Albert J. Ahler v. Charles Steffan Scarborough ( 2019 )


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  •                                                                                           07/17/2019
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT KNOXVILLE
    May 20, 2019 Session
    ALBERT J. AHLER V. CHARLES STEFFAN SCARBOROUGH ET AL.
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for Roane County
    No. 15-CV-111     Elizabeth Asbury, Chancellor
    ___________________________________
    No. E2018-01102-COA-R3-CV
    ___________________________________
    Plaintiff filed a complaint for declaratory judgment seeking to declare Old Stage Road a
    public road. Plaintiff sought to use the disputed road to access his property; his property
    does not abut the road. The plaintiff, asserting that he was also there on behalf of the
    public, also sought to have the road declared public in order to access defendants’ private
    property for recreation. Defendants filed a counterclaim seeking a declaratory judgment.
    Defendants argued that absent a ruling related to defendants’ property rights, the plaintiff
    and those he represents were likely to interpret any ruling favorable to them as a
    declaration of their right to trespass upon defendants’ private property for recreational
    purposes, instead of a public road to gain access to some lawful destination. After a trial,
    the court held that defendants had shown that public use of the area in question had been
    abandoned. The disputed road was held to be the private property of defendants. Plaintiff
    appeals. We affirm.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court
    Affirmed; Case Remanded
    CHARLES D. SUSANO, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which D. MICHAEL
    SWINEY, C.J. and THOMAS R. FRIERSON, II, J., joined.
    Robert Wilkinson, Oak Ridge, Tennessee, for the appellant, Albert J. Ahler.
    C. Douglas Fields, Crossville, Tennessee, for the appellees, Charles Steffan Scarborough
    and Anne K. Scarborough.
    -1-
    OPINION
    I.
    In 1823, George Gordon received a grant to construct a roadway; known as Old
    Stage Road, it became one of the early routes to Middle Tennessee. The road traverses
    the Whites Creek Gorge down the mountain to the foot of Walden’s Ridge, at U.S.
    Highway 27, near the present community of Eagle Furnace. The earliest map of the road
    in record is an 1834 map showing the road denominated as Gordon’s Road. Mr. Gordon
    charged a toll to use the road for 35 years. Thereafter, the road became open for public
    use. The most recent topographical maps have edited Old Stage Road such that it is no
    longer reflected as a road.
    Plaintiff owns approximately 105 acres; his tract of land is approximately 975 feet
    from the disputed road. Defendants’ property consists of approximately 360 acres in
    Roane and Rhea Counties. Approximately 164 acres of defendants’ property is subject to
    a Deed of Conservation Easement with the Tennessee Parks and Greenways Foundation.
    A portion of defendants’ property includes the disputed Old Stage Road.
    In 2014, plaintiff petitioned Roane County Road Committee requesting that Old
    Stage Road be opened. The road is not listed as a county road, and the county did not take
    any action to re-open the road. Plaintiff alleges that
    [a] called meeting of the Roane County Road Committee was
    held in June 2014. There were approximately 30 people there
    to consider if Old Stage Road was a county road. Meeting
    concluded with ‘[i]t is not a county road, but it is a public
    road.’ Minutes of this meeting were taken but ‘lost.’
    On September 15, 2015, plaintiff filed a complaint for declaratory judgment
    against Mr. and Mrs. Scarborough seeking to declare Old Stage Road a public road for
    his and the public’s use. Plaintiff desires to use Old Stage Road, because it is the easiest
    means of accessing his property. However, he admits that it is not his only access. The
    second available access to his property is allegedly difficult to traverse even with a four-
    wheel drive vehicle. Previously, there was an additional means of accessing his property
    off of U.S. Highway 70, but it was closed by the state and no one is allowed to use it any
    longer. Plaintiff ultimately aims to access his property using Old Stage Road by way of
    Black Creek Road.
    The public seeks access to the road in order to swim, fish, hunt, etc. in the creek
    and the surrounding area. However, the relevant portions of the creek, and the area
    surrounding it, are defendants’ private property. Defendants argued that there is therefore
    no interest in establishing a public road to access any destination other than their private
    -2-
    property. Defendants maintain that even if a public road were deemed to exist, that the
    lands beside Whites Creek and under Whites Creek are their private property and not
    subject to access, except by trespass, from any road sought to be created or recreated.
    Defendants argued that at the heart of this matter is an underlying effort to assert a public
    road in order to open up defendants’ private property to public use. Defendants have not
    opened their land or dedicated it as any kind of public area.
