IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT KNOXVILLE
Assigned on Briefs October 15, 2013
PATSY R. COWART, ET AL. v. LINDA M. HAMMONTREE
Appeal from the Chancery Court for McMinn County
No. 2011-CV-28 Jerri S. Bryant, Chancellor
No. E2013-00416-COA-R3-CV-FILED-NOVEMBER 27, 2013
Patsy Reba Cowart, Debbie Buff, and David Buff (collectively “Plaintiffs”) sued Linda M.
Hammontree to establish a boundary line and quiet title on a parcel of real property located
in McMinn County, Tennessee. Ms. Hammontree answered and filed a counterclaim for
trespass and slander of title, among other things. After trial, the Trial Court entered judgment
finding and holding, inter alia, that Plaintiffs had superior title to the disputed real property.
Ms. Hammontree appeals to this Court raising issues regarding whether the Trial Court erred
in finding that Plaintiffs rebutted Ms. Hammontree’s presumption of ownership pursuant to
Tenn. Code Ann. § 28-2-109, and whether the Trial Court erred in dismissing Ms.
Hammontree’s claim for slander of title. We find and hold that the evidence preponderates
against the finding that Plaintiffs rebutted Ms. Hammontree’s presumption of ownership,
but that the Trial Court did not err in dismissing Ms. Hammontree’s claim for slander of title.
We reverse, in part, and affirm, in part.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court
Reversed, in part; Affirmed, in part; Case Remanded
D. M ICHAEL S WINEY, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which J OHN W. M CC LARTY,
and T HOMAS R. F RIERSON, II, JJ., joined.
Sarah E. Kennedy, Athens, Tennessee, for the appellant, Linda M. Hammontree.
Russell J. Blair, Athens, Tennessee, for the appellees, Patsy R. Cowart, Debbie Buff, and
David Buff.
OPINION
Background
The real property in dispute in this case is a roughly triangular-shaped parcel
of approximately one third of an acre located in McMinn County, Tennessee (“Disputed
Area”). The Disputed Area lies adjacent to real property owned by Ms. Cowart and is across
a road from real property owned by Ms. Hammontree. Debbie Buff and David Buff are Ms.
Cowart’s daughter and son-in-law, respectively.
In November of 2009, Plaintiffs discovered that there was an issue with regard
to ownership of the Disputed Area. Plaintiffs sued Ms. Hammontree in February of 2011
seeking to establish the boundary line and to quiet title. Ms. Hammontree answered and filed
a counterclaim.1 The case was tried without a jury in August of 2012.
At trial Paul R. Lingerfelt, a registered land surveyor, testified as an expert for
Ms. Hammontree. Mr. Lingerfelt surveyed the property in 1996, but was not aware of a
dispute until early in 2011. Mr. Lingerfelt explained that he surveyed in 1996 for the estate
of Edd Miller in order to divide the property among Mr. Miller’s children or grandchildren.
Ms. Hammontree is one of Mr. Miller’s grandchildren.
Mr. Lingerfelt’s survey shows the Disputed Area as part of the Miller farm.
When asked what he based this conclusion on, Mr. Lingerfelt stated:
I based it on Mr. Miller’s deed, and he had a plat that was recorded in 1934
that shows the disputed area as being his. I based it on Ms. Cowart’s deed
saying she bordered the Miler property on the south, and there was a fence
there along that line. And also when you trace Ms. Cowart’s property back to
where it was cut, what deed it was cut from, it was cut from a 160-acre tract
that said it was the southwest quarter section of section 15. . . . Cowart’s deed
says - - Cowart’s deed has got a description with footage and general
directions. It doesn’t have bearings. It’s not a surveyed description. It’s got
footage and a general direction. But his deed also says it borders Miller on the
south.
1
There was some confusion procedurally in the Trial Court with regard to a notice of voluntary non-
suit that may have been granted by the Trial Court, but later was attempted to be withdrawn. This confusion
resulted in argument regarding the proper order of proof at trial. We need not discuss in this Opinion the
procedural confusion as we agree with the Trial Court that the confusion did not impact the issues tried or
the burden of proof, and no such issues were raised on appeal.
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Now, Cowart couldn’t border Miller on the south if it’s her property.
She would border the road. But to trace Ms. Cowart’s deed back to where it
was a whole, part of another tract, it was part of the section 15, the southwest
quarter of section 15. And Mr. Miller’s property all lies in section 22. The
Cowart deed doesn’t say anything about them ever owning anything in section
22. That’s my reasons for surveying it that way.
Mr. Lingerfelt explained that the Hammontree property and the property of her
predecessors in title was all located in section 22 of the county tax map, and that the Cowart
property was all located in section 15. The deed from which Ms. Cowart’s property was cut
contained 160 acres lying in the southwest quarter of section 15. This deed in Ms. Cowart’s
chain of title does not state that any of the Cowart property lies in section 22. Mr. Lingerfelt
explained that the Disputed Area is entirely in section 22. When asked, Mr. Lingerfelt
admitted that the section lines were established “when the government got this land from the
Indians in 1800 something,” and that they do not necessarily correspond to ownership as
people “could own property in two or three sections.”
