IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT KNOXVILLE
February 12, 2009 Session
ERIC KERNEY, ET AL. v. GARY ENDRES, ET AL.
Appeal from the Chancery Court for Sullivan County
No. K0033175(L) E.G.Moody, Chancellor
No. E2008-01476-COA-R3-CV - FILED JUNE 30, 2009
Eric Kerney and wife, Cassandra Kerney, brought this suit to enjoin the operation of a beauty salon
by defendant Susan Endres in the home owned by her and her husband, Gary Endres. The Kerneys
and the Endreses are adjoining homeowners in the Plantation Manor Subdivision in Kingsport. The
properties are subject to a restrictive covenant limiting their use to residential and forbidding
commercial use. Following a bench trial, the court found the salon was merely incidental to the
residential use and, as a consequence, did not violate the restriction. The court did, however, enjoin
any expansion of the business. Plaintiffs appeal. We vacate the judgment of the trial court and
remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court
Vacated; Case Remanded
CHARLES D. SUSANO , JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which D. MICHAEL SWINEY and
JOHN W. MCCLARTY , JJ., joined.
Margo J. Maxwell and Gwendolyn M. Kerney, Knoxville, Tennessee for the appellants, Eric Kerney
and Cassandra Kerney
Gary Endres and Susan Endres, Kingsport, Tennessee, appellees, pro se.
OPINION
I.
This is a timely appeal from the trial court’s opinion and order filed June 5, 2008. We will
quote at length from that opinion as an accurate summary of most of the evidence presented.
1. The parties stipulated the following facts in their Joint Pretrial
Statement:
a. The Plaintiffs, Eric and Cassandra Kerney . . . are residents of the
Plantation Manor Subdivision . . . in Sullivan County, Tennessee,
having the address of 168 Coralwood Drive, Kingsport, Tennessee
37663.
b. The Defendants, Gary Endres and Susan Endres . . . are residents
of the Plantation Manor having the address of 160 Coralwood Drive,
Kingsport, Tennessee 37663. . . .
c. Both the Kerneys and the Endreses live in the cul-de-sac end of
Coralwood Drive.
d. The developer of Plantation Manor, Robert Brooks Piercy, has
previously submitted an affidavit that he intended that Plantation
Manor be a strictly residential neighborhood.
e. . . . [T]he Endreses’ chain of title contains a prior Deed that provides, in relevant part, that the
Endreses’ Property:
(1) “shall be used exclusively . . . for residential purposes”;
(2) “not . . . for any commercial undertaking”; and
(3) that these “covenants run with the land.”
f. The Endreses have opened a beauty salon called “California Cuts,”
on their property.
g. The Endreses’ salon business does not have any employees other
than themselves, does not have any set hours, takes customers” by
appointment only”, works on only “one customer at a time”, and is
usually open “a few days a week, during the day.”
h. The Endreses’ salon business has no advertisement signage on the
exterior of their home or on the Endreses’ property, nor have the
Endreses created “any other alterations to the appearance of the
property that would indicate that the property is being used as
anything other than for [‘]residential use[’]”.
i. The Kerneys have requested the Endreses to cease operating the
beauty salon on their property as violative of the Covenants, but the
Endreses have refused to do so.
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j. One of the main reasons the Kerneys purchased a home on the cul-
de-sac was to raise their child and future children on a dead-end street
where they could play safely.
* * *
4. The Endreses’ income from the beauty salon for July 1, 2006 to
June 30, 2007 was $13,472.00.
5. The Endreses’ appointments for the beauty shop averaged 63 per
month for the period from January 1, 2007 to December 31, 2007.
6. The Endres family occupies all but one room of their residence.
7. The beauty shop occupies one 12’ x 14’ room.
8. Susan Endres testified that she buys all of her supplies from a
distributor in Johnson City and that she picks them up.
9. Susan Endres testified that UPS does not make deliveries to her
house for the beauty shop and that any UPS deliveries were personal.
10. Susan Endres testified that the beauty shop has no employees.
11. Susan Endres testified that the beauty shop did not have a sign.
12. Susan Endres testified that the beauty shop never had more than
two customers at a time, usually only one, and that they parked in her
driveway most of the time.
