James Lueking v. Cambridge Resources, Inc. ( 2012 )


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  •                 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT KNOXVILLE
    August 27, 2012 Session
    JAMES LUEKING, et al., v. CAMBRIDGE RESOURCES, INC., et al.
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for Scott County
    No. 7205 Hon. John McAfee, Judge
    No. E2011-02393-COA-R3-CV-FILED-DECEMBER 21, 2012
    Plaintiffs filed an action in the Circuit Court for a declaratory judgment and damages against
    defendants. Plaintiffs are property owners and lessors to defendants/appellees, who are
    lessees and operators of an oil and gas production unit. The Trial Court bifurcated the issues
    raised in the Complaint, and a trial was held before a jury. The jury found in favor of
    plaintiffs, determining that there was an oral lease "expanding the said storage yard from
    approximately 1/3 acre to approximately 2 and ½ acres." Based upon the jury's verdict, the
    Trial Court found there was proof of a lease and that plaintiffs were entitled to rentals of
    $1,000.00 per month from October 1994 through November 2010, totaling $194,000.00 with
    pre-judgment interest of $243,043.04. The Trial Court, in its discretion, referred the
    remaining issues to the Tennessee Oil and Gas Board for resolution and entered final
    Judgment. Plaintiffs appealed and we affirm the Trial Court Judgment, as modified.
    Tenn. R. App. P.3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed, as
    Modified.
    H ERSCHEL P ICKENS F RANKS, P.J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which C HARLES D.
    S USANO, J R., J., and D. M ICHAEL S WINEY, J., joined.
    Johnny V. Dunaway, LaFollette, Tennessee, for the appellants, James Lueking and Jim Reed.
    John R. Wingo, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellees, Cambridge Resources, Inc., PDC
    Resources, Inc., Oneida Gas, Inc., and Lick Branch Unit Joint Venture.
    OPINION
    Background
    This appeal arises from a dispute over an oil and gas lease. The wells at issue are
    located in Scott County, and suit was originally brought by plaintiffs/appellants Jim Reed and
    James Lueking1 , (plaintiffs or appellants) property owners and lessors, on March 19, 1997.
    Reed and Lueking voluntarily dismissed the Chancery Court suit. They filed a similar suit
    on February 16, 2007 in the Circuit Court. The suit was for declaratory judgment and
    damages against defendants/appellees, Cambridge Resources, Inc., PDC Resources Inc.,
    Oneida Gas, Inc. and Lick Branch Unit Joint Venture (collectively, LBU, defendants or
    appellees), who are lessees and operators of an oil and gas production unit (the Lick Branch
    Unit or Unit).
    The oil and gas leases at issue were originally executed by plaintiffs’ predecessors in
    title and defendants’ predecessors in title in 1965 and 1967. Reed and Lueking sought a
    declaratory judgment that the lease was void because defendants failed to commercially
    produce oil and gas for a period exceeding six months. They sought damages for trespass
    associated with defendants’ oil production and gas storage on their property after September
    1, 1995. They also sought damages for the nuisance of loud noise caused by defendants’
    compressor on the property. Plaintiffs further alleged that they had entered into an oral lease
    of a certain portion of the surface area with the defendants and that defendants had breached
    that lease by not paying the agreed upon rent.
    Defendants filed an Answer and Counter Complaint, and generally denied the
    allegations in the Complaint and asserted that other property owners, who had oil and gas
    leases and were part of the Lick Branch Unit were indispensable parties to the action. The
    Counter Complaint sought compensatory and punitive damages, claiming that Reed and
    Lueking intentionally interfered with defendants’ oil and gas operations on the Lick Branch
    Unit and the true purpose of the suit was to harass and defame them.
    Various motions were filed by the defendants, but were overruled.
    The Trial Court bifurcated the issues raised in the Complaint and the issue of whether
    there was commercial production of oil and gas during a six month period between
    December 1994 and September 1995 was tried by jury on December 16, 17 and 19, 2008.
    The jury found the defendants did not produce oil or gas in the Lick Branch Unit between
    1
    Jim Reed sued individually and as attorney in fact for Jean Reed, Freda Reed Davis, Charles Bruce
    Reed, James Russell Reed, Deborah Reed Brandon and Michael Allen Reed.
