Earl Van Winkle v. City of LaVergne ( 2001 )


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  •                  IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT NASHVILLE
    July 9, 2001 Session
    EARL J. VAN WINKLE, ET AL. v. CITY OF LaVERGNE
    Direct Appeal from the Circuit Court for Rutherford County
    No. 39528     Robert E. Corlew, Judge
    No. M2000-01784-COA-R3-CV - Filed September 27, 2001
    This appeal involves the disputed ownership of water lines. The City of LaVergne appeals the trial
    court’s ruling that the city was the owner of the water lines and responsible for their continued
    maintenance and repair. LaVergne also appeals the trial court’s award of $3037.31 to the Van
    Winkles. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the ruling of the trial court.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed; and
    Remanded
    DAVID R. FARMER , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ALAN E. HIGHERS and HOLLY K.
    LILLARD, J.J., joined.
    John E. Quinn and Todd C. McKee, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, City of LaVergne.
    Josh A. McCreary and Jeff Reed, Murfreesboro, Tennessee, for the appellees, Earl J. Van Winkle
    and wife, Pauline Van Winkle, individually, and d/b/a Rip Van Winkle Mobile Home Park.
    OPINION
    Earl Van Winkle and Pauline Van Winkle (the Van Winkles) are the owners of a mobile
    home park known as Rip Van Winkle Mobile Home Park on Blair Road in the City of LaVergne.
    After years of using well water as the primary watering system for the park, the Van Winkles
    petitioned the City of LaVergne (LaVergne) for water service. LaVergne agreed to supply the Van
    Winkles with water, but the city required the Van Winkles to bear the costs related to this service.
    Further, in order to connect to the existing water line on Waldron Road, the Van Winkles had to get
    easements from the other property owners on Blair Road. The Van Winkles collected the signatures
    of the property owners on Blair Road and returned these easements to LaVergne. Neither party
    presently knows the location of the original easements.
    At LaVergne’s request, the Van Winkles hired Barge, Waggoner, Sumner, and Cannon to
    design the water system that extended out Blair Road and eventually into the mobile home park The
    Van Winkles also hired the contractor who installed the water line, and paid for the materials used
    in the installation of the water line. LaVergne permitted the Van Winkles to recover tap fees from
    the other residents on Blair Road to help defray the costs of the water line. However, once the city
    accepted the water line, the tap fees would go to LaVergne. On October 27, 1982, LaVergne wrote
    the Van Winkles a letter stating that “[t]he Van Winkle water lines have been completed and
    accepted. They have been checked by water control of Tennessee and found negative.”
    Within the mobile home park, the water lines are connected to individual water meters
    adjacent to each mobile home. These lines, which are located on the Van Winkles’ property,
    required service several times prior to this suit. It was stipulated that LaVergne repaired the lines
    as many as 15 to 20 times prior to 1996.
    In 1996, LaVergne passed Ordinance 96-6. Pursuant to this ordinance, LaVergne placed two
    master water meters on the road outside of the Van Winkle property. After the city installed these
    master meters, LaVergne refused to repair the water lines on the Van Winkles’ property. The city
    billed the Van Winkles for the water lost from those lines. The Van Winkles paid $3,037.31 in water
    bills as a result of this water loss.
    In January 1998, the Van Winkles filed a complaint against LaVergne to determine
    ownership of the lines on the Van Winkles’ property and to recover the payments made to LaVergne
    as a result of the lost water. The case came to trial in December 1999. Early in the trial, the Van
    Winkles offered the documents signed by the property owners on Blair Road as evidence of
    easements. Counsel for LaVergne objected, citing that the documents did not contain the signature
    of city officials, and therefore, were not accepted by the city. The trial court sustained the objection
    stating:
    To the extent that the documents are offered as easements, perhaps Mr. McKee’s
    objection is proper. And I’ll sustain it. To the extent that the documents are
    photocopies of paper writings, the original of which cannot be located and to the
    extent that they demonstrate some offer perhaps or some intent on the part of some
    individual, at least the Plaintiffs perhaps, it is appropriate to allow them to be
    admitted.
    So, again, I guess for the limited purpose, I’ll allow the document to be
    presented. As to whether it is an easement, as to whether it’s an offer for an
    easement, or as to what, in fact, it is, I suppose I’ll reserve that issue and hear the
    further proof concerning the documents and otherwise. But at this point, I’ll allow
    them then for the limited purpose to be marked as the next exhibit. . . .