13. Susan Endres testified that:
a. An auto detailing business was conducted on tax parcel 46 for two
or three years;
b. A daycare was operated on tax parcel 47 for two years;
c. A jewelry and vending related business has been operating on tax
parcel 48 for several years;
d. The Endreses have operated a one chair beauty salon on tax parcel
49 for four years;
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e. A swimming instruction business has been operating on tax parcel
51 during the summer months for six years and whose services the
Kerneys have used; and
f. A landscaping and lawncare business has been operating on tax
parcel 52 for several years and whose services the Kerneys have also
used.
14. Pam Sandage, who has lived directly behind the Endreses for
twenty-one years, corroborated Susan Endres’ testimony about the
businesses being operated out of nearby residences and also testified
that an accounting business has been operating out of another
residence for some time.
15. Eric Kerney testified that his wife is currently doing some
business related internet work on tax parcel 50;
16. Eric Kerney testified that he knew about the lawnmowing
business, the vending related business and the accounting business.
Based on the above findings, the trial court reached the following “Conclusions of Law”:
The Endreses are bound by the restrictive covenants contained in the
prior deed in their chain of title which limits the use of their property
to residential purposes and excludes commercial purposes. However,
from the stipulated facts and uncontradicted testimony the Court finds
that the Endreses[’] use of their property for commercial purposes is
merely incidental to their use of it for residential purposes. They only
use a 12’ x 14’ room of a six room house for a one chair beauty shop;
the shop has no employees; the residential appearance hasn’t been
altered; the beauty shop does not have a sign; there are never more
than two customers at a time and usually only one; the customers
primarily park in the driveway; the income from the beauty salon was
only $13,472 for July 1, 2006 to June 30, 2007; the appointments
averaged sixty-three per month during 2007 and the beauty shop does
not receive deliveries.
The Court finds the same facts are persuasive that the Endreses are
not causing a nuisance per se.
The testimony also supports their position that the character of the
neighborhood has changed. . . . However, in view of the Court’s
ruling on the “restrictive covenants” issue which resolves this matter,
it is not necessary to rule on this issue.
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* * *
. . . Although the Court finds that the Endreses have not violated the
restrictions in regard to residential use, it finds that a significant
change in their business would violate them.
IT IS THEREFORE, ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED
that Gary Endres and Susan Endres be and they are hereby enjoined
from expanding their beauty shop business which includes, but is not
limited to, increasing the shop size, adding employees, extending the
hours of operation, advertising the business, increasing signage,
changing the residential appearance and increasing the customer base.
II.
The issues presented for review, as stated by plaintiffs, are:
Did the Trial Court err in ruling that Defendants’ use of their
residential property for a beauty salon business was “incidental” use
that did not violate the restrictive covenants that the property shall be
used for residential purposes only and not “any commercial
undertaking”?
Did the Trial Court err in finding that the testimony supported
Defendants’ position that the character of the neighborhood has
changed, where the Trial Court declined to rule on that issue?
III.
A.
A trial court’s findings of fact are reviewed de novo upon the record and accorded a
presumption of correctness unless the evidence preponderates against those findings. Tenn. R. App.
P. 13(d). A trial court’s conclusions of law, however, are reviewed de novo with no presumption
of correctness. Ganzevoort v. Russell, 949 S.W.2d 293, 296 (Tenn. 1997). The construction to be
given a restrictive covenant is a question of law. See General Bancshares v. Volunteer Bank &
Trust, 44 S.W.3d 536, 540 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000).
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B.
Plaintiffs argue that the trial court erred in holding defendants’ beauty shop did not violate
the restrictive covenant. They also contend that the concept of incidental use employed by the trial
court is simply inapplicable in the context of a specific prohibition of the incidental use.
A good summary of the law applicable to restrictive covenants is found in Maples
Homeowners Ass’n, Inc., v. T &R Nashville Ltd. Partnership, 993 S.W.2d 36, 38-39 (Tenn. Ct.
App. 1998).