Mr. Lingerfelt explained that in the 1984 deed from C.M. Cowart and Peggy
Cowart to Patsy Cowart the portion reading: “Hence along the meanderings of the same road
in an easterly direction 300 feet, more or less, to the Bonner farm line . . . generally bounded
on the south by Ed [sic] Miller and on the east by Bonner,” constitutes a discrepancy because
“it can’t do both. If you come with the meanderings of the road in an easterly direction 300
feet, you’re coming down into section 22, which he didn’t have any right to deed. And it
wouldn’t bound - - it wouldn’t be bounded by Ed [sic] Miller. It would be bounded by the
road.” He testified that evidence was found of a fence when he did his 1996 survey that
corroborated what was in the deeds. Mr. Lingerfelt also found three fence posts on the
corners. He did not locate any fence along the road.
Mr. Lingerfelt testified that Ms. Hammontree contacted him in 2011 to re-mark
the corners on the small triangle of the Disputed Area. His crew went out to do the work and
discovered that the fence was gone. Someone came from the Cowart side of the property and
told Mr. Lingerfelt’s crew that they would not allow them to survey, so the crew left. Mr.
Lingerfelt then sent a registered letter to Ms. Cowart stating that they had a right to survey.
He explained that after sending the letter they waited two weeks and then went back and
surveyed without incident.
Mr. Lingerfelt marked the line with iron pins on the corners and wood stakes
and prepared a plat dated in February of 2011. He opined that the Disputed Area was part
of the Miller property. He explained that he based his opinion:
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on Mr. Miller’s deed and plat that was recorded in 1934. I base it on the fence
being on the line. I base it on Ms. Cowart’s deed calling for her bordering on
Mr. Miller on the south. I believe I mentioned the fence, didn’t I? . . . And the
deed that it was cut from. They only owned property in section 15.
When asked, Mr. Lingerfelt explained that he personally did not do the field
work, but his crew did. He also explained that they did not re-pull and re-review the deeds
in 2011, but instead relied upon their plat, which they had researched when Mr. Lingerfelt
did the survey in 1996. He explained that they pulled deeds back to the 1934 conveyance to
Edd Miller when they did the 1996 survey but did not go further back than this. The 1934
plat showed Mr. Miller’s property as two separate pieces of property.
Linda Miller Hammontree testified about how she obtained ownership of her
property. She explained that her father owned around 130 to 150 acres, and in 1996 he
decided to divide the property up between Ms. Hammontree and her two siblings. Ms.
Hammontree testified that she lived in Georgia at the time of trial. Ms. Hammontree had not
lived on the property in approximately 40 years, but testified she visits her mother frequently,
who does live on the property. Ms. Hammontree testified that she has known the Cowart
family for years and that relations between her family and the Cowart family had been “very
amicable” until this suit.
Ms. Hammontree’s parents and, prior to that, her grandparents lived on the
Miller farm. Ms. Hammontree testified that her grandmother planted creeping phlox in the
Disputed Area. She testified that the Disputed Area was mostly wooded with nothing but her
grandmother’s phlox, roses, and sweet pea vines on it. Ms. Hammontree recalled her
grandmother maintaining the creeping phlox since Ms. Hammontree was six or seven years
old and testified that the phlox still was maintained. Ms. Hammontree’s mother maintains
the phlox by weeding. Ms. Hammontree testified that at one point the county wanted to
straighten the road and her grandmother argued with them that they could not because of her
flowers, so the road was left alone. Ms. Hammontree explained that the Disputed Area
serves as a buffer between her mother’s property and the Cowart property, which she stated:
“it’s not landscaped. There’s old barrels, old boats, old cars. It’s not maintained. Again, I
say with all due respect, it’s not something I would want to look at.”
Ms. Hammontree testified that at some point in the past Warner Johnson, Ms.
Cowart’s step-father, bought some property near the Miller farm and started to build on the
Disputed Area. Ms. Hammontree testified that her brother and her grandfather had a
conversation with Mr. Johnson wherein Mr. Johnson was told the Disputed Area belonged
to the Miller family, so Mr. Johnson stopped building there and moved down the road where
he then built his house.
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Thomas Wendell Miller, Ms. Hammontree’s brother, testified about the
conversation with Warner Johnson, which he stated occurred around 1960, stating:
Well, Mr. Johnson had bought land north of the [disputed] triangle from
Chester McKeehan, and he and his wife were going to build a house. But
Warner Johnson didn’t know about the triangle, so he was cutting bushes to
build a house on the triangle. So my grandfather told me to go over there and
ask them what they were doing. So I went over there and I talked to Mr.
Johnson, and I was, I don’t know, 10 or 12 years old, maybe, and I asked him
what he was doing. And he said he was clearing off, getting ready to build a
house. So my grandfather had told me to ask him if he knows where the
corner is, the boundary for the property. I asked him that, and he did not know
so I showed it to him. Well, he didn’t argue or - - he just moved on north
down on his property farther and cleaned off a spot and built a house.
