Court Opinion

ID: 1080405
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-09 20:40:13.878088+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:10:15.990443
License: Public Domain

JOYCE BERRYHILL and                )
CARTINA BERRYHILL,

      Plaintiffs/Appellants,
                                   )
                                   )
                                   )
                                                         FILED
                                   )
VS.                                )                     October 22, 1997
                                   )
RON G. SWINEA and wife,            )                     Cecil W. Crowson
WILLIE JO SWINEA,                  )        Appeal No. Appellate Court Clerk
                                   )        01-A-01-9702-CH-00082
      Defendants/Appellees/Third-  )
      Party Plaintiffs/Appellants, )        Lawrence Chancery
                                   )        No. 6243-93
WILLIAM TUCKER; RANDY TUCKER )
and wife, DONNA E. TUCKER;         )
CLELAND EZELL and wife,            )
SHIRLEY EZELL,                     )
                                   )
      Defendants/Appellees/Third-  )
      Party Plaintiffs,            )
                                   )
MARGIE L. NEWTON,                  )
                                   )
      Third-Party Defendant.       )

                      COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
                        MIDDLE SECTION AT NASHVILLE

APPEALED FROM THE CHANCERY COURT OF LAWRENCE COUNTY
AT LAWRENCEBURG, TENNESSEE

THE HONORABLE JAMES L. WEATHERFORD, JUDGE

RANDY HILLHOUSE
327 West Gaines Street
P. O. Box 787
Lawrenceburg, Tennessee 38464
       Attorney for Plaintiffs/Appellants

CHARLES W. HOLT, JR.
P. O. Box 357
Lawrenceburg, Tennessee 38464
       Attorney for Defendants/Appellees

PAUL PLANT
P. O. Box 399
Lawrenceburg, Tennessee 38464
       Attorney for Defendant

                           REVERSED AND REMANDED

                                            BEN H. CANTRELL, JUDGE

CONCUR:
TODD, P.J., M.S.
KOCH, J.
                                 OPINION
              The parties to this boundary line dispute all acknowledged that the

deeds to their respective properties described their common boundary as a straight

line, but they differed as to the correct placement of that line. After hearing all the

proof, the trial court ordered a new survey to establish a boundary line whose

bearings changed in mid-course, giving each of the parties some of what they

claimed. We reverse the order of the trial court, because we can find no evidence in

the record to support it.

                            I. The Origins of the Dispute

              All the properties in dispute are derived from a tract of Lawrence County

land totaling 253 acres, which had been owned by Mr. W.T. Baker. In 1945, Mr.

Baker conveyed the southern 113 acres of this combined property to his son, Calvin

Baker. The northern boundary of the property conveyed away was described as

running from a point on the railroad in a straight line north 76° west 214 poles to the

western boundary.     Through a series of transactions, including a 1961 sale to

Waymon Berryhill and Billy G. Mabry, this property eventually devolved to the

plaintiffs, Joyce Berryhill and her daughter, Cartina Berryhill.

              In 1965, Mr. Baker sold his remaining property, in a deed which

described it as “consisting of 140 acres, more or less.” The southern boundary line

of this property contained essentially the same description as the northern line of the

property previously conveyed to Calvin Baker. The real estate passed through several

hands before becoming the property of Marjorie Lynch Newton and her husband in

1972. The Newtons built a house and established a peach and apple orchard on the

property.

                                          -2-
              The Newtons divorced, and in 1990 Mr. Newton quitclaimed his interest

in the property to his former wife. In 1992, Ms. Newton divided the land into eight

tracts, which were sold at auction. The defendants in this case are the purchasers of

four tracts which adjoin the Berryhill property.

              The parties agree on the beginning point at the railroad. An old fence

begins at that point and extends about 2000 feet north-westward in a straight line

before turning almost due south. The Newtons had built a driveway that extended

about 800 feet along the northern side of that fence. The Berryhills contend that the

line follows that fence, and continues in a straight line from where the fence turns, and

they produced evidence that the line is marked by a series of blazes on a line of old

trees.