    After both sides presented their respective cases, the trial court entered judgment holding that
    LaVergne is the owner of the water lines and responsible for their repair, maintenance, and
    replacement. Additionally, the court awarded the Van Winkles $3037.13, representing the cost of
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    the water lost after the city installed the master meters. The trial court listed several factors as
    significant in reaching its conclusion:
    1) the entire Blair Road Project, serving a number of residences and property
    owners was directed by the City; 2) the City initially mandated the preparation of and
    following of the project manual; 3) easements for the project were obtained in the
    name of the City; 4) the City selected the engineers to design the project and
    approved the design; 5) the City directed the types of materials to be used; 6) the City
    monitored and approved the workmanship; 7) the City ‘accepted’ the waterlines,
    whatever meaning the City may have intended some 18 years ago; 8) the City
    maintained the water lines for a number of years; 9) the City granted or denied water
    service to individual tenants of the Plaintiffs’ trailers, requiring or waiving deposits,
    and individually billing those tenants as its customers.
    The City of LaVergne raises two issues on appeal as follows:
    I.      Whether the trial court erred by rendering judgment against the City of
    LaVergne when the Plaintiffs/Appellees stated no basis to abrogate the city’s
    sovereign immunity.
    II.     Whether the trial court erred by relying upon documents as evidence of
    easements in formulating its holding, after it had refused to admit the very
    same documents as evidence of easements during trial.
    As this matter was tried before the trial court sitting without a jury, our review of the trial court’s
    findings of fact is de novo with a presumption of correctness, unless the preponderance of the
    evidence is otherwise. Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d). With respect to the court’s legal conclusions,
    however, our review is de novo with no presumption of correctness. Bain v. Wells, 
    936 S.W.2d 618
    ,
    622 (Tenn. 1997).
    We first consider LaVergne’s assertion that the trial court erred in rendering judgment in
    favor of the Van Winkles when the Van Winkles stated no basis to abrogate the city’s sovereign
    immunity. Citing sections 29-20-101 to 29-20-406 of the Tennessee Code, LaVergne maintains that
    the Governmental Tort Liability Act does not permit suits against governmental entities to determine
    ownership of utilities or to award damages associated with utilities. Therefore, LaVergne argues,
    the trial court lacked jurisdiction to enter judgment in favor of the Van Winkles, as the Van Winkles
    did not state grounds in their suit for removing LaVergne’s immunity. In support of this argument,
    LaVergne relies on the following statutory provision:
    Except as may be otherwise provided in this chapter, all governmental entities shall
    be immune from suit for any injury which may result from the activities of such
    governmental entities wherein such governmental entities are engaged in the exercise
    and discharge of any of their functions, governmental or proprietary.
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    Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-20-201
    (a) (2000).
    The doctrine of sovereign immunity was a common law doctrine which protected the state
    and its governmental subdivisions from liability for damages caused by their tortious acts. Kirby v.
    Macon County, 
    892 S.W.2d 403
    , 406 (Tenn. 1992). The Tennessee legislature codified this
    common law doctrine as it applies to local governmental agencies, municipalities, and counties by
    enacting the Governmental Tort Liability Act in 1974. 
    Id.
     This was an act of grace through which
    the General Assembly provided immunity from tort liability to all governmental entities, but
    removed it in limited, specific instances. 
    Id.
     As its name suggests, the intent of the legislature was
    to limit governmental tort immunity, while providing standards and procedures to protect the public
    interest. Cruse v. City of Columbia, 
    922 S.W.2d 492
     (Tenn. 1996) (citing Simpson v. Sumner
    County, 
    669 S.W.2d 657
    , 659-60 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1983)). Therefore, it is evident that the doctrine
    of sovereign immunity, and its subsequent codification, only functions to protect local governments
    from suits sounding in tort.
    This Court has previously illustrated this limitation of governmental immunity. In Simpson
    v. Sumner County, 
    669 S.W.2d 657
    , 661 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1983), the Middle Section of this Court
    held that an action for the breach of contract was not within the GTLA. The court placed importance
    on the name of the Act and its legislative history when it concluded that “[t]he Act taken as a whole
    is incapable of reasonable interpretation if causes of action for matters other than ‘tort’ are included.”
    
    Id. at 660
    . The court concluded by stating that the definition of “injury” 1 in the GLTA does not
    cover damages resulting from a breach of contract.
    Additionally, this Court has determined that the GLTA does not provide a county immunity
    in an action for a declaratory judgment. Hackett v. Smith County, 
    807 S.W.2d 695
    , 698-99 (Tenn.
    Ct. App. 1990). In that case, the court held that a plaintiff has standing to seek a declaration that
    certain roads were public roads pursuant to the declaratory judgment act.2 
    Id. at 699
    . The court
    noted that the case did not contain allegations of tortious activity, nor did it seek to impose liability.