Mr. Miller explained that Mr. Johnson had started clearing out in the Disputed Area, but that
Mr. Johnson built his house farther north. He explained that Mr. Johnson’s house was built
farther north than the house where Ms. Buff currently resides. Mr. Miller testified that he
knew where the boundary was because his grandfather and father had “told me and showed
me where the iron pin was, and also three notches in a big gum tree that marked the
boundary.” Mr. Miller testified that someone later pulled up the iron pin and threw it away.
Ms. Hammontree testified that no one else ever had claimed to own the
Disputed Area until this suit. The tax cards and maps show the Disputed Area as part of Ms.
Hammontree’s property and not the Cowart property. Ms. Hammontree testified that she
herself has paid the property taxes on the Disputed Area since 2000 and that prior to that her
family paid them.
Ms. Hammontree received a letter in July of 2010 from an attorney representing
Plaintiffs. Ms. Hammontree testified that the letter stated that Plaintiffs thought they owned
the Disputed Area, but offered to buy it for $500. This was the first time Ms. Hammontree
ever had heard anyone else make claim to the Disputed Area. Ms. Hammontree then checked
the boundary lines and discovered that the fence no longer was there. Ms. Hammontree then
hired Mr. Lingerfelt to resurvey the Disputed Area and posted no trespassing signs.
Charlotte Elizabeth Miller, Ms. Hammontree’s mother, testified that she has
lived on the Miller farm since she married Howard Thomas Miller in 1948. Her house is
across the road from the Disputed Area. Prior to her husband’s death in 1999, Ms. Miller and
her husband divided the Miller farm among their three children. Ms. Hammontree received
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approximately 40 acres including the house where Ms. Miller resides under a life-time estate.
Ms. Miller testified that she sees the Disputed Area “[e]very day. And
sometimes more than that,” and that as far back as she can remember the Miller family
exercised exclusive control over the Disputed Area. She has allowed neighboring children
to play on the property. Ms. Miller testified that the Disputed Area is wooded, that her
mother-in-law planted flowers in the Disputed Area, and that nothing else ever has been
planted in the Disputed Area. The creeping phlox her mother-in-law planted still exist in the
Disputed Area.
When asked about the incident with Warner Johnson, Ms. Miller testified:
Well, he was cleaning off the place directly in front of my house on the
triangle, and he was asked why he was cleaning it, and he said, “to build a
house.” And my father-in-law told him it was not his property. And Mr.
Johnson moved on down the road - - I don’t know how to estimate land, but
just on down the road from there - - and built his house. And we heard no
more complaints from Mr. Johnson. . . . He accepted it and built his house.
Ms. Miller was in her house during the conversation between her family members and Mr.
Johnson. Her father-in-law and her son, Thomas Miller, spoke to Mr. Johnson.
Ms. Miller testified that there is a driveway between Ms. Buff’s house and the
Disputed Area. Ms. Miller gave the Cowart children permission to play in her yard. She
stated: “They used to come up and play ball in my yard. They didn’t have a yard down there,
so they’d come up to my house to play any time they wanted to. But I told them they could.”
She testified that the Cowart children did not play in the Disputed Area. Ms. Miller never
has seen anyone use the Disputed Area without her permission. Ms. Miller testified that
when the dispute arose there was a fence in the Disputed Area “but it was an old fence, and
part of it was down. And we also had an iron post as our marker. And both of them are
gone.” Ms. Miller was asked if the fence enclosed the entire Disputed Area and she stated:
“Yes. It went - - except - - it went on the back side, and the road is on the front side of it.”
Patsy Cowart, who was 71 years old at the time of trial, testified that she had
lived on her property since she was approximately 15 or 16 years old. She explained that her
mother and step-father, Warner Johnson, purchased the property and built a house. With
regard to the construction of this house, Ms. Cowart testified:
We was up there cleaning off. We hadn’t even started the house. And
Howard Miller come over and told Warner [Ms. Cowart’s step-father], says:
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I don’t think you want to clean this off. You don’t need to do this. He says:
Yes, I do. He said: You don’t own the land. I just bought it from Chester
McKeehan, so we do own it. And he told him, he said: You can talk to Chet
about it if you want to.
Ms. Cowart testified that she was present during this conversation. She said that after the
conversation she and her family continued to clean up in the Disputed Area, but that the
house was not built there. She stated that her step-father “wasn’t going to build the house
[in the Disputed Area] anyway, or I don’t think he was. Like I say, we was just cleaning the
place off.”
Ms. Cowart testified that her family lived in the house her step-father built until
her mother died in 1969, and then her step-father sold the house to the Beckmans. She later
clarified that her step-father sold to H.B. Calhoun who sold it to the Beckmans a few days
later. The Beckmans lived in the house for a while, and then the house burned. Ms. Cowart
testified that the Beckmans did not want to rebuild after the fire. So, in 1971, she and her
husband purchased the property from the Beckmans. Ms. Cowart and her husband then
“cleaned up where the house had burned,” and built a new house. Ms. Cowart explained that
Debbie Buff is her daughter and that Ms. Buff also lives on her property. Ms. Buff holds a
power of attorney for Ms. Cowart.