    Defendants answered plaintiff’s complaint; in a subsequent motion to dismiss,
    defendants alleged that Gordon Dale Fourman and Tennessee Parks and Greenways
    Foundation were necessary parties. Pursuant to an order entered October 18, 2016, the
    court determined that the proper remedy would not be dismissal; it instead granted
    defendants leave to file counterclaims, and plaintiff the opportunity to amend with
    instruction to add the two additional parties: Gordon Dale Fourman and Tennessee Parks
    and Greenways. The court further noted that the order is limited to the addition of only
    these two parties based on the understanding that plaintiff only seeks to declare the
    portion of road as public that extends to Willet Mountain Road, and that that portion will
    not extend beyond the property of Gordon Dale Fourman.
    On November 16, 2016, defendants filed their counterclaims seeking a declaratory
    judgment. Defendants stated that absent a ruling related to defendants’ property rights,
    the plaintiff and those he represents were likely to interpret any ruling favorable to them
    as a declaration of their right to trespass upon defendants’ property for recreational
    purposes, instead of a public road to gain access to some lawful destination. Accordingly,
    if a public road is found to exist, defendants asked the court to render a declaratory
    judgment on the following issues:
    1. Whether users of any public road found to exist have any
    legal right to leave the boundaries of the road and enter upon
    Counter-Petitioners[’] land to access the creek or any other
    portion of their property for any reason without Counter-
    Petitioners[’] permission to do so[.]
    2. Whether Counter-Petitioner[s’] property rights extend to the
    ground over which White[’]s Creek flows[.]
    3. Whether the [c]ourt can issue an order barring users of the
    road from deviating from its boundaries if Counter-Petitioners
    enjoy the customary rights of a private property owner as they
    will assert they do[.]
    On September 6, 2017, on a motion for partial summary judgment filed by
    defendants, the court held that Whites Creek is a “non-navigable stream where it passes
    through and/or is the boundary of the [defendants’] properties.” It held that a survey
    -3-
    performed by Richard Bailer accurately identifies the boundaries of the defendants’
    properties in relation to Whites Creek. The court further declared that, as a non-navigable
    stream, defendants own the property beside the stream and the land underneath the stream
    to the extent of their property boundaries. The court also held that
    [i]ndividuals that cross the [defendants’] property to access
    White’s Creek or enter the Creek to the extent of the
    [defendants’] boundaries, would be committing a trespass if
    such individuals do not have the permission of the
    [defendants’] or their successors or assigns to do so.
    Following the partial summary judgment, the parties decided to withdraw their
    jury demand. Upon the court’s own motion, the trial judge subsequently recused himself.
    On September 28, 2017, Chancellor Elizabeth C. Asbury was designated to try the matter
    by interchange.
    On February 15, 2018, a trial was held. Several witnesses testified regarding the
    existence and/or non-existence of Old Stage Road, and whether or not use of the disputed
    road had been abandoned.
    Plaintiff testified that he is an 85-year old retired physician. He purchased his
    property in 1964. As of 2017, plaintiff had only been to his property twice – once in 1989
    and once in 1996. He did not access his property by Old Stage Road either time. Plaintiff
    has never had his property surveyed, and he does not know where his boundaries lie.
    As noted above, plaintiff testified that he seeks to open the disputed road, because
    it is the most convenient way to access his tract of land. He acknowledged that there is an
    additional public access road that he was unaware of until after he filed the lawsuit. He
    has never driven on Old Stage Road, but “knew other people had.” He alleges that Old
    Stage Road is walkable, but that in or around 2000, three boulders were placed at the
    intersection of Black Creek Road and Old Stage Road in an attempt to prevent people
    from accessing Old Stage Road. He states that individuals continued to use the road
    nonetheless.
    He testified that he has walked Old Stage Road; he recalled that there were no
    homes in the area other than defendants’, and that there were not any driveways, stores,
    or other commercial activity in the area. He acknowledged that Old Stage Road has been
    edited off current map iterations, including the county tax map. Despite the foregoing, he
    “believe[s] people ought to be able to park on Mr. Scarborough’s property to go out and
    fish and swim and enjoy themselves.”
    Defendants asked plaintiff whether he was present when an individual went onto
    Mr. Scarborough’s property, cut the cable blocking a road at the top of the mountain, cut
    -4-
    down some trees, and cleared some roadway – he stated “I was there;” he summarily
    responded: “[d]isputable property line.” Defendants then asked plaintiff:
    Q:     For the fellow…that doesn’t know where
    his property line is and has never had his
    property surveyed, you dispute the
    boundary line; is that correct?
    A:     Absolutely.