    
    Id.
    In the present case, the GTLA does not provide LaVergne immunity from suit. As stated
    above, the GTLA, like the doctrine of sovereign immunity, functions to provide immunity and
    exceptions from immunity in tort actions. The Van Winkles’ action is to determine who owns
    certain water pipes on their property and to recover the money the Van Winkles paid the city after
    the installation of the master meters. Similar to the situation in Hackett, the Van Winkles do not
    1
    Section 29-20-102(4) defines “injury” as “death, injury to a per son, dama ge to or loss of property or any other
    injury that one may suffer to one’s person, or estate, that would be actionable if inflicted by a private person or such
    person’s ag ent.” Tenn . Code A nn. § 29-2 0-102(4 ) (2000 ).
    2
    Section 29-14-107(a) of the Tennessee Code provides that “when de claratory relief is so ught, all perso ns shall
    be made parties who have or claim any interest which would be affected by the declaration.” Tenn. Code. Ann. § 29-14-
    107(a) ( 2000) . The act d efines “perso ns” to include municipal co rporation s.
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    have to assert grounds under the GTLA in order to seek a declaration that LaVergne owns the water
    lines in issue.
    The GTLA does not prohibit the Van Winkles from seeking to recover costs they incurred
    after LaVergne’s installation of the master meters. The water costs did not arise from any tortious
    action by LaVergne. These costs arose due to the disputed ownership of the water lines. Water
    leaked from the lines, and LaVergne billed the Van Winkles for the water loss, asserting the Van
    Winkles owned the lines.
    As in Simpson, the injuries defined by the GTLA do not encompass the Van Winkles’ action
    for reimbursement. The GTLA’s definition of injury contemplate situations where one party
    tortiously damages another’s property or their person. In the present case, the Van Winkles seek to
    recover costs paid to the city as a result of water leaking from the lines on the Van Winkles’
    property. LaVergne did not negligently or intentionally damage any of the Van Winkles’ property.
    The Van Winkles suffered no “damage to or loss of property” that was “inflicted” by LaVergne.
    LaVergne’s reliance on Paduch v. City of Johnson City is misplaced. Paduch v. City of
    Johnson City, 
    896 S.W.2d 767
     (Tenn. 1995). In Paduch, the city required a landowner to pay the
    paving costs of a street before the city would issue the landowner a building permit adjacent to the
    street. Ownership of the street became an issue after the landowner paved the street. The landowner
    was successful in his suit to determine the city owned the street, but the Tennessee Supreme Court
    reversed the lower court’s award of damages to the landowner as compensation for paving the street.
    After noting that the city was under no obligation to pave the road in issue, the court determined that
    the GTLA provided the city immunity for its decision to deny the building permit until the
    landowner paved the public road. The court held that the landowner did not assert a basis of liability
    under the Act, and that the Act had a specific provision providing immunity for a city’s failure to
    issue a building permit.
    Here, the Van Winkles’ action is not asserting LaVergne made a negligent decision in
    disclaiming ownership of the lines. The action is to determine ownership of the lines. Consequently,
    if LaVergne owns the lines, it is obligated to pay for water lost through those lines. Unlike Paduch,
    the instant action is to enforce that obligation, not to recover damages for a negligent or tortious
    decision.
    As the GTLA does not provide immunity to LaVergne in this action, we must now turn to
    LaVergne’s second issue, whether the trial court erred by relying on documents as evidence of
    easements when reaching its holding, after it refused to admit those documents as evidence of
    easements during trial. LaVergne maintains that evidence of easements is the only objective proof
    that the city would have agreed to own or maintain the water lines on the Van Winkles’ property.
    Thus, according to LaVergne, when the trial court refused to rule that the documents were
    easements, the court erred in reaching its ultimate conclusion that LaVergne owns the water lines
    and must pay costs incurred by the Van Winkles after the installation of the master meters. We
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    disagree. If the trial court did rely on the documents as evidence of easements, it was not improper
    for the court to do so.
    An easement is a real property interest that confers on its holder a right to use the property
    of another for a specific purpose. Pevear v. Hunt, 
    924 S.W.2d 114
    , 115 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1996).
    Parties may create easements in a number of different ways. Bradley v. McLeod, 
    984 S.W.2d 929
    ,
    934 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998). Parties may create easements by an express grant, by reservation in a
    deed, by implication, by prescription, by estoppel, or by eminent domain. 
    Id.
     As an interest in real
    property, an easement created by an express grant must comply with the Statute of Frauds. Miller
    v. Street, 
    663 S.W.2d 797
    , 798 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1983). The Statute of Frauds requires the document
    to contain a sufficient description of the land and it must be “signed by the party to be charged.” Id.;
    
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-2-101
     (2000). The “party to be charged” is the owner of the real property.