              The defendants (or their predecessor, Ms. Newton) had installed a

single strand barbed wire fence, beginning at the agreed upon point on the railroad,

but following a more southerly angle, and they claimed all the land north of this new

fence. The Berryhills subsequently sued to establish the correct boundary line.

              At trial the defendants argued that the true property line was an even

older fence (no longer in existence) that had enclosed a cattle lane used by W.T.

Baker. Though they were able to produce photographs at trial of pieces of an old

style of web wire fencing that could be found along the edge of the old cattle lane,

they did not produce any evidence that the fence in question corresponded to any of

the descriptions in the deeds. Instead, they relied upon a survey of the property that

had been commissioned by Ms. Newton after the sale of her property.                 The

defendants also filed a third party claim against Ms. Newton, for breach of warranty

of title, in the event that the Berryhills prevailed on their claim.

                                           -3-
              After hearing testimony from the parties, their neighbors and two

surveyors, the trial court ordered that an independent surveyor be appointed to

establish a a new boundary line,

              “BEGINNING at a point immediately adjacent to the drive and
              following the fence immediately adjacent to the drive to a
              point where the fence turns in a southerly direction; thence
              from that point in a straight line to a point 217 feet south of
              the northwest corner of the Berryhill property as shown on the
              survey of J.T.Dixon.”

              The boundary line established by the court’s order ran from the railroad

with the old fence to the point where it turned south; then the line ran at a different

angle to a point 217 feet south of the point where the extension of the old fence line

intersected the western edge of the property. The plaintiffs appealled, as did the

defendants Ron G. Swinea and his wife, Willie Jo Swinea.

                              II. The Cleghorn Survey

              We can find no evidence in the record to support the boundary ordered

by the trial court. The parties insist that all their deeds indicate a straight line

boundary. The surveys relied upon by both parties agree as to the starting point of

that boundary. They only disagree as to its proper bearing.

              Perhaps the most revealing testimony in this case was that of Mr. Eddie

Cleghorn, who surveyed the Newton property. Mr. Cleghorn first assumed that the

fence line would be the boundary. But when he ran the fence line out, he discovered

that the acreage of the Newton property would come up short of the amount called for

in the original deed from Mr. Baker. He then had a discussion with the auctioneer,

John Marion “Skeets” Eskridge, from which he understood that Mr. Eskridge had

gotten permission from the Berryhills to run the line further south.

                                         -4-
              Mr. Cleghorn subsequently drafted a survey which indicated a southern

boundary for the Newton property with a bearing of North 74 degrees 06' 03" West.

The deeds Ms. Newton issued to the defendants all recited this bearing. However,

all the deeds in both the Newton’s and the Berryhill’s chains of title recited a bearing

of North 76 degrees 0' 0" West. Joyce Berryhill testified that she never agreed that

the line belonged where Mr. Cleghorn attempted to place it.

              On direct, Mr. Cleghorn testified as follows:

                   Q.     Would you have issued your survey, if you had
              some other understanding or agreement?

                     A.     No, sir.

                     Q.     Why not?

                     A.     It just wouldn’t be good business practice.

              His testimony on this point was further clarified under cross-examination:

                    Q.     Did I understand you, that you would not have
              marked this as the south boundary line unless you had
              understood that my clients agreed to it?

                     A.     Right.

                     Q.      The reason for that is there’s just nothing to
              indicate that this is the south boundary line?

                     A.     Right.

                                III. The Dixon Survey

              After they became aware of the Cleghorn survey of the Newton property,

the plaintiffs hired another licensed surveyor, Mr. J.T. Dixon, to survey their own land.

Mr. Dixon found that the fence row had a true north bearing of North 76 degrees 0'0"

West. He testified that he and his crew found old hacks and blazes along the same

                                          -5-
line after the fence turned, all the way to the western boundary of the Berryhill

property.