    James Hill then testified; he is a registered surveyor. On a Tennessee Valley
    Authority map, he identified Whites Creek, and identified the disputed roadway as a trail.
    He recalled it previously being used as an access to Whites Creek for swimming and
    fishing. He has not used the alleged road in many years; his last familiarity with it was
    from 37 years ago. William Adams testified that he last visited the area when he was a
    child, and he last used the road 30 years ago. At that time, a car could be driven down the
    road.
    J.W. Long testified that he was familiar with the road. He recalled the area being
    used for swimming and hunting. He was last in the area about two years ago; he parked
    on Black Creek Road and walked down to the creek. On that occasion, Mrs. Scarborough
    encountered Mr. Long and told him that he was trespassing. He left the area.
    Wayne Johnson recalled that the alleged road was used as an access for swimming
    and hunting, but it has been 20 years since he last used the road. Dwayne Cooper testified
    that the area in question had been used for swimming, fishing, ATV riding, and hunting
    by him and other people. He recalled last using the area between 1980 and 1990. He
    testified that the area is currently overgrown and there is debris blocking the road. In
    2015, he testified that he removed bolts out of a cable barricade in order to enter
    defendants’ property.
    Richard Bailey, a licensed surveyor testified that there is no evidence of a road
    next to Whites Creek. He was able to identify an “Old Gordon Road” survey pin; some
    believe this road and Old Stage Road are the same.
    Jake Alman, a forester and real estate broker, testified that he is familiar with
    defendants’ property and with Whites Creek. He examined a sycamore that sits where the
    old road was allegedly located; he determined it was 16 years old. He could not identify a
    distinct roadway.
    Jason O’Shell, a forester with Tennessee Division of Forestry testified that there
    was a fire in defendants’ area in 2012, but the steep terrain and creek prevented access by
    Old Stage Road. Christy Henderson, a representative of the Land Conservancy and Parks
    -5-
    Foundation, testified regarding the Conservation Easement Agreement with defendants.
    The foundation monitors the property on an annual basis; her records do not reflect any
    active public road through the area. She testified that the area some are calling Old Stage
    Road looks like a trail.
    Danny Sherrill is a stone harvester, and he harvested stone from the property
    defendants own from about 1968-1973, and then again around 1991 to 1992. He accessed
    the stone property by Black Creek Road. He testified that to access the disputed area with
    a vehicle would require blasting off a bluff; he recalled that people walked down if they
    wanted to swim in the area.
    Stuart Steele, a real estate broker and timber cruiser, testified that the area in
    question was a skid trail that cannot be driven down. He testified that in 1991-1992 storm
    damage occurred and Whites Creek took out the road.
    Randy Ellis, a member of the Roane County Commission testified that the road
    could be identified up to a point and then it stops. The County Commission did not open
    the road, because Old Stage Road is not a county road that has been dedicated to and
    accepted by Roane County. He testified that Black Creek Road ends where the asphalt
    ends and that the area beyond that is not a county road. He did not know if the area in
    dispute was a public road.
    Defendant Mr. Scarborough testified that he purchased his property in 1991. Other
    than defendant and his family, no one else lives on the road; there are no businesses in the
    area, and there is no commercial activity. A large storm came in early 1992, and due to
    the disputed road’s proximity to Whites Creek, erosion from the creek caused some of the
    road to wash away. He testified that, over time, large boulders have fallen and blocked
    the road, and that no one has ever come to remove them.
    In the early 1990s, defendants opened up a portion of their property so that
    individuals could access the creek. They established rules, and even installed a trash
    receptacle to help facilitate a clean environment. However, the rules were not followed
    and the receptacle was ultimately stolen. Defendants had recurring issues with individuals
    coming through their woods, leaving garbage, stealing rock, cutting down trees, using the
    creek and leaving behind a mess. Defendants also experienced arson, and the firetrucks
    had difficulty reaching their property.
    As a result, the defendants began to take back control of the area in 1994, and
    further restricted access to the property in 2004. Defendants state there was no activity in
    the area from 2009-2015. The last witness, Thomas Scarborough, defendants’ son,
    testified that the boulder blocking the disputed road fell as a result of a storm in the
    1990s, which is contested by plaintiff.
    -6-
    On March 19, 2018, the trial court entered its “Findings of Fact and Conclusions
    of Law.” The court stated that “the issue to be determined is whether Old Stage Road is a
    public road.” The court first looked to whether or not the disputed road is classified as
    public or private. The court cited Lay vs. Wallace, 
    2013 WL 654360
    , at *1 (Tenn. Ct.