Ms. Cowart testified that she has believed since she began living there in 1971
that she owns the Disputed Area, and that she never had any indication that anyone else
claimed ownership of the Disputed Area. Ms. Cowart testified that her husband built a fence
in the Disputed Area, and that they kept ponies. She also testified that they cut small trees
in the Disputed Area and used them for firewood.
Ms. Cowart was asked when she discovered that there was an issue regarding
the Disputed Area, and she testified that it was when she attempted to convey the property
to her children. She stated that they consulted an attorney and sent a letter to Ms.
Hammontree. Ms. Cowart was asked if she ever made any offers to purchase the Disputed
Area, and she stated: “No, I didn’t. Our lawyer told us that since Linda [Hammontree] lived
down there in Georgia or wherever, he said that we could give her something for her troubles
of coming up here, and he suggested the $500,” to clear up the title.
Frank Thurston surveyed the Disputed Area for Ms. Cowart and testified as an
expert. Mr. Thurston was asked if his survey was conducted based upon a property
description and he stated: “Yes and no. I surveyed what I found in the field and then I
compared it to the description, and then I went back and matched it up.” When asked which
description he was referring to, Mr. Thurston stated: “I started with Sneed and I followed it
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all the way through to Ms. Cowart. . . . [Sneed in 1952 is] the first time this parcel was
broken off of this one, the main tract over there.” He testified that in 1952 Grant Sneed sold
the Disputed Area to Chester McKeehan.
Mr. Thurston testified that by way of research for his survey he:
looked up Hammontree’s deed and the previous deeds to that tract. I looked
up the deed to the disputed triangle. I got Shults, Bonner. I went back to
Gregory, which is 1898, and I got these deeds all the way down. Then I went
back [the Hammontree tract] - - all the way back to Horace Dyer. . . . Dyer to
Shults was ’06.
Mr. Thurston testified that the first time the Disputed Area was included in the Hammontree
property was after the 1934 survey. He stated: “The original Bonner never went that far at
all.” Mr. Thurston opined that the Disputed Area is on the Cowart property. Mr. Thurston
was asked what the only diversion from that opinion was, and he stated: “This description
right there that came over about that other plat, this plat right here was done when it went
across. . . . ’34. After this plat the descriptions did take in the little triangle. . . . The
Hammontree description actually describes it as a separate tract, not as part of the original
boundary.” When asked who described it, Mr. Thurston stated: “Whoever wrote the deed.
. . . I think it’s Shults to Ed [sic] Miller.” He further stated: “At any rate when Hammontree
acquired the property from Miller, and I think Miller was her father or grandfather, they
described the little triangle as a separate tract of land.”
Mr. Thurston opined that the 1934 plat was wrong, but stated “[b]ut there
again, we’ve got overlapping descriptions and it’s a matter of a lot of interpretation.” He
admitted that there is a description of the Disputed Area in the Hammontree chain of title that
goes back to 1906 in the deed from Dyer to Shults. He explained “that’s where I said there
are overlapping descriptions.”
Mr. Thurston admitted that his labeling of the sections may contain error, and
stated he is working with the GIS department to determine exactly where the section is. He
explained that the tax map shows that his label of the section is “a half section off.” He
further stated: “One of us is wrong. . . . I’m going to say until I do further research and some
field investigation with the GPS equipment, the jury is out.” Mr. Thurston explained:
I went back to the GIS department, and I said let’s attempt to put this on your
GIS map, which, it does not have it. They dropped it. He said: I cannot put
it in my computer based until you find me some original corners in the field
and tie them to state plane coordinates.
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I would say that we’re fairly close right here, but the GIS department
and the assessor’s office was not comfortable enough to continue to carry these
section numbers.
When asked, Mr. Thurston agreed that the Disputed Area is in section 22. He
also agreed that the first time the description of the Disputed Area came up in the Cowart
chain of title was in the 1952 deed from Grant Sneed to Chester McKeehan. The deed prior
to the Sneed to McKeehan deed contained section numbers and stated the Cowart property
was in sections 15 and 16. Mr. Thurston agreed that based upon the Cowart chain of title the
Cowart’s have no claim to anything in section 22. He stated: “Assuming that the people that
sold to Cowart did not have any claim. I don’t know how far back the screw-up came in, but
Patsy Cowart purchased that description and it just came from a chain of title all the way
from Grant Sneed.”
The deed from Sneed to McKeehan states the Cowart property is a triangular
shape, and Mr. Thurston stated that it looked more “like a teardrop with half of it cut off.”
He admitted that the shape would be closer to a triangle if the Disputed Area were cut out.
He also admitted that somewhere along the line in the Cowart chain of title there is a
discrepancy of “6.9. We pick up five or six feet. Between old deeds and what we find in the
field are dropped five or six feet every day. That’s not unusual.”
Mr. Thurston testified that the Cowart property description states it is bounded
on the south by Edd Miller, not a road. He agreed that it would be more correct if the
description stated it was bounded by the road, but stated: “It would be more proper but not
necessarily happened.” Mr. Thurston agreed that the 1934 plat shows the Disputed Area as
part of the Miller farm, or what is now the Hammontree property. He found evidence of
fence wire in the trees on two sides of the Disputed Area. Mr. Thurston admitted when asked
that the Millers have the prior right of title on paper, as there was a deed in the Hammontree
chain of title prior to 1919 that included the Disputed Area, and stated: “I think it’s a trust
deed, but I don’t remember.”