              Mr. Dixon also checked on the records of the adjoining properties, going

back to Mr. Baker, and discovered a 1963 land line agreement between Mr. Baker and

Mr. Meiers, who owned the property to the north and west of Mr. Baker’s tract. He

testified that in straightening the line between their respective properties, the

agreement had taken about eighteen acres off the north side of the Baker farm, and

he suggested that this accounted for the shortfall in acreage on the Newton property

that Mr. Cleghorn discovered. Interestingly, the boundary he drew gave the Berryhills

about 114 acres, only slightly more than had been granted by W.T. Baker in the 1945

deed to his son.

              On cross-examination, the defendants’ attorney managed to bring out

some discrepancies between the calls in the deed and the boundaries described in

the survey. In particular, the northern boundary line was 160 feet longer in the survey

than was called for in the deed (4,191 feet). Mr. Dixon admitted that the bearing of

the line would have to be turned sharply to the south in order for it to close at the

distance called for in the deed.

              Neither the judge’s order nor his statements at trial indicate how he

arrived at the decision to order another survey to establish a new boundary.

Apparently he found credible evidence on both sides, and we are tempted to

speculate that he found Mr. Dixon’s testimony as to the correct bearing of the

boundary to be persuasive, but was disturbed by the contradictory testimony as to

blazes and marks on the trees west of the fence line. Several witnesses, including Mr.

Cleghorn and Mr. Eskridge, testified that they could not find any such marks.

                                         -6-
              In any case, it is clear that the trial court did not find the survey drawn

by Mr. Cleghorn to accurately reflect the boundaries called for in the deeds, as the line

he ordered drawn nowhere follows that survey.

                           IV. The Role of the Chancellor

              Though the chancery court has jurisdiction to determine a boundary line,

Tenn. Code Ann. § 16-11-106, it is the duty of the chancellor to uphold the boundaries

described in the deed, if at all possible. If the description found in the deed is so

inconsistent that some its calls must be rejected, then there is an established order

of precedence to be followed between different calls, subject only to the consideration

that the controlling call should be the one most consistent with the intention of the

grantor.

              This order of precedence is described as follows in City of Johnson City

v. State, 202 Tenn. 318, 304 S.W.2d 317 (1957), quoting 16 AmJur § 262:

              “In the event that two or more of the descriptive elements
              used conflict with or are inconsistent with the others, resort is
              first to be had to natural objects or landmarks, next to artificial
              marks, then to adjacent boundaries, and then to courses and
              distances, unless it appears that mistakes exist in respect to
              the calls, in which event an inferior means of location may
              control a higher one. That rule should be adopted which is
              most consistent with the intent of the grant.”

202 Tenn. at 323, 304 S.W.2d at 320.

              Monuments and landmarks do not figure prominently in the present

case, except for the 2000 foot fence, which is not mentioned in the deeds of either

party. The deeds indicate a straight line boundary with a bearing of North 76 degrees

0' 0" West between the portion of the property Mr. Baker conveyed to his son, and the

portion he retained. The fence line adopted as the boundary by Mr. Dixon had the

correct bearing. Neither the line defined by the Cleghorn survey nor the one ordered

by the judge followed the deed.

                                           -7-
              The consistency between the amount of acreage conveyed to the

Berryhills’ predecessor and the amount enclosed by the Dixon survey is another

argument for that survey’s accuracy.       The discrepancy first discovered by Mr.

Cleghorn between the acreage recited in the Newton deed and the acreage north of

the Berryhills’ fence line can be explained by the 1963 boundary line settlement

between Mr. Baker and his neighbor to the north.

              The discrepancy between the length of the northern boundary called for

in the Berryhills’ deed, and its length as measured in the Dixon survey amounts to

between 3% and 4% of the deed amount. The proof showed that the eastern one-

third of the property was relatively level and was mostly cleared fields, while the

western portion was wooded and hilly. A discrepancy of this magnitude is not

surprising, given the difficulties inherent in measurement over uneven ground. In any

case, we would find it hard to believe that the original grantor intended for the length

of this line to control over its bearing, when that bearing is measured from, and

determines the boundary of, the more productive portion of the property.

