OPINION
This appeal involves a boundary line dispute between two neighbors. The Appellants, William and Rebecca Pevear, and the Appellees, Evans and Irene Hunt, own real estate which is separated by an alley which is owned by the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County.
On August 16, 1991, William Pevear and his wife Rebecca Pevear, brought an action seeking to establish a right, by way of a prescriptive easement, to utilize a portion of defendant Hunt’s property for driveway and parking purposes. Their contention is that a small gravelеd area in the alley .has been used for over twenty years by the plaintiffs and their predecessors in title as а driveway. This graveled area is located partially on the public right-of-way, and partially on the property of the defendant Hunt’s. Prior to the filing of the Complaint, the Appellees Hunt erected posts just inside the boundary line of their property, effectively rendering the remaining graveled area too narrow for use as а driveway. The Metropolitan Government claims it has no objection to either party’s use of the alley but is unwilling tо abandon the property.
On March 8, 1994, the Hunts counterclaimed, seeking damages for trespass by the Peveаrs onto the property of the Hunts, and further, for damage to the Hunt’s personalty.
On March 18, 1994, the Pevear’s filed a Mоtion for Summary Judgment seeking a disposition of their ease. On May 27, 1994, the Hunt’s filed a Motion to Dismiss the action brought by the Pevеars. On August 31, 1994, the trial court entered an Order granting the Hunt’s Motion to Dismiss and denying the Pevear’s Motions for Summary Judgment. On May 10, 1995, the trial сourt designated its decision in granting the Hunt’s Motion to Dismiss and denying the Pevear’s Motion for Summary Judgment as a final judgment from which this Aрpeal is taken. We hold that it erred and reverse.
An easement is a right an owner has to some lawful use of thе real property of another.
Brew v. Van Deman,
53 Tenn. (6 Heisk) 433 (1871). Easements can be creat
To create a prescriptive easement, the use and enjoyment of the property must be аdverse, under a claim of right, continuous, uninterrupted, open, visible, exclusive, with the knowledge and acquiescеnce of the owner of the servient tenement, and must continue for the full prescriptive period.
Keebler v. Street,
In this case, if an easement was granted, it would be considered an easement appurtenant, as there are two tracts of land involved, with the Hunt’s land benefiting the Pеvear’s land.
The trial court’s final order, while denying the Appellant’s Motion for Summary Judgment and granting the Appelleе’s Motion to Dismiss, did not cite any particular authority for its decision. The Appellee’s Motion to Dismiss was prediсated on the physical separation of the two properties, thus we will infer that the trial court found this faсt determinative. Therefore, we will consider the principal legal issue in this matter to be whether non-contiguousness bars the establishment of prescriptive easement rights in Tennessee.
As the parties had indicated in their briеfs, there is a split of authority on this question and Tennessee Court’s have not yet spoken. However, we do so nоw. To ascertain our response this Court has reviewed the rulings of other jurisdictions, and finds that the majority position, as well as the trend in decisions on this issue, is in favor of a rule which does not require the servient tenement to be adjacent to the dominant tenement. Rather, we hold, as the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania did in 1965, that:
The mere fact thаt an easement, to be of any benefit to the dominant tenement, must traverse land of another does not, of itself, destroy the easement. Although the existence of a servient tenement is a prerequisite to the creation of an easement appurtenant, it is not necessary that the servient and dominant tenements be contiguous parcels of land.
Woodlawn Trustees, Inc. v. Michel,
We are persuaded that “the use of the easement must be so related tо the use of the dominant tenement that its particular connection with the beneficial enjoyment of that tеnement is not merely conjectural, but direct and apparent.”
Thomas v. Brooks,
We believe this rule to be less mechanical, and more in harmony with the mоdern holdings found in the majority of states on this issue.
See Reiss v. Maynard,
[a]s the question is an open one in this state, we feel at liberty to adhere to the more liberal rule, which is founded upon justice and common sense in preference to one based upon the shadow instead of substanсe.
Therefore the judgment of the trial court is reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Costs on appeal are taxed to the Appellees.