    Lusky v. Keiser, 
    164 S.W. 777
     (Tenn. 1914); Patterson v. Davis, 
    192 S.W.2d 227
    , 229 (Tenn. Ct.
    App. 1946).
    Additionally, as in other real property transactions, an express easement must be delivered
    to and accepted by the grantee. Morris v. Simmons, 
    909 S.W.2d 441
    , 446 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1993);
    Mast v. Shepard, 
    408 S.W.2d 411
    , 413 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1966). If the easement is beneficial to the
    grantee, the court may presume acceptance of the easement. 28A C.J.S. Easements § 56 (1996).
    Further, acceptance may be implied by admissions, conduct, or other circumstances. 9 Tennessee
    Jurisprudence Deeds § 11 (1993).
    In the present case, testimony established that LaVergne could only enter the Van Winkles’
    property to repair the water lines if the leaks constituted a nuisance or if the city had an easement
    over the Van Winkles’ property. Ms. Van Winkle testified that the city required all the property
    owners on Blair Road to grant easements to the city prior to the installation of the water lines.
    LaVergne did not rebut her testimony on that issue. Therefore, it was undisputed that LaVergne
    required easements prior to the construction of the water lines.
    Ms. Van Winkle introduced documents into evidence which she claimed to be easements.
    These documents purported to grant easements to LaVergne from the property owners on Blair Road,
    including the Van Winkles. The document the Van Winkles assert is an easement over their property
    named LaVergne as the grantee of an easement. Further, the Van Winkles signed the document, and
    the document gives a sufficient description of the easement.
    It is also undisputed that Ms. Van Winkle took the original document to city hall and that its
    whereabouts are presently unknown. The parties could not locate the document in the public records
    of the city of LaVergne.
    We conclude that the documents at issue are indeed easements, and if the trial court relied
    on them as such, it was not in error to do so. LaVergne asserts that they did not sign the documents
    and, therefore, the easements are not valid as to them. As stated above, the document does not have
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    to be signed by the grantee to be given legal effect. The only signature required is that of the grantor,
    as they are the “party to be charged.”
    Additionally, LaVergne argues that the city did not accept the documents, and as a result,
    there can be no transfer of a real property interest to LaVergne. We believe the events in this case
    illustrate acceptance by LaVergne. First, Ms. Van Winkle took the documents to city hall as
    LaVergne’s officials instructed her to do. Second, LaVergne wrote the Van Winkles a letter stating
    that the “water lines have been completed and accepted.” Third, LaVergne repaired the water lines
    as many as 24 times before the city installed the master meters. Finally, the water lines are beneficial
    to LaVergne as the city collects the tap fees from the lines and receives money from the residents on
    the mobile home park due to their use of water.
    We realize there was considerable debate over the meaning of “accepted” as used in
    LaVergne’s letter to the Van Winkles. LaVergne maintains that acceptance means the city approved
    the quality and construction of the lines. The Van Winkles argue the letter indicates an acceptance
    of ownership of the lines. We believe the Van Winkles’ interpretation to be the better of the two.
    LaVergne told the Van Winkles that the Van Winkles could collect the tap fees until the city
    accepted the line. After acceptance, the city would collect the tap fees for the line. This indicates
    to us that LaVergne accepted ownership of the lines. Further, in light of the undisputed testimony
    that LaVergne required the Van Winkles to grant an easement over their property, the letter accepting
    the lines provides additional proof that the city accepted ownership of the lines.
    We also note that LaVergne claims they repaired the water lines only because the lines
    constituted a nuisance and not because they accepted the easement. Although we acknowledge this
    position, we are of the opinion that the continued maintenance is conduct which illustrates
    acceptance of the easement. Several factors illustrate this conclusion. Prior to the installation of the
    master meters, the city continually maintained the lines, usually without protest. In fact, LaVergne
    repaired the water lines often out of request by the Van Winkles or mobile home tenants.
    Additionally, LaVergne failed to bill the Van Winkles for the repairs or attempt to make the Van
    Winkles claim responsibility for the water lines. This conduct by the City of LaVergne amounts to
    acceptance of the easement and the water lines. Accordingly, we hold that the documents are
    easements, and that if the trial court relied on the documents as such, it was not in error to do so.
    Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the decision of the trial court. The costs of this appeal
    are taxed to the appellant, the City of LaVergne, and its surety, for which execution may issue if
    necessary.
    ___________________________________
    DAVID R. FARMER, JUDGE
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