    -2-
    December 1994 and September 1995. Plaintiffs filed a motion for the Court to enter an
    Order declaring the leases terminated based on the jury’s finding. The Trial Court entered
    an Order declaring that the oil and gas lease between the parties was terminated for failure
    to produce oil and gas effective September 19, 1995, based upon the jury’s finding.
    Subsequently, the Trial Court entered a corrected Order, denying defendants’ motions
    to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, motion for new trial and motion for
    judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The Court also granted defendants permission to take
    an interlocutory appeal, which the appellate Court denied.
    The Trial Court, after denying a Motion for lack of jurisdiction, stated in the Order
    that at the hearing it determined sua sponte that the issue of trespass, which resulted from
    defendants continuing to produce after the oil and gas leases became void, and the damages
    that flowed therefrom shall not be submitted to the jury. The Court invoked its declaratory
    judgment powers and declared that plaintiffs are entitled to receive 1/8 of the gross revenues
    defendants received from gas storage rentals.”
    A trial before a jury was conducted on November 3rd and 4 th 2010, and the only issue
    the Court allowed the jury to determine was whether or not there was a contract between
    plaintiffs and defendants for lease of a surface area of approximately 2 ½ acres of plaintiffs’
    property in the Lick Branch Unit. The jury found in favor of plaintiffs, determining that
    there was an oral lease “expanding the said storage yard from approximately 1/3 acre to
    approximately 2 and ½ acres.” Based upon the jury’s verdict, the Trial Court found that there
    was proof of a lease and that plaintiffs were entitled to rentals of $1,000.00 per month from
    October 1994 through November 2010, totaling $194,000.00 with pre-judgment interest of
    $242,043.04. During the proceedings the Trial Court first ruled that plaintiffs were barred
    from prosecuting the action to recover damages for trespass for producing oil and gas after
    the oil and gas lease had expired based on a finding that the other parties to the Unit
    Agreement had not been joined and that they were indispensable parties. However, the Trial
    Court did rule that plaintiffs could proceed to recover 1/8 of the gross rentals defendants had
    generated by storing gas under plaintiffs’ property. Later, the Trial Court reversed itself on
    this issue, sua sponte, and denied plaintiffs the ability to present the gas storage issue to the
    jury. The Court held this issue in abeyance, and stated in its oral ruling and in its written
    judgment that it believed the gas storage issue was within the purview of the jurisdiction of
    the OGB and that the Unit Agreement controlled this issue. The Court also prohibited
    plaintiffs from presenting the jury with the issue of whether they were entitled to damages
    for nuisance as it found that this issue lies exclusively with the OGB. Plaintiffs took a non-
    suit on the issue of damages to the surface of the real property. The final judgment was
    entered February 8, 2011. Plaintiffs filed a Notice of Appeal.
    -3-
    Plaintiffs took a non-suit on the issue of damages to the surface of real property, and
    these issues are raised on appeal:
    A.     Did the Trial Court err, in barring Appellants from presenting to the jury the
    issue of damages resulting from trespass, where Plaintiff sought damages for
    Appellees' continued production of oil and gas, after the leases were void?
    B.     Did the Trial Court err, in dismissing Appellants' claim for damages resulting
    from trespass, where Appellees received rental payments for storage of gas
    under Appellants' property, on the basis that the Tennessee Oil and Gas Board
    possessed exclusive jurisdiction over that issue?
    C.     Did the Trial Court err, in dismissing Appellants' claim of damages for
    nuisance from Appellees' operation of excessively loud compressors on
    Plaintiffs' property, on the basis that the Tennessee Oil and Gas Board
    possessed exclusive jurisdiction over that issue?
    D      Did the Trial Court err in instructing the 2008 jury on the definition of
    commercial production under Tenn. Code Ann. § 66-7-103?
    E.     Did the Trial Court err in awarding Plaintiff Jim Reed damages for fifteen
    years of rent under a purported oral lease between Reed and LBU? (Issue
    raised by appellee).