    App. Feb. 21, 2013) for the proposition that
    [a] public road may be created by an act of the public
    authorities, or the express dedication of the owner, or an
    implied dedication by means of the use by the public and
    acceptance by them with the intention of the owner that the
    use become public, or by adverse user for a period of 20 years
    continuously creating a prescriptive right. Dedication arises
    from an owner's offer of land for public use, and a public
    acceptance of the offer.
    When an implied dedication is claimed, the focus of the
    inquiry is whether the landowner intended to dedicate the
    land to a public use. To establish a dedication by implication
    there must be proof of facts from which it positively and
    unequivocally appears that the owner intended to permanently
    part with his property and vest it in the public, and that there
    can be no other reasonable explanation of his conduct.
    Dedication of a roadway may be shown by conduct of the
    owner and it is not necessary to prove formal overt acts.
    Lay v. Wallace, 
    2013 WL 654360
    , at *2 (Tenn. Ct. App. Feb. 21, 2013) (internal
    citations and quotations omitted). The court held that, “[m]any years ago there was at
    least an implied dedication based on Mr. Gordon’s receipt of a toll for 35 years and then
    leaving the road for public use;” it further noted that “[t]here is no dispute that Old Stage
    Road [] was, in fact, a road utilized by the public from approximately 1823 until the late
    1980s to early 1990s.” However, it remained disputed whether or not Old Stage Road
    continued to be used as a public road from that time period forward, or whether it had
    been abandoned.
    To determine whether Old Stage Road remained a public road, the trial court
    looked to Farr v. Pentecost, 
    1994 WL 12617
     (Tenn. App. 1994). In Farr, the plaintiff
    filed a complaint alleging that a road was public and asked the trial court to issue an
    injunction to prohibit the defendant from constructing a fence that would block plaintiff’s
    access. The trial court held the road had been abandoned by nonuse. On appeal, this
    Court clarified that there must be a positive showing of an intention to abandon, and that
    nonuse can be indicative of intent. Farr v. Pentecost, 
    1994 WL 12617
    , at *3 (Tenn. Ct.
    App. Jan. 18, 1994). In reviewing the trial court’s finding of abandonment by nonuse, this
    Court, in Farr, considered: the use of the road by the public, the condition of the road,
    -7-
    maintenance of the road by the county or the parties, and any activity inconsistent with
    the use of the property as a public road. 
    Id.
     It found that the county’s maintenance had
    become minimal or ceased entirely, that the road was in no condition to be used as such,
    that the road was not listed on the county’s roadmap, that the parties did not maintain it as
    a road, and that there was evidence that a tree had grown in the middle of the road. The
    foregoing was held to indicate that the road had been intentionally abandoned as a public
    road:
    This activity is inconsistent with the use of the property as a
    public road and the public’s acquiescence in these activities is
    indicative of an intent to abandon it as a public road. There
    was some evidence that the public could and occasionally did
    walk through [the disputed road]. This evidence is insufficient
    to overcome the burden of correctness with which the [trial]
    court’s finding of abandonment comes to this court.
    
    Id.
     This Court affirmed the trial court’s holding that the road had been abandoned.
    Applying these considerations to the present matter, and reaching the same
    conclusion, the trial court stated that
    Old Stage Road has never been included on Roane County’s
    list of county roads. No residents live along the road in
    question at the present time and have not lived in that area for
    many years. Roane County has never maintained the roadway
    in question. No one from the public has made any effort to
    maintain the road since at least the early 1990s and quite
    likely since the 1973 flood. There are no businesses or
    commercial activity in the area in question. The [c]ourt has
    previously determined by granting a [m]otion for [s]ummary
    [j]udgment that the creek along the road is a non-navigable
    waterway and that [d]efendants own the land under the creek
    and on both sides of the creek.
    In addition, the trial court considered the Supreme Court’s pronouncement, in Shelby v.
    State, 
    29 Tenn. 165
     (1849):
    [a]nd if the public ceases to use a road and adopt another, and
    there upon, the owner of the soil of which the old road
    passed, resume use and occupancy thereof, and the public
    acquiesce therein for a period of 3 years, discontinuance, or
    abandonment of the old road may well be presumed. In
    absence of all evidence indicating a contrary intention on part
    -8-
    of the public…The use of the old road by a few individuals in
    the immediate vicinity thereof, for purposes of mere private
    convenience, furnishing no evidence sufficient to repel the
    presumption of abandonment by the public.