Deborah Cowart Buff testified that she is Patsy Cowart’s daughter. Ms. Buff’s
house is across the road from Ms. Hammontree’s property, and Ms. Buff testified that she
has lived on the property for approximately 49 years. She testified that her house, which she
built in 1997, is approximately 25 yards from the Disputed Area.
Ms. Buff testified that she first discovered that there was a dispute about who
owned the Disputed Area around Thanksgiving of 2009 when her mother got sick and
wanted to divide the land between Ms. Buff and Ms. Buff’s brother. Ms. Buff testified that
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she went “to the courthouse to the assessment room” and that is when she discovered that
Ms. Hammontree claimed ownership of the Disputed Area.
Ms. Buff testified that she had always believed the Disputed Area belonged to
her grandmother, and stated she played there when she was a child, and that her family
fenced in part of the Disputed Area because her father got them ponies. Ms. Buff and her
brother helped her father to put up the barbed wire fence, which was hammered into the trees.
Ms. Buff drew the fence on an exhibit entered at trial, which depicted the Disputed Area and
the surrounding properties. The fence line as drawn by Ms. Buff runs west to east roughly
along the northern border of the Disputed Area and then turns and runs in a north/south
direction on Ms. Cowart’s property. The fence as drawn by Ms. Buff appears to be only a
few feet at most within the actual northern boundary line of the Disputed Area. Ms. Buff
testified that the fence line was “zigzagging in with the trees.” The fence as drawn by Ms.
Buff does not enclose the Disputed Area, but runs only along the northern side of it with the
road being along the southern side. Ms. Buff testified that the fence “was found up against
the trees in that area.” She also admitted that the ponies were kept to the north of the fence,
which would have been on Ms. Cowart’s property.
Ms. Buff also testified that her father used the Disputed Area to put farm
equipment, and that her brother put junk in the Disputed Area. Ms. Buff testified that she
has never known the Miller family or Ms. Hammontree to use the Disputed Area. She stated
that she does not know Ms. Hammontree well, but that her son “thought highly of [Ms.
Hammontree],” and spent time with her.
Ms. Buff admitted that the Disputed Area is completely within section 22. She
agreed that the 1902 deed from W.T. Gregory and Mary Gregory to W.G. Kelly, W.R. Kelly,
and M.B. Kelly in her mother’s chain of title describes the property as being only in sections
15 and 16. When asked if she believed it would be impossible to convey property in section
22 if one only owned property in sections 15 and 16, Ms. Buff stated:
No, it would not really be impossible because, like I said, they’ve got the
sections made out. But somebody came up through there and went down
between the little valleys of it and made a little bitty road trail. As they turn
that corner, what looked to be that line turned down in the low part, so they
went over in that area. . . . Where they’re cut lines through the lower parts of
it? That happened in the older times when they didn’t have - -
Ms. Buff was asked if she could point to any specific language in the deeds in the Cowart
chain of title which do what she claims, and she stated: “No.”
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Ms. Buff was asked if she had hired another surveyor during the pendency of
this suit, and she stated that she “had a Mr. Ball who came out there. Well, it wasn’t Mr.
Ball. It was some other man who was in with him, partnership or something.” She stated:
“they had done the survey on it and said that it showed that it went around the road, all the
way around it, but they couldn’t distinguish where the 300-foot point started.” Ms. Buff was
asked why she never furnished any information about Mr. Ball or his engineer during
discovery, and she stated: “That’s because he didn’t follow through on anything, and he just
said that he was going to - - he never gave me anything showing anything had been done, so
I didn’t have anything of any discovery to give you in that area.” Ms. Buff claimed that she
had given her former attorney the information about Mr. Ball or his engineer, and stated that
her former attorney “was supposed to have sent you papers saying that there was a surveyor
who was going to be doing it. So - - . . . . So I do not have anything that [my former
attorney] did because he lost it.” Ms. Buff was asked if it were true that Mr. Ball or his
engineer had advised her that they could not establish that the Disputed Area was on her
property, and she stated: “No. The only thing that I was told is they could not distinguish
where the 300 foot, going around the curve, they did not know where to start counting the
300 foot. . . . They would not put the seal on it that they could not establish a point.”
After trial, the Trial Court entered its judgment on January 16, 2013 finding
and holding, inter alia, that Plaintiffs had superior title to the Disputed Area, and dismissing
Ms. Hammontree’s claim for slander of title. Ms. Hammontree appeals to this Court.
Discussion
Although not stated exactly as such, Ms. Hammontree raises what we
consolidate as two issues on appeal: 1) whether the Trial Court erred in finding that Plaintiffs
had rebutted the presumption of ownership that arose pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. § 28-2-
109 by showing partial adverse possession or otherwise; and, 2) whether the Trial Court erred
in dismissing Ms. Hammontree’s claim for slander of title.