    Appellate review of a trial court's findings of fact is de novo upon the record with a
    presumption of the correctness of the findings. Bratton v. Bratton, 
    136 S.W.3d 595
    , 605
    (Tenn. 2004). The presumption of correctness can be overcome only if the preponderance
    of the evidence is against the trial court's findings of fact. Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d); Wright
    v. City of Knoxville, 
    898 S.W.2d 177
    , 181 (Tenn. 1995). The presumption of correctness
    applies only to a trial court's findings of fact, not to conclusions of law; accordingly,
    appellate courts review a trial court's resolution of legal issues without a presumption of
    correctness and reach their own independent conclusions regarding these issues. Tenn. R.
    App. P. 13(d); Cumberland Bank v. G & S Implement Co., Inc., 
    211 S.W.3d 223
    , 228 (Tenn.
    App. 2006); In re: Estate of Baker v. King, 
    207 S.W.3d 254
    , 263 (Tenn. App. 2006).
    Our review of decisions that lie within the discretion of a trial court are reviewed for
    abuse of discretion. See, e.g., Parks v. Mid-Atlantic Fin. Co., 
    343 S.W.3d 792
    , 799 (Tenn.
    Ct. App. 2011). A trial court's decision whether or not to defer to an administrative body on
    questions within the competence of that agency is discretionary. Freels v. Northrup, 
    678 S.W.2d 55
    , 58 (Tenn. 1984). See also, Heritage Acres, Ltd. v. Reece, 
    1989 WL 70747
     at *
    -4-
    2 (Tenn. Ct. App. June 30, 1989). The trial court deferred to the OGB on plaintiffs' claim
    for trespass damages based on LBU's injection and storage of gas at the Unit, and plaintiffs'
    claim for nuisance damages based on LBU's use of a compressor to inject the gas.
    As for plaintiffs' third claim, for trespass arising from LBU's post-1995 oil and gas
    operations, the Trial Court clarified its reasoning for its order that plaintiffs were barred from
    presenting this issue to the jury during discussions in open court with counsel during the
    November 2010 hearing. The Trial Court stated that even if all the parties to the Unit
    Agreement were present as parties, jurisdiction of this issue would lie with the OGB. Later
    in the same hearing, the Trial Court, on the same issue, stated that “[I]t’s my opinion that all
    this stuff in reference to this unit agreement should be before, has exclusive jurisdiction with
    the Oil and Gas Board, period.” Under the abuse of discretion standard, a trial court's ruling
    “will be upheld so long as reasonable minds can disagree as to the propriety of the decision
    made.” Eldridge v. Eldridge, 
    42 S.W.3d 82
    , 85 (Tenn.2001). The abuse of discretion standard
    does not permit an appellate court to substitute its judgment for that of the trial court. Id.
    The standard of review of a jury verdict is well settled and is set out in Tennessee Rule
    of Appellate Procedure 13(d), which provides, “[f]indings of fact by a jury in civil actions
    shall be set aside only if there is no material evidence to support the verdict.” The Tennessee
    Supreme Court, in Whaley v. Perkins, 
    197 S.W.3d 665
     (Tenn.2006) addressed the approach
    an appellate court should take when determining whether there is material evidence to
    support a jury verdict as follows:
    [A]n appellate court shall : (1) take the strongest legitimate view of all the evidence
    in favor of the verdict; (2) assume the truth of all evidence that supports the verdict;
    (3) allow all reasonable inferences to sustain the verdict; and (4) discard all
    countervailing evidence. Appellate courts shall neither reweigh the evidence nor
    decide where the preponderance of the evidence lies. If the record contains “any
    material evidence to support the verdict, the jury's findings must be affirmed; if it
    were otherwise, the parties would be deprived of their constitutional right to trial by
    jury.”
    Whaley v. Perkins, at 671 (citations omitted). The appellate court does not make credibility
    determinations of the witnesses. Poole v. Kroger Co., 
    604 S.W.2d 52
    , 54 (Tenn. 1980).