Covenants, conditions, and restrictions such as [subdivision
restrictions] are property interests that run with the land. They arise,
however, from a series of overlapping contractual transactions.
Accordingly, they should be viewed as contracts, and they should be
construed using the rules of construction generally applicable to the
construction of other contracts.
The courts enforce restrictions according to the clearly expressed
intentions of the parties manifested in the restrictions themselves. We
give the terms used in restrictions their fair and reasonable meaning,
and we decline to extend them beyond their clearly expressed scope.
We also construe the terms of a restriction in light of the context in
which they appear.
When the restriction’s terms are capable of more than one
construction, we should adopt the construction that advances the
unrestricted use of the property. . . . [W]e should resolve all doubts
concerning a covenant’s applicability against applying the covenant.
Id. (Citations omitted.)
We have been made aware of one case in this state involving an in-home beauty salon
challenged as a violation of a residential restriction. Waller v. Thomas, 545 S.W.2d 745 (Tenn. Ct.
App. 1976). Waller was not mentioned in the trial court’s ruling. Defendants argue that Waller is
controlling. Plaintiffs argue that the language of the restriction is the controlling factor and that the
language in the present case is different from the language in Waller. We agree with plaintiffs.
The restrictions at issue in Waller were, in pertinent part, as follows:
1. All lots in the Subdivision shall be known and described as
residential lots. No structure shall be erected, altered, placed or
permitted to remain on any of said lots other than buildings for
residential purposes. . . .
* * *
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3. No mercantile business or industrial trade or activity shall be
carried on upon any lot . . . .
Id. at 746. The Waller court noted that had the restrictive covenant stopped with the first paragraph,
the beauty salon would have clearly been in violation of the restriction. The language in paragraph
3, however, modified, or elaborated on, the broader language of paragraph 1. “This elaboration . . .
can only be interpreted as a limitation of the broader restrictive language contained in the first
restriction.” Id. at 748. Upon determining from secondary sources that the language in paragraph
3 required the buying and selling of goods and wares for profit, the court construed the restriction
as falling short of a complete prohibition of business use.
In reaching its holding, Waller carefully distinguished Carr v. Trivett, 143 S.W.2d 900
(Tenn. Ct. App. 1940). Waller’s comments about Carr are helpful for our consideration of the
present facts.
The court is aware of only one case in Tennessee specifically
addressing the issue of the incidental use of a dwelling for business
purposes under a restrictive covenant that it be used for residential
purposes, Carr v Trivett, supra. The court in Carr enjoined the
incidental use of a dwelling for a tourist home in a restricted location,
but the case is distinguishable from the case at bar for two reasons:
first, the restrictions on the use of the property contained in the deed
were clear and unambiguous, using language as follows: “ . . . said
property shall not be used except for residential purposes and that no
building or structure shall be erected thereon to be used for the
purpose of any trade, manufacture or other business”, and, second, the
extent of the use of the premises for business purposes went beyond
incidental use. Approximately one-half of the dwelling was being
used in connection with the business.
Carr v. Trivett, supra, is important however, because the case
illustrates that the courts of Tennessee are in agreement with the
general proposition that whether an incidental use of residential
property for business purposes is in violation of a covenant restricting
use to residential purposes depends upon the wording of the
restriction and the extent and nature of the use.
Waller, 545 S.W.2d at 748.
We have examined Carr and have no quarrel with Waller’s characterization of Carr. We
believe, however, notwithstanding that Waller involved a beauty salon, the present case is more like
Carr than Waller. Waller involved a broad positive commitment to residential use followed by a
narrowing negative prohibition against only mercantile uses which the court interpreted to mean the
selling of goods and wares for profit. Carr involved a broad commitment to residential purposes
followed by an equally broad negative prohibition against “the purpose of any trade, manufacture
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or other business.” 143 S.W.2d at 902. The present case involves a broad commitment to
“residential purposes” followed by an equally broad negative prohibition against “any commercial
undertaking.” According to Ballentine’s Law Dictionary (3d. Ed. 1969), the word “commercial”
means “[p]ertaining to the purchase and sale or exchange of goods and commodities and connoting
as well forms of, and occupations in, business enterprises not involved in trading in merchandise;
in a broad sense, embracing every phase of commercial and business activity and intercourse.” Id.
at 222. Thus, while the term mercantile used in Waller requires the sale of goods1, the term
commercial used in the present case includes any “business activity.” Accordingly, we hold that the
“wording of the restriction” is clear and unambiguous and prohibits operation of a beauty salon in
the subdivision.
