Whitlow v. Hardin Co., Tenn.

13 Tenn. App. 347, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 142
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 28, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 13 Tenn. App. 347 (Whitlow v. Hardin Co., Tenn.) 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
Whitlow v. Hardin Co., Tenn., 13 Tenn. App. 347, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 142 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

SENTBR, J.

The parties will be referred to as in the court below, Otis Whitlow, plaintiff, and Hardin County, Tennessee, defendant.

The plaintiff sued Hardin County for the value of land alleged to have been taken by the county as a right of way for State Highway No. 15. The declaration avers in substance that the defendant appropriated a strip of land across the lands of plaintiff located in Hardin County, which land was taken for right of way for the State Highway No. 15, without condemnation proceedings and without dedication upon the part of plaintiff, and that the highway had been constructed on the right of way so appropriated. The declaration avers that the strip of land taken is about 2000 feet in length, and 60 feet in width, for a part of the distance, and about 900 feet in length and about 200 feet in width through a creek bottom portion of the land taken. The declaration further avers that the defendant took possession of the right of way and appropriated same to its own use as a public highway or road, and is now using and enjoying the same “as one of its public highways *349 or roads, the same being State Aid Road No. 15, without the consent of plaintiff and without proceedings for the ' condemnation thereof, and has not paid to the plaintiff any consideration or compensation therefor of any kind or character, and is now, and has been since said wrongful entry and appropriation in the exclusive possession of all said lands.”

The declaration sets out with considerable detail the damages resulting to plaintiff by reason of the alleged wrongful taking of the right of way in question across his lands; the building of a high levee and making large bar pits along the sides of the road, with some resultant overflows from the creek.

The declaration admits that the suit ■ was not brought within twelve months from the date the land is alleged to have been taken for said purposes, but sets out, and avers, that the defendant is estopped from denying liability and from pleading the statute of limitations in bar of the action for the alleged reason that before the twelve months period had run the defendant was negotiating with plaintiff through its Quarterly County Court and certain committees appointed by the Quarterly County Court for a settlement and adjustment with plaintiff and other land owners whose lands had been similarly taken for said purpose, and with the view of preventing the expense of a suit being brought by plaintiff, and that these negotiations and repeated actions -of the County Court in appointing committees to view the premises and to assess the' damages with assurances that the matter could and would be adjusted without suit induced ’the plaintiff to delay beginning his suit until after the twelve months statute of limitations expired.

The defendant filed a demurrer to the declaration, which demurrer was overruled by the court, whereupon the defendant filed several pleas to the declaration. By several of the pleas the aver-ments of the declaration are denied, and are properly to be classed as the general issue, and also a special plea by which the statute of limitations is specially pleaded. Replications were not filed to the special pleas, nor was judgment asked by the defendant upon the failure of the plaintiff to file replications. The case went to trial upon the declaration and the pleas. The declaration recognized that the suit wa's not commenced within twelve months from the date of the alleged wrongful taking of the land, but, as above stated, the declaration averred that the failure to institute the suit within twelve months was due to the conduct of the defendant in giving repeated assurances that the matter could and would be adjusted and satisfactorily settled without suit, and that this conduct continued for several' months after the twelve months statute had expired, and that the failure of plaintiff to sue within the *350 twelve months statutory period was due to the reliance of plaintiff upon the assurances of the Quarterly County Court of Hardin County and its conduct in continuing the negotiations and the appointment of committees by the County Court seeking an adjustment without litigation.

This tendered an issue on the subject of the statute of limitations, and the special plea of the statute of limitations by the defendant amounted to a denial of the averments of the declaration on that subject, and the denial that the action was not barred by the statute, and a denial that the defendant was estopped to plead the statute of limitations.

At the conclusion of plaintiff’s proof the defendant made a motion for a directed verdict in its favor. This motion was sustained by the learned trial Judge, and the suit was dismissed at the cost of plaintiff. A motion for a new trial was made by plaintiff, which motion was likewise overruled, and to the action of the court in overruling his motion for a new trial, and in rendering judgment against the plaintiff for the cost and dismissing the suit, plaintiff has appealed in the nature, of a writ of error to this court, and the appeal has been duly perfected and errors assigned.

The assignments of error are numerous, and we deem it unnecessary to set. out and dispose of the several assignments separately.

However, we will separately dispose of the first assignment' of error, which assignment is directed to the action of the court in refusing to permit the plaintiff, before the trial of the suit, to amend his declaration by adding a second count. The proposed amendment to the declaration as the second count thereto, averred in substance that the County Court had appointed a special committee to adjust and settle the question of damages with plaintiff for the right of way in question, and that said committee, regularly appointed and with full authority to act, proposed to pay to plaintiff for the actual land taken, without incidental damages, the sum of $650, and that plaintiff accepted said proposition and agreed to waive any damages or claim for incidental damages and accept the sum of $650 in full settlement, and that this agreement was made by plaintiff and the committee appointed by the County Court to make said settlement, and constituted a promise to pay to plaintiff said sum, and that subsequently the County Court refused to pay the amount so agreed upon, and the said proposed amendment sought a recovery on the promise to pay said amount in settlement. The learned trial judge declined to permit this amendment to the declaration on the theory that it constituted a new cause of action inconsistent with the cause of action as set out in the declaration as originally filed.

*351 We are of the opinion that the court was not in error in disallowing the proposed amendment. The suit as originally filed proceeded upon the theory that the county had wrongfully and unlawfully appropriated the strip of land in question for a right of way for road purposes, and that plaintiff was entitled to recover the value of the property so taken. The proposed amendment set up an entirely new cause of action, and was in effect a suit to recover on a promise to pay, which promise and contract had been breached, and which promise was a different transaction and sustained no relation to the cause of action as originally sued upon.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Tenn. App. 347, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitlow-v-hardin-co-tenn-tennctapp-1930.