    The three issues raised by appellant can be considered together by the Court as they
    all deal with the Trial Court’s dismissal of claims that it found fell within the purview of the
    OGB. Based on the jury’s finding that the Bertram and Reed Leases were terminated in 1995
    for lack of production, the Plaintiffs asserted claims for trespass, based on LBU's injection
    and underground storage of natural gas at the Unit; nuisance, based on LBU's use of a
    -5-
    compressor to inject the gas; and trespass, based on LBU's continued production of oil and
    gas at the Unit after 1995. Plaintiffs argue that the Trial Court was in error when it dismissed
    these claims when it found that they should be decided by the OGB. LBU contends that the
    plaintiffs’ position is without merit because the Unit Agreement authorizes LBU to engage
    in each of these activities and the OGB has authority to interpret the Unit Agreement. The
    Trial Court had decided that it was within the OGB’s jurisdiction to decide if the Unit
    Agreement authorized LBU to engage in the complained of activities, and deferred the matter
    to the OGB. The Trial Court provided its reasons, stating that any attack or anything in
    reference to the Unit Agreement had been vested by the General Assembly in the OGB.
    Further, Tenn. Code Ann. 60-1-601 et seq. specifically vests the OGB with the power to
    compensate landowners for damages caused by oil and gas operators.
    We conclude that the Trial Court’s dismissal of these three claims and its deferral to
    the OGB was not an abuse of discretion. The Tennessee Supreme Court first discussed the
    jurisdiction of the OGB in Freels, 
    678 S.W.2d 55
    . That case arose from a dispute over the
    ownership of mineral rights and the plaintiff’s right to participate in an oil well drilling unit.
    Suit was filed in the Chancery Court for Morgan County, and plaintiffs alleged that they
    owned the mineral rights in a disputed tract and that their interest was in such close proximity
    to the defendants' well that unitization was required under T.C.A. § 60–1–101 et seq., and
    the Rules of the OGB. The Freels plaintiffs also claimed that the Board had approved such
    unitization but that oil had been collected from the well without any accounting to the
    plaintiffs. The trial court in Freels awarded the mineral rights to plaintiffs and awarded a
    certain percentage of oil royalties received by defendants to plaintiffs. Id. at 56. The Court
    of Appeals held that the determination of unit participation percentages is within the
    particular expertise of the OGB. Thus, the Supreme Court was asked to determine whether
    the OGB had exclusive jurisdiction to determine the percentage of participation the plaintiffs
    had in an oil well drilling unit. Id. Defendants argued that only the OGB has the authority,
    pursuant to T.C.A. § 60–1–202, to determine unit participation. The Court reviewed the
    statutory powers and duties of the OGB as set out in Tenn. Code .Ann. § 60–1–202, which
    provides in part:
    (a) The Board shall have jurisdiction and authority ...
    (4) To make rules, regulations, and orders for the following purposes:
    ****
    (I) To identify ownership of oil and gas wells, producing leases, refineries, tanks,
    structures, and all storage and transportation equipment and facilities; ...
    -6-
    (M) To provide for the forced integration of separately owned tracts and other
    property ownership into drilling and production units....
    From the statutory language the Freels Court concluded that OGB has the authority
    and jurisdiction to determine the unit participation in the oil well at issue. However, the
    Court rejected the Court of Appeals finding that the Board has exclusive jurisdiction to make
    that determination and found that the trial court was acting within its authority and
    jurisdiction in making the unit participation determination. Id. at 57.
    The Freels Court went on to say that “[i]n deciding whether to defer to the
    administrative agency, courts generally make two inquiries: (1) will deferral be conducive
    toward uniformity of decision between courts and the agency, and (2) will deferral make
    possible the utilization of pertinent agency expertise. Id. The Supreme Court found that
    neither of these considerations were present, and concluded that the trial court was not
    required to defer to the OGB. The Court went on to declare that “the doctrine of primary
    jurisdiction is discretionary and a court is never required to defer to agency expertise. Id. at
    59 (citing Great Northern Ry. Co. v. Merchants Elevator Co.259 U.S. 285, 
    42 S. Ct. 477
    , 
    66 L. Ed. 943
     (1922); Kerr v. Dept. of Game, State of Washington, 
    14 Wash. App. 427
    , 
    542 P.2d 467
     (1975)).
