Reece v. Brown

Decision Date23 May 2000
Docket Number97-00217
PartiesDAVID ALTON REECE, et al. v. ROBY BROWNIN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE
CourtTennessee Court of Appeals

Jeffrey F. Stewart, Chancellor

This appeal involves a dispute over whether a passageway through private land has been dedicated to public use. The owners of a tract adjoining the tract through which the passageway runs filed suit in the Chancery Court for Marion County seeking a declaration that the passageway had been dedicated for public use. After a bench trial, the trial court dismissed the complaint, and the property owners seeking to prove dedication appeal. We affirm the trial court because the evidence does not preponderate against it's finding that there was no manifest intention to give the passageway to public use.

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

Howard G. Swafford, Jasper, Tennessee, for the appellants, David Alton Reece and Connie Irene Reece.

J. Harvey Cameron, Jasper, Tennessee, for the appellee, Roby Brown.

Koch, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which Todd, P.J., M.S., and Cantrell, J., joined

OPINION

Kerr-McGee Chemical Corporation ("Kerr-McGee") owned a large tract of land at the junction of Sequatchie Road1 and Curtis Trace Road in Marion County, Tennessee. In the mid-1980's, Kerr-McGee began selling the land piece by piece and, by 1992, the parties to this dispute owned their respective properties. The properties relevant to this dispute are those currently owned by the plaintiffs, David Alton Reece and Connie Irene Reece; the owners of the property through which the disputed passageway runs, John Morgan Coppinger and Mary Jean Coppinger; and the defendant, Roby Brown. We have attempted to combine the information in the record to create a map providing a rough overview of the properties as they stood at the date of trial. Obviously, the map is not fully accurate, or to scale.

NOTE: OPINION CONTAINS TABLE OR OTHER DATA THAT IS NOT VIEWABLE

The first relevant chain of title is from Kerr-McGee to the Reeces. On January 6, 1987, Kerr-McGee conveyed to Marshall B. Newsom and Annie Sue Newsom a 50-acre tract east of, and directly adjacent to Curtis Trace Road. Two other tracts, both adjacent to Curtis Trace Road, lay between the Newsom tract and Sequatchie Road. The deed description of the Newsom property defines its eastern border by reference to a logging road running south from Sequatchie Road. Kerr-McGee used the logging road to traverse its as yet unsold property to the east of the Newsom tract.

On November 4, 1989, the Newsoms conveyed to Travis E. Harrison and Diana M. Harrison 19.92 acres of the Newsom tract on the eastern side, retaining the western 30 acres for themselves. The Newsoms also granted the Harrisons an easement across the retained land to Curtis Trace Road.2 On July 21, 1990, the Harrisons conveyed their 19.92 acres to the Reeces, together with the right of way across the Newsoms' property to Curtis Trace Road. Both conveyances defined the eastern border of the 19.92 acre property by reference to the logging road.

The second pertinent chain of title is from Kerr-McGee to the Coppingers. On April 30, 1987, some four months after the Newsoms purchased their land, Kerr-McGee conveyed to the Coppingers a 99.78 acre tract to the south of, and adjacent to Sequatchie Road. The deed excluded from the conveyance "an existing 50 foot wide unrestricted road right of way leading from the Sequatchie paved road through this property for excess [sic] to adjoining property, to the South . . . ." This right of way ( the "Coppinger right of way") follows the same course as the logging road that Kerr-McGee had been using to cross its property. However, unlike the logging road, the Coppinger right of way stops at the southern border of the Coppinger property. The southwestern corner of the Coppinger right of way touches the northeastern corner of the Reece property. However, the logging road, which is significantly narrower than the 50 feet wide Coppinger right of way, lies thirty 30 feet to the east of the Reece property.

The third relevant chain of title is from Kerr-McGee to Mr. Brown. On an unspecified date after selling to the Newsoms and the Coppingers, Kerr-McGee sold the tract of land to which it had retained access via its right of way over the Coppingers' land. The Coppinger tract occupies the northern border of this property, and the Reece property is on a portion of the eastern border. The record is unclear as to the original purchasers. Nevertheless, it is clear that, on July 10, 1992, Mr. Brown purchased the tract from David E. Kelley, William R. Ellis, III, and Murray H. Gibson, subject to timber rights previously conveyed to Mead Corporation ("Mead"). On the same day, Messrs. Kelley, Ellis, and Gibson executed another deed conveying to Mr. Brown an easement for the "nonexclusive right of ingress and egress" through the Coppinger property to Sequatchie Road. This easement follows the same path as that of the Coppinger right of way retained by Kerr-McGee in the April 30, 1987 deed.3

The following is a magnified map of the corner at which the Reece, Coppinger, and Brown tracts converge. Again, it is intended only as a visual aid, and is not to scale.