Our review is de novo upon the record, accompanied by a presumption of
correctness of the findings of fact of the trial court, unless the preponderance of the evidence
is otherwise. Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d); Bogan v. Bogan, 60 S.W.3d 721, 727 (Tenn. 2001).
A trial court’s conclusions of law are subject to a de novo review with no presumption of
correctness. S. Constructors, Inc. v. Loudon County Bd. of Educ., 58 S.W.3d 706, 710 (Tenn.
2001).
We first consider whether the Trial Court erred in finding that Plaintiffs had
rebutted the presumption of ownership that arose pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. § 28-2-109
by showing partial adverse possession. Ms. Hammontree argues in her brief on appeal that
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the Trial Court erred in making findings with regard to Ms. Hammontree’s chain of title. The
Trial Court found that W.H. Bonner conveyed property to the Millers. The Trial Court
further found that W.H. Bonner never owned the Disputed Area and could not have conveyed
it to the Millers. W.H. Bonner, however, never conveyed any property to the Millers. Ms.
Hammontree argues that the deeds in her chain of title show that the Disputed Area is part
of the property conveyed by the Shults to the Millers in 1934. As such, Ms. Hammontree
argues that the Trial Court “did not have a clear understanding of the chain of titles and
arguments for either party.”
After a careful and thorough review of the record on appeal, we find that even
if the Trial Court erred in finding that W.H. Bonner never owned the Disputed Area and
could not convey it, and that this directly impacted Ms. Hammontree’s title, such error was
harmless because the Trial Court properly found that Tenn. Code Ann. § 28-2-109 applied
to the case, and properly found that pursuant to this statute Ms. Hammontree had a
presumption of ownership of the Disputed Area. Thus, even if the finding about Ms.
Hammontree’s chain of title was error, it was harmless error as our considering the record
as a whole shows that it did not “more probably than not [affect] the judgment or … result
in prejudice to the judicial process.” Tenn. R. App. P. 36 (b).
As pertinent to the issue of whether the Trial Court erred in finding that
Plaintiffs had rebutted Ms. Hammontree’s presumption of ownership, Tenn. Code Ann. § 28-
2-109 provides:
28-2-109. Presumption of ownership from payment of taxes. – Any
person holding any real estate or land of any kind, or any legal or equitable
interest therein, who has paid, or who and those through whom such person
claims have paid, the state and county taxes on the same for more than twenty
(20) years continuously prior to the date when any question arises in any of the
courts of this state concerning the same, and who has had or who and those
through whom such person claims have had, such person’s deed, conveyance,
grant or other assurance of title recorded in the register’s office of the county
in which the land lies, for such period of more than twenty (20) years, shall be
presumed prima facie to be the legal owner of such land.
Tenn. Code Ann. § 28-2-109 (2000). Thus, if a party has paid taxes continuously for more
than twenty years and has assurance of title that has been of record for more than twenty
years, a rebuttable presumption of ownership arises under Tenn. Code Ann. § 28-2-109. Eg.
Corrado v. Hickman, 113 S.W.3d 319, 324 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2003); Welch v. A.B.C. Coal Co.,
Inc., 293 S.W.2d 44, 50 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1956).
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The evidence in the record on appeal shows that Ms. Hammontree and her
predecessors paid taxes on the Disputed Area for more than twenty years. The evidence also
shows that Ms. Hammontree had recorded assurance of title to the Disputed Area for more
than twenty years. Plaintiffs’ own expert surveyor, Mr. Thurston, testified the 1906 deed
from Dyer to Shults is in Ms. Hammontree’s chain of title and that it included the description
of the Disputed Area. So the evidence shows Ms. Hammontree had recorded assurance of
title to the Disputed Area for more than twenty years. As such, the evidence in the record on
appeal does not preponderate against the Trial Court’s finding that Ms. Hammontree was
entitled to a presumption of ownership of the Disputed Area pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann.
§ 28-2-109.
The Trial Court found that “Cowart has rebutted the presumption that arose by
the payment of taxes,” by showing “an implied description” in their chain of title, that they
had “partially adversely possessed to the fence line . . .,” and that Ms. Hammontree had the
Disputed Area “as part of a deed description which couldn’t be conveyed.”
With regard to the finding that Ms. Hammontree had the Disputed Area “as
part of a deed description which couldn’t be conveyed,” as discussed above, the Trial Court
found that Ms. Hammontree claimed title through a deed from Bonner to Miller, but that
Bonner never owned the Disputed Area. The evidence in the record on appeal, however,
shows that Ms. Hammontree’s chain of title does not contain any conveyance from Bonner
to Miller. Instead, Plaintiffs’ expert surveyor, Mr. Thurston, testified that there is a
description of the Disputed Area in the Hammontree chain of title that goes back to 1906 in
the deed from Dyer to Shults. Thus, the evidence preponderates against the finding that Ms.
Hammontree had the Disputed Area “as part of a deed description which couldn’t be
conveyed.” Plaintiffs’ expert admitted that Ms. Hammontree had a description of the
Disputed Area within her chain of title in the 1906 deed from Dyer to Shults.