    Shelby v. State, 
    29 Tenn. 165
     (1849). Here, the trial court determined the evidence
    indicates that the disputed road ceased being used by the public in or about the mid-1970s
    to the early 1990s. After defendants purchased their property in 1991, there was no
    maintenance except by the defendants. Then, in the early 1990s, the area flooded, and the
    road was eroded. For a few years in the 1990s, defendants permitted access to the creek,
    posted rules for permissible use, and placed a trashcan to help facilitate adherence to the
    rules. However, no one that utilized the area took care to maintain the area or to improve
    its condition. Instead, users stole the garbage can and trashed the area. From 2009 to
    2015, there was no known use of the area in question except by defendants. The court
    held that
    ‘[t]he public’ who visited the area for swimming and hunting
    took no action to maintain the road. From the proof, ‘the
    public’ really only wanted to access the creek for recreational
    purposes. ‘The public’s’ only acts were to leave garbage and
    be disrespectful to the property. The area has not existed as a
    road for at least 25 years. This length of non-use is indicative
    of intent to abandon. No action by the county or public to
    maintain occurred. No one has offered to work on the road.
    The only requested use has been recreational. The inability
    for the fire crews to access the properties that were burning
    and the failure of the public or the county to take action is
    indicative of intent to abandon. Additionally, a 16 year-old
    tree is growing in the area and no one has cut it down. Trees
    have fallen across the road which have never been removed.
    In the area along White’s Creek, the ‘road’ has been taken
    away by acts of nature and ‘the public’ has done nothing to
    restore it.
    Based on the foregoing, the court held that defendants had shown by clear and
    convincing evidence that public use of the area in question has been abandoned. The area
    was held to be the private property of defendants.
    Lastly, the trial court considered whether any adjoining land owners might have a
    private easement of access to their premises. The court held that there were no concerns
    in this regard, because defendants own the land on both sides of the creek and plaintiff’s
    property does not abut the alleged roadway. Furthermore, the trial court reminded that
    -9-
    plaintiff has another reasonable or practicable means of ingress or egress, and therefore
    he is not entitled to a private easement over the disputed road area. Plaintiff appeals.
    II.
    Plaintiff asks this Court to consider whether the evidence preponderates against
    the trial court’s finding that the use of the road as a public road has been abandoned.
    III.
    In this bench trial, 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).
    IV.
    Plaintiff argues that the trial court erred in finding that use of Old Stage Road
    ceased around the early 1990s and that it has been abandoned as a public road. He argues
    that the “record indicates that during this time the public continued to use the road to
    access the Whites Creek gorge to camp, hunt, fish, swim, and work.” Plaintiff alleges that
    the road was continuously used from the early 1990s to the present.
    As outlined infra, the evidence indicates that a severe storm caused Whites Creek
    to rise and erode the disputed road in the early 1990s. No one ever repaired or re-
    established Old Stage Road, and it never returned to a useable condition. The public has
    not made any effort to maintain the disputed road since the early 1990s, at the latest. The
    county has never maintained the roadway, because it is not a county road. The disputed
    road has been edited off of current maps. The evidence indicates that trees and boulders
    have fallen across the road, and no one has come to remove them. A 16 year-old tree is
    growing on the alleged road and no one has cut it down. The trial court therefore
    correctly held that “the ‘road’ has been taken away by acts of nature and ‘the public’ has
    done nothing to restore it.” As stated by the trial court, at the latest, use entirely ceased
    “[f]rom 2009 to 2015 [when] there was no known use of the area in question except by
    [d]efendants.”
    Plaintiff further argues that there was no abandonment, because there is evidence
    that the public occasionally walked through the disputed road to access defendants’
    private property for recreation. However, the evidence is negligible and ultimately
    insufficient to overcome the burden of correctness with which the trial court’s finding of
    abandonment comes to this Court. See, Farr v. Pentecost, 
    1994 WL 12617
    , at *3
    - 10 -
    (holding that some evidence that the public could and occasionally did walk through the
    disputed road is insufficient to overcome the burden of correctness with which the trial
    court’s finding of abandonment comes to this court.); see also, Shelby v. State, 
    29 Tenn. 165
     (1849) (holding that the use of an old road by a few individuals for private
    convenience is insufficient to repel the presumption of abandonment by the public). We
    hold that the evidence does not preponderate against the trial court’s finding that public
    use of the disputed road has been intentionally abandoned. Accordingly, we affirm.
    V.
    The judgment of the trial court is affirmed. Costs on appeal are taxed to the
    appellant, Albert J. Ahler. Case remanded for enforcement of the trial court’s judgment
    and collection of costs assessed below.
    _______________________________
    CHARLES D. SUSANO, JR., JUDGE
    - 11 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: E2018-01102-COA-R3-CV

Judges: Judge Charles D. Susano, Jr.

Filed Date: 7/17/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/17/2019