    Accordingly, the Court in the instant case had the discretion to maintain jurisdiction
    over the issues arising from the Unit Agreement or to defer the issues to the Oil & Gas
    Board. We hold the Trial Court did not abuse its discretion. The Board has “special
    competence” with respect to matters pertaining to the drilling and production of oil and
    natural gas in Tennessee, especially when the case involves questions about a unitized
    formation, which the Board approved more than thirty years ago and requires a determination
    of the scope of the Board’s power and the interpretation of the Board’s Order approving the
    Unit and the Unit Agreement. The Board has expertise regarding the oil and gas production
    at issue here, including the injection of gas as an enhancement to oil production, the
    subterranean storage of gas, the use of compressors for gas injection and the usual and
    accepted noise associated with the production of oil and gas. The Trial Court’s deference
    to the Board also negates the possibility of the Court and the Board issuing conflicting
    rulings. For these reasons, we conclude that “reasonable minds can disagree as to the
    propriety of the decision” made by the Trial Court to defer to the Board and conclude the
    deferral was appropriate.
    LBU contends the trial court erred in instructing the jury at the December 2008 trial
    on how to assess “commercial production” under Tenn. Code Ann. § 66-7-103. Tenn. Code
    Ann. § 66-7-103 (a)(1). This section provides that:
    -7-
    Any lease of oil or natural gas rights or any other conveyance of any kind separating
    such rights from the freehold estate of land shall expire at the end of ten (10) years
    from the date executed, unless, at the end of such ten (10) years, natural gas or oil is
    being produced from such land for commercial purposes. If, at any time after the ten-
    year period, commercial production of oil or natural gas is terminated for a
    period of six (6) months, all such rights shall revert to the owner of the estate out
    of which the leasehold estate was carved. No assignment or agreement to waive the
    provisions of this subsection (a) shall be valid or enforceable.
    (emphasis added).
    The Verdict Form in the 2008 jury trial stated:
    VERDICT FORM
    (1)   Did the defendants produce oil in the Lick Branch Unit between December, 1994 and
    September, 1995?
    YES _____             NO __x___
    (2)   Did the defendants produce gas in the Lick Branch Unit between December, 1994 and
    September, 1995?
    YES _____             NO ___x
    NOTE:        If your answer to both question 1 and 2 are “no”, sign the verdict form. If you
    answer to either question 1 or 2 is “yes”, proceed to question 3.
    (3)   If there was production of either gas or oil in the Lick Branch Unit between
    December, 1994 and September, 1995, was the production in paying quantities?
    YES ____              NO ____
    NOTE:        Paying quantities mean that the sale of the oil and gas would yield a reasonable
    profit above the expenses of production and transportation, including, but not
    limited to, labor, trucking, transportation expense, replacement and repair of
    equipment, taxes, license and permit fees, the operator’s time on the lease,
    advertising, and daily expenses of the defendants in producing oil.
    -8-
    In the record is the “Special Verdict Form” that states: “Did the Defendants, between
    December, 1994 and September, 1995, act as reasonably prudent operators at Lick Branch
    Unit by initiating and completing their enhanced oil recovery project. The exhibit was
    marked for identification only.
    LBU contends the jury instructions provided to the jury were incorrect and that the
    jury should have been instructed to engage in a two-part inquiry. Accordingly, they submit
    that the error in instructing the jury on this issue led to the erroneous ruling that the Bertram
    and Reed leases had terminated.
    In considering this issue for LBU, neither the jury instructions provided to the jury by
    the Trial Court at the 2008 trial nor LBU’s proposed jury instructions, if any, are in the
    appellate record and the scope of our factual review is limited to the contents of the appellate
    record. BEP Services, Inc. v. CareFirst Found., Inc., W2006-02059-COA-R3-CV, 
    2007 WL 2376331
     at * 4 n. 1(Tenn. Ct. App. Aug. 21, 2007)(citing Richmond v. Richmond, 
    690 S.W.2d 534
    , 535 (Tenn. Ct. App.1985)). Accordingly, we are not informed what instruction
    was requested by LBU or what instructions were actually delivered to the jury by the Trial
    Court. Accordingly, we cannot find that a jury instruction was improper without the
    opportunity to review the objected to instruction. Flightless-N-Bird Farm, Inc. v. Dughman,
    01A01-9803-CV-00126, 
    1999 WL 22376
     (Tenn. Ct. App. Jan. 21, 1999)(citing Tenn. R. Civ.
    P. 51.02; Rule v. Empire Gas Corp., 
    563 S.W.2d 551
    , 554 (Tenn. 1978). LBU had the
    responsibility to prepare a fair, accurate, and complete record on appeal. Accordingly, on the
    state of this record, we must presume that the Trial Court gave appropriate instructions to the
    jury.