              For all these reasons, we find that the correct boundary line may be

determined with reference to the Dixon survey, and we reverse the trial court.

                           V. The Third Party Complaint

              The Court granted the motion to dismiss the third party complaint

against Margie L. Newton, stating

              “The Court finds the motion to be well taken, it being the
              opinion of the court that the sale was in gross and not by the
              acre; and there being no evidence nor allegation of any
              misrepresentation or fraud of any kind on behalf of the Third-
              Party Defendant or her agents, that the Third-Party Complaint
              would not lie.”

                                         -8-
              The court apparently concluded that the defendants knew what they

were bargaining for, and that since they received it, they should not be heard to

complain if upon survey the acreage was less than they believed it to be.

              The deeds to the four defendants set out the boundaries of the land

conveyed, and nowhere do they state the acreage involved. The price is a recited as

a lump sum rather than a per acre price. It thus appears that the trial court was

correct in characterizing the sale as one in gross rather than by the acreage.

              However, the defendants/third-party plaintiffs argue that their claim

against Ms. Newton rests upon an entirely different footing, and we agree. The

warranty deeds she issued all recite a southern boundary with a bearing of North 74

degrees 06' 03" West. The deeds further go on to state, in fairly standard language:

              “. . . I am lawfully seized and possessed of said land in Fee
              Simple, have a good right to convey it, and the same is
              unincumbered.
                        And I do further covenant and bind myself, my heirs
              and representatives, to warrant and forever defend the title to
              said land to the said [names of defendants], their heirs and
              assigns, against the lawful claims of all persons whomever.

              The defendants contend that the action of the trial court had the effect

of evicting them from a portion of the land granted to them in the deed, thus creating

a cause of action for breach of warranty. They further claim that if it should be found

that they have not been evicted, then they still have a claim against Ms. Newton for

breach of covenant of seisen.

              Black’s Law Dictionary (Fourth Ed. 1951) defines covenant of warranty

as “[a]n assurance by the grantor of an estate that the grantee shall enjoy the same

without interruption by virtue of paramount title.” Covenant of seisin is defined as “[a]n

assurance to the purchaser that the grantor has the very estate in quantity and quality

which he purports to convey.”

                                          -9-
              This court has stated in much the same language that:

              “We recognize that it is established law that if the purchaser
              has not been evicted, in the absence of fraud or insolvency,
              he can have no remedy for a breach of warranty. (Citations
              omitted).
                      “However, the rule is different as to a covenant of
              seisin. A covenant of seisen is an assurance to the
              purchaser that the seller has the very estate, in quantity and
              quality, which the deed purports to convey, it is a personal
              covenant preaesenti,and, if not true, is breached the instant
              it is made, and an immediate course of action accrues to the
              vendee for its breach without and before eviction.” (Citations
              omitted).

Thompson v. Thomas, 499 S.W.2d 901, 903 (Tenn. App. 1973).

              In view of the fact that Ms. Newton conveyed to the defendants property

that she had did not have the right to dispose of, it appears that the defendants have

at the very least a cause of action against her for breach of the covenant of seisin,

and that the trial court erred in dismissing their third party complaint. It also appears

that the court is obliged to exercise its equitable powers to reform the defendants’

deeds.

                                           VI.

              The order of the trial court is reversed. Remand this cause to the

Chancery Court of Lawrence County for further proceedings consistent with this

opinion. Tax the costs on appeal to the appellees.

                                           _____________________________
                                           BEN H. CANTRELL, JUDGE

CONCUR:

                                         - 10 -
_______________________________
HENRY F. TODD, PRESIDING JUDGE
MIDDLE SECTION

_______________________________
WILLIAM C. KOCH, JR., JUDGE

                              - 11 -