                 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
                              AT JACKSON
                                November 19, 2008 Session

     WINSTON E. WOLFE, TRUSTEE OF THE WINSTON E. WOLFE
     REVOCABLE LIVING TRUST DATED DECEMBER 5, 1997 v. O.
                   MICHAEL JAEGER, ET UX.

                 Direct Appeal from the Chancery Court for Fayette County
                         No. 14320    William C. Cole, Chancellor



                   No. W2008-00923-COA-R3-CV - Filed March 19, 2009


This appeal arises from a private condemnation action commenced by Plaintiff pursuant to
Tennessee Code Annotated § 54-14-101, et. seq. After the jury of view filed its report, but before
the report was acted upon by the trial court, Plaintiff moved for a voluntary nonsuit pursuant to
Tennessee Rule of Civil Procedure 41.01. The trial court granted the nonsuit, and Defendants filed
a Rule 60.02 motion for relief from the judgment granting the nonsuit. The trial court denied
Defendants’ motion. We affirm.

  Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed; and
                                        Remanded

DAVID R. FARMER , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ALAN E. HIGHERS, P.J., W.S., and
J. STEVEN STAFFORD , J., joined.

J. Payson Matthews, Somerville, Tennessee, for the appellants, O. Michael Jaeger and wife, Janet
A. Jaeger.

Thomas M. Minor, Somerville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Winston E. Wolfe, Trustee of the
Winston E. Wolfe Revocable Living Trust Dated December 5, 1997.

                                           OPINION

        The facts relevant to our disposition of this matter on appeal are undisputed. In December
2006, Plaintiff/Appellee Winston E. Wolfe, Trustee of the Winston E. Wolfe Revocable Living Trust
Dated December 5, 1997 (Mr. Wolfe), filed an action in the Fayette County Chancery Court pursuant
to Tennessee Code Annotated § 54-14-101, et seq., against the owners of two lots adjoining his
property (collectively, “Defendants”). In his complaint, Mr. Wolfe asserted he owned two tracts of
real property which adjoined and were separated by Defendants’ tracts, and that his northwestern
most tract was without access to a public road. Mr. Wolfe asserted the southeast corner of his
landlocked tract adjoined property owned by Defendants/Appellants O. Michael Jaeger and Janet A.
Jaeger (“the Jaegers”) and Defendants Adam E. Hohenberg, et al., (collectively, “the Hohenbergs”).1
Mr. Wolfe sought an easement across the Jaegers’ property which would permit him access to his
southeastern tract and a public roadway. Mr. Wolfe prayed the court to appoint a jury of view to
lay off by metes and bounds the land suitable for an easement and to assess damages. Defendants
answered and denied that their properties should be used to create an easement.

        On March 7, 2007, Mr. Wolfe moved the court to appoint a jury of view for the purpose of
laying off and marking an easement through “the land or lands of the Defendants, either or both[.]”
Notwithstanding Mr. Wolfe’s March 7 motion or the requirement of Tennessee Code Annotated §
54-14-103 that all owners of property across which an easement might be located be joined as
parties, on March 20 Mr. Wolfe and the Hohenbergs filed a “stipulation” asserting that Mr. Wolfe
did not seek an easement through the Hohenberg property and that, if such an easement were
awarded, he would not accept it. Mr. Wolfe and the Hohenbergs further “stipulated” that the
proceedings could go forward without further participation by the Hohenbergs but that, if the
Hohenbergs’ property was affected notwithstanding the stipulation, Mr. Wolfe would immediately
move to suspend the proceedings in order to give the Hohenbergs the opportunity to participate. On
March 26, the Jaegers filed a motion to strike the March 7 stipulation, asserting the stipulation was
the equivalent of an attempt to dismiss the Hohenbergs in violation of section 54-14-103.

        Following a hearing on March 30, on April 26, 2007, the trial court entered an order
appointing a jury of view for the purposes of determining the necessity and location of an easement.
The trial court’s order provided that two qualified jurors would be designated by Mr. Wolfe and two
by the Jaegers, with a fifth juror to be designated by the first four. The trial court apparently did not
enter judgment on the Jaegers’ motion to strike. Following the Jaegers’ motion to appoint an
appraiser as required by section 54-14-103(b), on May 11 the trial court appointed an appraiser to
inspect and appraise the Jaegers’ property. Mr. Wolfe posted bond as required by section 54-14-
103(b) in July 2007.