    Next, LBU contends that the Trial Court erred when it awarded damages to plaintiffs
    pursuant to the oral lease the jury found between Mr. Reed and LBU. Following the
    November 2010 trial the jury found that Mr. Reed and Mr. Gamblin, acting for LBU, had
    entered into an oral lease wherein LBU leased two and one half acres of Reed’s property for
    $1,000.00 a month. Based on this jury finding, the Trial Court awarded Reed a judgment of
    $436,043.04, which included $194,000.00 in unpaid rent and $242,043.04 in interest. LBU
    contends that the finding of an oral lease and resulting judgment cannot stand as a matter of
    law because, first, the Unit Agreement already granted LBU an easement to engage in the
    activities for which it purportedly leased the land. Thus LBU received no benefit under the
    alleged oral lease. Second, the undisputed testimony of Mr. Reed and Mr. Gamblin
    demonstrates that there was no meeting of the minds sufficient to form a lease. Third, any
    oral lease of the property is barred by the statute of frauds.
    LBU’s first argument on the oral lease issue is that the Unit Agreement, was still in
    place, and which specifically states that LBU, as the Working Interest Owner of the Unit, had
    -9-
    an easement to use any and all necessary surface land within the Unit to conduct “Unit
    Operations”. Unit Operations are defined as “all operations conducted for or on account of
    the development of the Unitized Formation for the production of Unitized Substances.”
    LBU argues that there was neither a need nor an obligation for LBU to enter into the
    alleged oral lease or to pay rent for the use of property as long as the Unit Agreement was
    in effect.
    We do not address the merits of LBU’s legal argument on this issue because the
    specific language of paragraph 10.1 of Unit Agreement does not support the argument that
    the Unit Agreement already granted LBU the right to place a compressor or office trailer on
    the Unit property. Paragraph 10.1, which pertains to the grant of easements, specifically
    states that “nothing herein shall be constructed as leasing or otherwise conveying to working-
    interest owner a site for a water, gas injection, processing or otherwise plant, or campsite.”
    The evidence showed that the compressor LBU placed on the 2 ½ acres and that Reed claims
    was subject to the oral lease, pertains to the injection of gas into the Unit, thus paragraph
    10.01 of the Unit Agreement precludes the place of such a compressor from the grant of
    easements. Similarly, the placement of an office/trailer on the 2 ½ acres would equate to the
    placement of a campsite, another activity specifically precluded from the grant of easements
    in paragraph 10.01 of the Unit Agreement. Accordingly, LBU’s argument on this issue is
    without merit.
    LBU’s second argument as to why the oral lease contract should not have gone to the
    jury is that there was no “meeting of the minds” between the parties. It is axiomatic that a
    contract “must result from a meeting of the minds of the parties in mutual assent to the terms.
    Staubach Retail Services-Se., LLC v. H.G. Hill Realty Co., 
    160 S.W.3d 521
    , 524 (Tenn.
    2005). Mr. Reed stated that Mr. Gamblin orally agreed to pay $1,000 a month for a lease
    of the 2 ½ acre area of the Unit in 1994. LBU states in its brief that Mr. Reed also testified
    that he believed Mr. Gamblin was lying when he agreed to the terms of the lease. Mr.
    Gamblin, on the other hand, denied agreeing to the terms of the lease. LBU argues that if
    Mr. Gamblin did not orally agree to the terms of the lease, as he testified, then there was no
    meeting of the minds and no contract. However, if Mr. Reed is to be believed and Mr.
    Gamblin did agree to the terms but he was lying when he did so, then there was still no
    meeting of the minds and no contract. The problem with this argument is that Mr. Reed
    testified that he believed Mr. Gamblin when he agreed to the terms of the lease in 1994 but,
    in retrospect, at the time of the trial he believed Mr. Gamblin had been lying. Thus, LBU’s
    reasoning in this argument is flawed and without merit.
    LBU also argues that the actions of the parties following the alleged formation of the
    oral contract also demonstrate there was never a meeting of the minds. LBU points to Mr.
