sewee and Sweetwater road,’ the beginning above mentioned being far enough up said creek to include what is known as the Rogers Mill and house, also the privileges contained in deed from Latham to McElwee.”

The defendants were perpetually enjoined from trespassing on said land of complainant, who was awarded all costs of the cause and an execution directed to issue therefor.

On complainant’s motion the Master was directed to hear proof and report to the next term of the court as to the amount of damages due complainant for the trespass of the defendant on the land.

To this decree exception was, taken by the defendant J. W. Powers and an appeal therefrom to this court perfected by him, and he insists that the learned Chancellor erred:

“(1) In holding and decreeing that the strip of land in dispute herein, viz., a strip about three rods wide and several hundred yards in length, on the west side of Sewee creek, running up and down the same between said creek and a roadway, or lane, as it meanders, had been adversely held and claimed by R. H. Gettys, complainant’s predecessor in title, for more than seven years; because said Gettys admits of record that he did not claim said land, that it was in the woods, lying out, and unenclosed, and, in substance, that he would have at any time gladly surrendered it to the true owner, to-wit, appellant Powers or his predecessor in title.
“(2) In holding and decreeing that the enclosure of the lands lying below the mill dam, which lands were never claimed by appellant Powers, had any bearing on the question of the title, lines, or possession, of the so-called disputed strip in question; and that the enclosure of such portion of the entire large area of the original lands carries title to the entire boundary, irrespective of enclosure or otherwise.
“(3) In finding the matter in controversy in favor of the complainant, and enjoining complainant Powers from 'trespassing on said lands of complainant;’ and in taxing defendants with the costs of the cause and awarding execution therefor; and in ordering a reference to ascertain the damages due complainant for the trespassing of defendant on said land.”

The third specification involves the others, and the case may be disposed of upon its consideration.

The dispute over this long, narrow strip, which one of the witnesses said involves about a quarter of an acre in area, was occasioned possibly through some desire to protect the mill pond from [587]*587any possible claim of an adjacent proprietor, or as a rigbt-of-way thought to be essential or desirable, but which we think did not justify the extension of the boundaries of the deed made by J. R. Gettys, which he said later in his deposition was an unintentional mistake, though it was not available in this case to correct it, if such it was.

The parties in their failure to object, or to have their objections ruled upon or preserved, have been somewhat liberal in allowing the introduction of abstracts and verbal testimony as to ownership, as well as concessions; from all of which it appears that a common ancestor in estate owned all of the land in dispute at the beginning, and that said common ancestor (one A. Boggess) conveyed a portion at least of what the complainant claims to one Thomas B. McElwee, on the 9th day of March, 1849, under the following calls:

“Lying on the waters of Sewee creek, in range 2, west township first, section 2, and part of the northeast quarter of said section, beginning at the southwest corner; thence running with the east line to a conditional line between said Boggess and John Rogers; thence with said conditional line to the creek and across said creek; thence turning down said creek and running with its meandering until it strikes the north and south lines of said quarter section; thence across the creek south with said line to the beginning, and also granting to said McElwee full privileges of the creek in the use of machinery, mills, etc., as far said land may be injured thereby also.”

The complainant claims under the' foregoing deed through mesne conveyances, one of which, as will appear later, has enlarged the boundary.

W. A. Latham, age forty-eight years, and who testified that he had been surveying land since he was eighteen or twenty years old, surveyed the calls of the deed last above set out, and filed a plat of this survey as Exhibit No. 1 to his deposition. This plat shows the small, narrow strip in dispute from the place marked “Dam” on the plat to the place where the red line crosses the east line on the plat called the north and south line of said quarter section, and indicated on the plat as “N. 30 E. 259, Simpson line.” The part in dispute is the narrow strip between- these last two points, as indicated by the red line and the two black lines just north indicated on the plat as “Lane.”

Defendant Powers claims likewise through the said A. Boggess, but the deed to McElwee was the first separate portion carved from the original possession. It is therefore apparent that the complainant (who holds under this fork of the chain), could not go [588]

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Bluebook (online)
10 Tenn. App. 584, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wattenbarger-v-powers-tennctapp-1928.