        The jury of view filed its report on September 17, 2007. In its report, the jury of view
recommended that the easement be located across a tract which crossed both the Jaeger and
Hohenberg properties. On October 31, 2007, the Jaegers moved the trial court to approve the report
of the jury of view. In their motion, the Jaegers asserted that the time for filing objections or
exceptions to the jury of view’s report had passed, and the trial court accordingly should approve the
report.

        On November 2, 2007, Mr. Wolfe filed a notice of voluntary dismissal pursuant to Tennessee
Rule of Civil Procedure 41.01. The trial court granted the motion the same day. Subsequently, on
November 7, the Hohenbergs filed a response to the report of the jury of view. In their response, the
Hohenbergs objected to the jury of view’s report and referenced the March 7 stipulation entered into
with Mr. Wolfe providing that, if their rights were in any way affected by the report of the jury of
view, they would have an opportunity to be heard.


        1
            The properties apparently currently are used as a nature area.

                                                           -2-
        On January 30, 2008, the Jaegers filed a motion pursuant to Tennessee Rules of Civil
Procedure 41.01 and 60.02 (“Rule 41.01" and “Rule 60.02,” respectively) to “vacate or amend” the
trial court’s November 2, 2007, order of dismissal. In their motion, the Jaegers asserted the trial
court had erred by granting Mr. Wolfe’s motion for voluntary dismissal under Rule 41.01 because
the motion was not permitted after the jury retired to consider its verdict. They asserted that the
order of dismissal without prejudice accordingly was void, and that the trial court’s order therefore
should be vacated or amended to provide that the cause was dismissed with prejudice. Mr. Wolfe
filed a memorandum in opposition to the Jaegers’ motion on March 18, 2008.

       Following a hearing on March 20, the trial court entered final judgment in the matter on April
1, 2008, denying the Jaegers’ Rule 60.02 motion. The Jaegers filed a timely notice of appeal to this
Court on April 7, 2008.

                                          Issues Presented

       This issue as presented by the Jaegers for our review is:

       May the Plaintiff, in a private condemnation suit, enter an order of dismissal, without
       prejudice, after the Jury of View has retired to consider its verdict, reached a decision
       and filed its report or verdict with the Court.

Mr. Wolfe presents the issue as:

       Whether the Plaintiff/Appellee, in a private condemnation action, may take a
       voluntary dismissal or non-suit of said action subsequent to the filing of the report
       of the jury of view but before any other action is taken.

Mr. Wolfe raises the following additional issue:

       Whether the Defendants/Appellants failed to timely request relief from the Order of
       Dismissal entered by the trial court on November 2, 2007.

                                        Standard of Review

        We review a trial court’s decision to grant or deny either a motion to alter or amend a
judgment under Rule 59.04 or a motion for relief from a judgment under Rule 60.02 under an abuse
of discretion standard. Underwood v. Zurich Ins. Co., 854 S.W.2d 94, 97 (Tenn. 1993). An abuse
of discretion occurs when a trial court applies an incorrect legal standard, or where its decision is
contrary to logic or reasoning and causes an injustice to the complaining party. Eldridge v. Eldridge,
42 S.W.3d 82, 85 (Tenn. 2001) (citation omitted).

                                              Analysis



                                                 -3-
        We first address Mr. Wolfe’s assertion on appeal that the Jaegers’ January 30, 2008, motion
to amend the trial court’s judgment granting Mr. Wolfe’s Rule 41.01 motion for voluntary dismissal
was, in substance, an untimely Rule 59.04 motion to alter or amend. Mr. Wolfe asserts that we
should uphold the trial court’s order for this reason alone. Upon review of the record, we find
nothing to indicate that Mr. Wolfe raised this issue in the trial court.2 It is well settled that issues that
are not raised in the trial court cannot be raised for the first time on appeal. E.g., Barnes v. Barnes,
193 S.W.3d 495, 501 (Tenn. 2006). Accordingly, we decline to address Mr. Wolfe’s argument that,
despite its style, the Jaegers’ motion was not a proper Rule 60.02 motion, but an untimely Rule 59.04
motion.