    -10-
    Reed’s presentation of two written leases to Mr. Gamblin in 1995 and his certified letter to
    Mr. Gamblin in 1996 regarding the need for a signed lease agreement. However, as
    appellants point out, there was other evidence presented at trial to support Mr. Reed’s
    position that there was an oral lease. In the 1996 correspondence to Mr. Gamblin, Mr. Reed
    wrote “[i]t has been two years since you began installing the compressor and six months
    before that when your rent was due on the fenced storage yard.” He goes on to state “my
    family is not willing to let the present situation remain as it is without compensation and
    without a written agreement.” These statements can be interpreted to show that Mr. Reed
    had expected compensation well before 1996 and that when Mr. Gamblin refused to pay, Mr.
    Reed attempted to have the oral agreement memorialized in a written lease agreement.
    Although LBU frames this issue on appeal as an error of the Trial Court in awarding
    damages to Mr. Reed pursuant to the oral lease, essentially, it is an attack on the jury’s
    finding of fact that an oral lease had been entered into between Reed and Gamblin. As such,
    our standard of review is whether there was material evidence to support the jury verdict.
    We find that there was material evidence in the record to support the jury’s verdict.
    LBU’s last argument on the issue of the oral lease is based on Tennessee’s statute of
    frauds, Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-2-101 and/or Tenn. Code Ann. § 66-7-101. Upon the jury’s
    finding that an oral lease of the 2 ½ acres for $1,000 a month was entered into by the parties
    in 1994, the Trial Court awarded Mr. Reed back rent and interest from1995 until the time
    of trial in December 2010. LBU contends that this award violated the statute of frauds,
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-2-101 and/or Tenn. Code Ann. § 66-7-101. LBU contends that as the
    final judgment awarding Mr. Reed lease payments from 1995 to 2010, a fifteen year period,
    clearly contravenes the statute of frauds, the judgment should be overturned or remanded to
    the Trial Court to amend the judgment to limit the term of the oral lease to either one or three
    years, resulting in damages of $12,000 or $36,000 plus interest.
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-2-101(a)(4) provides: “(a) No action shall be brought: (4) Upon
    any contract for the sale of lands, tenements, or hereditaments, or the making of any lease
    thereof for a longer term than one (1) year.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-2-101 is the “statute of
    frauds” and the general rule is that the affirmative defense of the “statute of frauds” must be
    pled as an affirmative defense in defendant’s answer or it is waived. Tenn. R. Civ. P. 8.03;
    See Liberty Mut. Ins. Co. v. Friendship Home Health Agency, LLC, M2007-02787-COA-R3-
    CV, 
    2009 WL 736659
     at * 7 (Tenn. Ct. App. Mar. 19, 2009)(The statute of frauds is
    expressly enumerated in Tennessee Rule of Civil Procedure 8.03 as an affirmative defense
    which must be timely raised or is deemed waived). As LBU did not raise the statute of
    frauds as an affirmative defense in its answer or in an amended answer, this defense was
    waived and will not be considered on appeal.
    -11-
    However, there is no rule of waiver in connection with Tenn. Code Ann. § 66-7-101,
    which provides that [l]eases for more than three (3) years shall be in writing, and, to be valid
    against any person other than the lessor, the lessor's heirs and devisees, and persons having
    actual notice thereof, shall be proved and registered as provided in chapters 22-24 of this
    title. LBU raised this issue in its motion for directed verdict, thus it was preserved for
    appeal. We conclude that the oral lease at issue, was limited to a three year term pursuant
    to Tenn. Code Ann. § 66-7-101.2 On this issue the cause is remanded to the Trial Court to
    modify the judgment down to $36,000 plus interest.
    In conclusion, the Trial Court did not abuse its discretion when it dismissed the
    trespass and nuisance claims in deference to the OGB, but the Trial Court erroneously
    awarded damages pursuant to the oral lease for a period of fifteen years. Under the terms of
    the statute, the lease recovery is limited to three years pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. § 66-7-
    101. The cause is remanded with the cost of the appeal assessed one-half to plaintiffs and
    one-half to defendants.
    _________________________________
    HERSCHEL PICKENS FRANKS, P.J.
    2
    Leases for more than three (3) years shall be in writing, and, to be valid against any person other
    than the lessor, the lessor's heirs and devisees, and persons having actual notice thereof, shall be proved and
    registered as provided in chapters 22-24 of this title. Tenn. Code Ann. § 66-7-101.
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