We think it is doubtful that Waller’s examination of the nature and extent of the incidental
use is applicable to the present case. We understand that in a case where one use is explicitly
permitted but the actual use is not exactly within the permitted use, some analysis should be made
to determine whether the actual use should be allowed as incidental to the permitted use. We are
not convinced, however, that an actual use which is explicitly prohibited will be allowed to continue
as incidental to a permitted use. For example, in Laughlin v. Wagner, 244 S.W. 475, 478 (Tenn.
1922), a residential restriction resulted in the holding that lots could be used for purposes incidental
to residential use, such as flower beds and walkways, but not as driveways to a prohibited business
use.
Furthermore, we do not agree that defendants’ beauty salon was merely an incidental use.
The undisputed facts show that the defendants filed federal tax returns for 2005 and 2006 which
included a Schedule C reporting profit from a business. Though much was made of testimony that
defendants did not advertise their shop, they listed $2,250 advertising expense for 2005 and $2,667
in 2006 on their schedule C2. Further, the trial exhibits include state sales tax reports in 2005 and
2006, and Sullivan County tax reports for 2005, 2006 and 2007 for business license holder
“California Cuts.” Trial exhibit 1 is a report by the State Board of Barber Examiners on California
Cuts. To borrow again from the language in Carr, “We think such an undertaking is substantially
different from the incidental use of a dwelling for purposes, not strictly residential in character, from
which the owner derives some income or profit but which may not, by any fair construction, be
termed a business or trade.” Id. at 903. Defendants were clearly running a business out of their
home.
1
Susan Endres stocks and sells beauty products to her customers.
2
The trial court found that there were no exterior signs on the residence. Susan Endres testified that she does
no advertising.
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C.
We will now address the trial court’s comment that the testimony indicated “the character
of the neighborhood has changed.” We do so in light of the court’s determination that “it is not
necessary to rule on this issue.” Defendants assert that “[i]f this Court were to reverse the Trial
Court on the issue of incidental use, then this Court would have to remand the case to the Trial Court
for its determination on the waiver issue.” Plaintiffs argue that this Court should either refuse to
consider the issue or treat the trial court’s comment as an erroneous factual finding. On this point,
we must agree with the defendants.
Abandonment of the restrictive covenant was clearly pleaded in paragraph 5 of the answer,
and evidence was presented that several other businesses operated in the neighborhood. The trial
court’s comments indicate that abandonment or waiver was a viable issue in the case, but the court
stopped short of a complete analysis upon determining another issue that it saw as dispositive. A
complete analysis would have included, at least, further consideration of whether or not the alleged
violations rose to the level of “community acquiescence.” Scandlyn v. McDill Columbus Corp.,
895 S.W.2d 342, 349 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1994). Sporadic violations do not prove community waiver
or abandonment. Id. The violations must be so pervasive “as to frustrate the object of the scheme
with the result that enforcement of the restriction involved would seriously impair the value of the
burdened lot without substantially benefiting the adjoining lots.” Id. Whether there has been a
waiver or abandonment of the restriction is a fact question. Taylor v. Burleson, 2002 WL 1870269
(Tenn. Ct. App., E.S., filed August 15, 2002). We decline plaintiffs’ invitation to decide this fact
question before the trial court has that opportunity. See Zaharias v. Vassis, 789 S.W.2d 906, 911
(Tenn. Ct. App. 1989) (factual issues should be determined first at trial level). Accordingly, we will
remand the case to the trial court for determination of issues that were pretermitted.
IV.
The judgment of the trial court is vacated. Costs on appeal are taxed to the appellees, Gary
Endres and Susan Endres. This case is remanded to the trial court, pursuant to applicable law, for
further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
_______________________________
CHARLES D. SUSANO, JR., JUDGE
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