It is unclear from the record what the Trial Court meant when it found that
Plaintiffs had superior title by virtue of an “an implied description” in their chain of title.
Plaintiffs bore the burden of rebutting Ms. Hammontree’s presumption of ownership
pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. § 28-2-109. The evidence shows that Plaintiffs’ expert, Mr.
Thurston, testified that Ms. Hammontree had the description of the Disputed Area in her
chain of title as far back as 1906. Furthermore, he testified that the description of the
Disputed Area was in the 1934 deed in Ms. Hammontree’s chain of title from A.W. Shults
and Ethel Shults to Edd Miller and Maude Miller, which references the 1934 survey. Mr.
Thurston further testified that the first time the description of the Disputed Area came up in
the Cowart chain of title was in the 1952 deed from Grant Sneed to Chester McKeehan. The
deed prior to the Sneed to McKeehan deed contained section numbers and stated the Cowart
property was in sections 15 and 16. Mr. Thurston agreed that the Disputed Area is in section
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22. Ms. Buff also admitted that the Disputed Area is completely within section 22, and
agreed that the 1902 deed from W.T. Gregory and Mary Gregory to W.G. Kelly, W.R. Kelly,
and M.B. Kelly in Plaintiffs’ chain of title describes the property as being only in sections
15 and 16. Given all this, the evidence preponderates against the finding that Plaintiffs
rebutted Ms. Hammontree’s presumption of ownership by showing superior title.
With regard to the Trial Court’s finding that Plaintiffs “partially adversely
possessed to the fence line . . . ,” we note that our Supreme Court has instructed:
In order to establish adverse possession under [the common law] theory, or in
any statutorily based claim, the possession must have been exclusive, actual,
adverse, continuous, open, and notorious for the requisite period of time.
Hightower v. Pendergrass, 662 S.W.2d 932, 935 n.2 (Tenn. 1983); cf. Menefee
v. Davidson County, 195 Tenn. 547, 260 S.W.2d 283, 285 (Tenn. 1953).
Adverse possession is, of course, a question of fact. Wilson v. Price, 195
S.W.3d 661, 666 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2005). The burden of proof is on the
individual claiming ownership by adverse possession and the quality of the
evidence must be clear and convincing. O’Brien v. Waggoner, 20 Tenn. App.
145, 96 S.W.2d 170, 176 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1936). The actual owner must either
have knowledge of the adverse possession, or the possession must be so open
and notorious to imply a presumption of that fact. Kirkman v. Brown, 93
Tenn. 476, 27 S.W. 709, 710 (Tenn. 1894). When an adverse possessor holds
the land for a period of twenty years, even absent any assurance or color of
title, the title vests in that possessor. Cooke v. Smith, 721 S.W.2d 251, 255-56
(Tenn. Ct. App. 1986).
Cumulus Broad., Inc. v. Shim, 226 S.W.3d 366, 377 (Tenn. 2007). As our Supreme Court
stated in Bensdorff v. Uihlein: “the law is well settled that inclosure is unnecessary to
establish actual possession where such inclosure is impracticable, but possession may be
established by such use and occupation as the land, from its situation, nature, and character,
admits.” Bensdorff v. Uihlein, 177 S.W. 481, 482 (Tenn. 1915).
Additionally, this Court has explained that: “Occasional use of land through
cultivation, cutting grass or timber or the grazing of stock is not sufficient to establish
adverse possession.” Cusick v. Cutshaw, 237 S.W.2d 563, 567 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1948). See
also Quarles v. Smith, No. W2009-00514-COA-R3-CV, 2010 Tenn. App. LEXIS 136, at *13
(Tenn. Ct. App. Feb. 24, 2010) (quoting other cases wherein it was stated: “[o]ccasional
grazing and cultivation are insufficient to establish adverse possession[,]” and “occasional
use of land by cutting trees, no matter how long, will not alone constitute adverse
possession.” (citations omitted) (emphasis in original)), no appl. perm. appeal filed.
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“Actions such as the taking of firewood and hunting are more indicative of an intent to
trespass than an intent to seize and hold the land.” Heaton v. Steffen, No. E2008-01564-
COA-R3-CV, 2009 Tenn. App. LEXIS 574, at *15 (Tenn. Ct. App. Aug. 27, 2009), no appl.
perm. appeal filed.
The evidence in the record on appeal shows that both Plaintiffs’ surveyor and
Ms. Hammontree’s surveyor found evidence that a fence had existed in the Disputed Area.
Mr. Lingerfelt found fence posts in the corners of the Disputed Area. Mr. Thurston found
evidence of fence wire in the trees on two sides of the Disputed Area. Both Ms. Cowart and
Ms. Buff testified that their family had built a fence in the Disputed Area, and had kept
ponies. The evidence in the record also shows that both sides agree that the fence no longer
exists. The evidence shows that the fence was near, if not on, the northern boundary of the
Disputed Area. The evidence also shows that the Disputed Area is a wooded area. Ms. Buff
testified that the ponies were kept to the north of the fence line, which she drew on an exhibit
entered at trial. Ms. Buff’s drawing shows that the property to the north of the fence line she
drew is Ms. Cowart’s property, not the Disputed Area. The record is devoid of evidence
showing the duration of time during which the ponies were kept. Ms. Buff also testified that
her father and brother put farm equipment and junk in the Disputed Area, and Ms. Cowart
testified that they occasionally cut firewood in the Disputed Area.
