IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT KNOXVILLE
Assigned on Briefs, March 16, 2010
BRENDA DUNCAN ALBRIGHT, v. RANDOLPH & SHERRY TALLENT
Appeal from the Chancery Court for McMinn County
No. 24512 Hon. Jerri S. Bryant, Chancellor
No. E2009-01983-COA-R3-CV - FILED MAY 12, 2010
Plaintiff brought this action, asserting that defendants were constructing a fence which
impacted on her driveway right-of-way, and sought an injunction against the construction of
the fence. The Trial Court determined the fence was being constructed on defendants'
property and denied plaintiff relief. However, the Trial Court also determined that the fence
served no useful purpose, and suggested it was a spite fence. Plaintiff has appealed. On
appeal, we affirm the Trial Judge as modified, the modification being that the defendant had
testified in the Trial Court that he was building a fence of the same style and character as the
fence around the rest of his property, which was a split board type, and would not block
plaintiff's view. We modify the Judgment to restrict the defendants to constructing a fence
as depicted in the exhibits filed in the Trial Court, i.e., the same type of fence he has
constructed around the remainder of his property.
Tenn. R. App. P.3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed,
as Modified.
H ERSCHEL P ICKENS F RANKS, P.J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which C HARLES D.
S USANO, J R., J., joined, and D. M ICHAEL S WINEY, J., concurred in part, dissented in part and
filed an opinion..
Lance W. Parr, Athens, Tennessee, for the appellant, Brenda Duncan Albright.
A. Scott McCulley, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellees, Randolph and Sherry Tallent.
OPINION
Plaintiff's Verified Complaint and Request for Temporary Injunction against
defendants, Randolph and Sherry Tallent, alleged that they were adjoining property owners,
and that defendants had begun building a fence in the middle of her front yard, blocking her
easement. She alleged that she had used the easement for a period in excess of twenty years,
and thus established adverse possession.
Defendants answered, acknowledging that an easement was granted at some point, but
that its scope was uncertain and did not give plaintiff the rights she claimed, and they denied
they were constructing a privacy fence across the middle of plaintiff's yard, as she charged.
Defendants also counter-claimed, asserting they had expended money on maintaining the
easement and if the Court determined plaintiff had a right to use the driveway, she should be
required to pay one-half of the expense of maintaining the driveway.
At trial, plaintiff offered the testimony of a licensed surveyor, who testified he was
employed to survey plaintiff's property and the driveway was necessary to access plaintiff's
home. He testified that when plaintiff's tract was severed from the parent tract, a 50 foot
wide easement was given for access, but some later deeds did not specifically mention the
easement.
The Court then heard testimony from the respective owners, and following the trial
an Order was entered finding plaintiff's adverse possession claim was not proven by clear and
convincing evidence, and denied the request for an injunction. The Court concluded that the
defendants could construct a fence as long as it did not interfere with plaintiff's access to her
property.
In the Chancellor's Memorandum Opinion, the Chancellor found that the defendants’
property was originally platted to be a subdivision and the easement was going to be a right-
of-way into that subdivision. The Court further found that the fence defendants were
erecting served no purpose, and was really “nothing more than a spite fence.” The Court
found that, depending on its height, the fence could block the view of plaintiff’s house from
the road. The Court found that defendants had stipulated that they would not block plaintiff’s
access to her home nor her use of the driveway, but the Court questioned whether the
dominant tenant (in this case, the plaintiff) had a right to retain the aesthetic value of the
easement. The Court found that the easement was for ingress and egress, and was originally
supposed to serve the entire subdivision, but since defendants bought all of the subdivision
property, plaintiff was the only lot using the easement.
The Court concluded by observing that the law allowed the defendants to build the
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fence, but the fence had no useful purpose.
Plaintiff has appealed, raising these issues:
1. Whether the Trial Court erred in failing to award a permanent injunction
against appellees prohibiting them from constructing a fence along the
easement when the proof at trial showed that appellees had no practical need
for the fence and the fence was erected for no purpose other than spite?