NOTE: OPINION CONTAINS TABLE OR OTHER DATA THAT IS NOT VIEWABLE

When Mr. Brown purchased his property and easement, he put locks on cattle gates previously erected by the Coppingers at either end of the easement over the Coppinger property.4 In 1995, Mead began its logging operations on Mr. Brown's land. To facilitate transporting timber off the property, Mead improved the logging road running through the Coppinger right of way. According to Mr. Brown, this was when the Reeces first displayed an interest in the logging road. He testified that Mr. Reece, without permission, took down the cattle gate leading from Mr. Brown's property to the Coppinger right of way, and regularly crossed 30 feet through Mr. Brown's property to reach the logging road. Mr. Brown responded by using his bulldozer to block access to his property with a pile of dirt.

On January 21, 1997, the Reeces filed a complaint in the Chancery Court for Marion County asserting that Kerr-McGee had dedicated the Coppinger right of way to public use, and seeking damages and an order requiring Mr. Brown "to open the roadway . . . ." The trial court conducted a bench trial at which it heard testimony relevant to whether the Coppinger right of way had been dedicated as a public roadway. Mr. Coppinger testified that, until Mead improved it in 1995, the logging road was virtually impassable. It was rutted with gullies, some of which were four feet deep and, according to Mr. Coppinger, even a four wheeler would have difficulty negotiating the terrain. He admitted, though, that people did pass through the Coppinger right of way from time to time.5 Mr. Newsom testified that, before Mr. Brown's arrival, he had freely used the Coppinger right of way for access to Sequatchie Road. Mr. Reece testified that, because his deed described the Reece property by reference to the logging road, he assumed that he would have access to the Coppinger right of way. He also testified that he used the logging road from the time he bought his property until Mr. Brown blocked access.

John Kunz, a licensed surveyor employed by Kerr-McGee until 1987, also testified. Mr. Kunz surveyed the property that Kerr-McGee conveyed to the Coppingers. Mr. Kunz testified that Kerr-McGee reserved the Coppinger right of way to ensure that Kerr-McGee, and any prospective buyer, would have access to Kerr-McGee's as yet unsold property directly south of the Coppinger tract, the property eventually purchased by Mr. Brown. Mr. Kunz also stated that the deed in which Kerr-McGee conveyed property to the Newsoms referred to the logging road only for the purposes of identifying the eastern boundary of the property being conveyed. Mr. Kunz testified that the deed did not grant to the Newsoms any right to access the logging road because that was never Kerr-McGee's intention.

Ruling from the bench, the trial court found that the Coppinger right of way stops at the Coppinger property line; that the Reeces would have to cross Mr. Brown's property to reach the logging road on the Coppinger right of way; that Kerr-McGee excluded from its conveyance to the Coppingers the property over which the Coppinger right of way passes solely for Kerr-McGee's own benefit; and accordingly, that the Reeces had failed to prove that Kerr-McGee dedicated the passageway to public use. On August 19, 1997, the trial court entered an order granting Mr. Brown's motion to dismiss the action pursuant to Tenn. R. Civ. P. 41.02 on the grounds that the Reeces failed to show that they are entitled to any type of relief.6 The Reeces now appeal.

I.

The Reeces assert that the trial court erred in finding that Kerr-McGee did not dedicate the Coppinger right of way to public use, and by failing to require Mr. Brown to open the Coppinger right of way to the Reeces and to the general public. We have determined that the evidence does not preponderate against the trial court's finding that the Coppinger right of way is not a public roadway.

Because the trial court conducted this trial without a jury, we review its findings of fact de novo upon the record with a presumption of correctness, unless the evidence preponderates otherwise. See Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d); Stone v. City of McMinnville, 896 S.W.2d 548, 550 (Tenn. 1995); Town of Benton v. Peoples Bank of Polk County, 904 S.W.2d 598, 601 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1995).

Dedication arises from an owner's offer of land for public use, see Stoker v. Brown, 583 S.W.2d 765, 766 (Tenn. 1979); Winn v. Tucker Corp., 848 S.W.2d 64, 68 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1992), and a public acceptance of the offer. See West Meade Homeowners Ass'n, Inc. v. WPMC, Inc., 788 S.W.2d...

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