None of the uses of the Disputed Area shown by Plaintiffs, however, rise to the
level of “exclusive, actual, adverse, continuous, open, and notorious.” Cumulus Broad., Inc.,
226 at 377. Rather, the uses shown, fencing on the northern boundary of the Disputed Area,
keeping ponies on Ms. Cowart’s property north of the Disputed Area, cutting firewood, and
leaving equipment or junk, are more temporary or occasional uses at most. Furthermore, the
record is devoid of evidence showing that any of these uses occurred continuously for the
requisite period of twenty years. As such, Plaintiffs failed to show by clear and convincing
evidence that they adversely possessed the Disputed Area.
Plaintiffs did not adversely possess the Disputed Area and produced no other
evidence which would rebut Ms. Hammontree’s presumption of ownership of the Disputed
Area pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. § 28-2-109. We, therefore, reverse that portion of the
Trial Court’s judgment finding and holding that Plaintiffs hold title to the Disputed Area, and
instead find and hold that Ms. Hammontree holds title to the Disputed Area.
We next consider whether the Trial Court erred in dismissing Ms.
Hammontree’s claim for slander of title. With regard to claims for slander of title, this Court
explained in Brooks v. Lambert:
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Slander or libel of title was first recognized as a cause of action in Smith v.
Gernt, 2 Tenn. Civ. App. 65, 79-80 (1911). Harmon v. Shell, No. 01-
A-01-9211-CH-00451, 1994 WL 148663 (Tenn. App. M.S. Apr. 27, 1994).
To establish a successful claim for slander of title, a plaintiff must prove:
(1) that it has an interest in the property, (2) that the defendant
published false statements about the title to the property, (3) that
the defendant was acting maliciously, and (4) that the false
statements proximately caused the plaintiff a pecuniary loss.
(citations omitted).
Id. at *4. Statements made with reckless disregard of the property owner’s
rights or with reckless disregard as to whether the statements are false may be
malicious within the scope of a libel of title action. Id. (citing Gernt, 2 Tenn.
Civ. App. at 79-80). To assert this cause of action, the plaintiff must allege
“malice … in express terms or [by] any such showing of facts as would give
rise to a reasonable inference that [the defendant acted maliciously.]”
Waterhouse v. McPheeters, 176 Tenn. 666, 669, 145 S.W.2d 766, 767 (1940).
A good faith, but erroneous, claim of title does not constitute a cause of action
for libel of title. Ezell v. Graves, 807 S.W.2d 700, 704 (Tenn. App. 1990).
Brooks v. Lambert, 15 S.W.3d 482, 484 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999). As this Court further
explained in Phillips v. Woods:
Libel2 of title has been found to occur “when a person . . ., without privilege
to do so, willfully records or publishes matter which is untrue and disparaging
to another’s property rights in land as would lead a reasonable person to
foresee that the conduct of a third party purchaser might be determined by the
2
As we explained in Phillips v. Woods:
We focus on “libel” of title because the instant case involves a writing. With respect to the
basis upon which we decide this case, what we say about libel of title applies with equal
force to slander of title. The action is sometimes referred to as one for disparagement of
title. See Albertson v. Raboff, 46 Cal. 2d 375, 295 P.2d 405, 408 (Cal. 1956). We have
previously held that this cause of action, regardless of the label placed upon it, is a species
of a claim for “injurious falsehood.” See Wagner v. Fleming, 139 S.W.3d 295, 302 (Tenn.
Ct. App. 2004).
Phillips v. Woods, 2008 Tenn. App. LEXIS 193, at *18 n.4.
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publication, or maliciously records a document which clouds another’s title to
real estate.” 53 C.J.S. Libel and Slander § 310 (2005) (footnotes omitted)
(emphasis added).
Phillips v. Woods, No. E2007-00697-COA-R3-CV, 2008 Tenn. App. LEXIS 193, at **18-19
(Tenn. Ct. App. March 31, 2008) (footnote added), no appl. perm. appeal filed.
A careful and thorough review of the record on appeal reveals that Ms.
Hammontree failed to prove all of the elements of slander of title. Specifically, Ms.
Hammontree failed to prove publication or malice. As such, the Trial Court did not err in
dismissing Ms. Hammontree’s claim for slander of title. We affirm that portion of the Trial
Court’s judgment dismissing Ms. Hammontree’s claim for slander of title.
Conclusion
The portion of the judgment of the Trial Court holding that Plaintiffs hold title
to the Disputed Area is reversed, and judgment is entered holding that Ms. Hammontree
holds title to the Disputed Area. The remainder of the Trial Court’s judgment is affirmed,
and this cause is remanded to the Trial Court for collection of the costs below. The costs on
appeal are assessed against the appellees, Patsy R. Cowart, Debbie Buff, and David Buff.
_________________________________
D. MICHAEL SWINEY, JUDGE
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