2. Whether the Trial Court erred when it held that appellant did not prove by
clear and convincing evidence the elements of adverse possession for the
disputed portion of property lying to the north of the driveway?
Plaintiff urges this Court to find the Trial Court erred in allowing defendants’ fence
to remain when there was no practical need for it and the Trial Court basically found that it
was a “spite” fence. Plaintiff is correct in her argument that the law in Tennessee states that
a fence or gate may only be erected on an easement if it is shown that same is necessary for
the servient tract owner’s use and enjoyment of his land, and if it does not unreasonably
interfere with the use of the easement. See Ogle v. Trotter, 495 S.W.2d 558 (Tenn. Ct. App.
1973). In this case, as the Trial Court found, the fence was not necessary to the defendants’
use and enjoyment of their land, and served no real purpose other than to mark the property
line.
It was also shown, however, that this fence did not interfere with plaintiff’s use of the
easement in any way, as she still had the same access that she had always had, and the
driveway was unimpeded.
The cases relied upon by the plaintiff, were cases where the courts have ordered a
fence along an easement to be removed, where it had been established that the fence
interfered with the use of the easement in some way. See Ogle, see also Hughes v. Polton,
2005 WL 2777346 (Tenn. Ct. App. Oct. 25, 2005). In this case, the fence was shown to be
on defendants' property along the boundary line, and it was not established to be within the
easement. Other cases have similarly ruled that where a fence is placed along the edges of
an easement but does not restrict it in any way, the fences are allowed to remain. See,
Hughes, and Carroll v. Belcher, 1999 WL 58597 (Tenn. Ct. App. Feb. 9, 1999). This is
consistent with the long-standing rule of law regarding easements, that “[t]he owner of a
right-of-way across the land of another, whether it was acquired by grant or by prescription,
is entitled only to a reasonable and usual enjoyment thereof, in view of all the circumstances
of the case and of the use then and theretofore made of the premises affected by it, and the
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owner of the soil is entitled to all the rights and benefits of ownership consistent with the
easement.” Long v. Garrison, 1 Tenn. App. 211 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1925).
We affirm the Court's ruling that the defendants may construct the fence where
proposed. However, the Chancellor in making her ruling observed:
[I]t is nothing more than a spite fence. It could, depending on its height, block the
plaintiff's view of the road or anything else. Depending on its height, it can and will
block the view of plaintiff's house from the roadway.
In view of this finding, we modify Chancellor's Judgment to require defendants in
constructing their fence, to construct it accordance with their testimony that it will be similar
to the other fences on their property as depicted in the photographic exhibits.1
Finally, plaintiff argues that the Trial Court erred in holding that she did not prove that
she had adversely possessed the property to the north of the driveway by clear and
convincing evidence. Plaintiff concedes that to prove her claim, she must show that her
possession of the property has been exclusive, actual, adverse, continuous, open and
notorious for the requisite period of twenty years. See Hightower v. Pendergrass, 662
S.W.2d 932 (Tenn. 1983).
In this case, the record reveals plaintiff did not make the requisite showing of
exclusive, adverse, and continuous possession of the property, as her only claim was that she
and her ex-husband mowed and landscaped the property for over twenty years. Defendants
testified, however, that they also mowed and landscaped on the property in question, and
further, that any work done on the property by plaintiff and her ex-husband was done with
their express permission. Defendants testified that all of their dealings with plaintiff and her
ex-husband regarding the driveway and the property to the north demonstrated that plaintiff
knew that defendants were the owners, and there was no dispute regarding the ownership.
The Judgment of the Trial Court on this issue is affirmed.
The cause is remanded, with one-half of the cost assessed to plaintiff, Brenda D.
Albright, and one-half to defendants, Raldolph and Sherry Tallent.
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HERSCHEL PICKENS FRANKS, P.J.
1
The exhibits show a four panel fence that does not restrict any view and is aesthetically pleasing.
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