       We next turn to whether the trial court erred by denying the Jaegers’ Rule 60.02 motion.
Rule 60.02 provides, in relevant part:

        On motion and upon such terms as are just, the court may relieve a party or the
        party’s legal representative from a final judgment, order or proceeding for the
        following reasons: (1) mistake, inadvertence, surprise or excusable neglect; (2) fraud
        (whether heretofore denominated intrinsic or extrinsic), misrepresentation, or other
        misconduct of an adverse party; (3) the judgment is void; (4) the judgment has been
        satisfied, released or discharged, or a prior judgment upon which it is based has been
        reversed or otherwise vacated, or it is no longer equitable that a judgment should
        have prospective application; or (5) any other reason justifying relief from the
        operation of the judgment.

Tenn. R. Civ. P. 60.02 (2008). The Jaegers do not identify the subsections of Rule 60.02 under
which they seek relief. However, although they assert the trial court’s judgment was a “mistake,”
the Jaeger’s also assert that, under the supreme court’s decision in Lacy v. Cox, 152 S.W.3d 480,
(Tenn. 2004), the trial court’s order granting Mr. Wolfe’s Rule 41.01 motion is void where Mr.
Wolfe filed his motion after the jury of view had filed its report. We do not read Lacy as standing
for the proposition that, although a trial court in a jury trial has no “authority” to grant a voluntary
dismissal without prejudice after the jury has retired to deliberate, such an order is “void.” However,
in consideration of the Jaegers’ pleadings and its arguments in this Court and the trial court, we
perceive the Jaegers’ motion to be a motion for relief from the judgment under Rule 60.02(3) and
(5). Thus, we turn to the substantive issue presented by this appeal.

        The gravamen of the issue presented by this case, as we perceive it, is the application of
Tennessee Rule of Civil Procedure 41.01, and the limitations thereto, to a condemnation proceeding
filed pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated § 54-14-101, et. seq. Rule 41.01 provides:

                 (1) Subject to the provisions of Rule 23.05, Rule 23.06, or Rule 66 or of any
        statute, and except when a motion for summary judgment made by an adverse party


        2
          The record transmitted to this Court on appeal includes only the technical record and not transcripts of
hearings before the trial court.

                                                       -4-
         is pending, the plaintiff shall have the right to take a voluntary nonsuit to dismiss an
         action without prejudice by filing a written notice of dismissal at any time before the
         trial of a cause and serving a copy of the notice upon all parties, and if a party has not
         already been served with a summons and complaint, the plaintiff shall also serve a
         copy of the complaint on that party; or by an oral notice of dismissal made in open
         court during the trial of a cause; or in jury trials at any time before the jury retires to
         consider its verdict and prior to the ruling of the court sustaining a motion for a
         directed verdict. If a counterclaim has been pleaded by a defendant prior to the
         service upon the defendant of plaintiff's motion to dismiss, the defendant may elect
         to proceed on such counterclaim in the capacity of a plaintiff.
                  (2) Notwithstanding the provisions of the preceding paragraph, a notice of
         dismissal operates as an adjudication upon the merits when filed by a plaintiff who
         has twice dismissed in any court an action based on or including the same claim.
                  (3) A voluntary nonsuit to dismiss an action without prejudice must be
         followed by an order of voluntary dismissal signed by the court and entered by the
         clerk. The date of entry of the order will govern the running of pertinent time periods.

Tenn. R. Civ. P. 41.01(2008).

         The Jaegers assert that, under Rule 41.01, Mr. Wolfe had no right to a voluntary dismissal
without prejudice under Rule 41.01 because he filed his Rule 41.01 motion after the jury of view had
retired to consider its verdict. The Jaegers rely on Lacy v. Cox for the proposition that the trial
court’s order granting Mr. Wolfe’s motion is void where the motion was filed beyond the time
provided by the Rule. The Jaegers further assert that, under Cunningham v. Memphis Railroad
Terminal Co., 126 Tenn. 343 (Tenn. 1912), and its progeny, a plaintiff may obtain a voluntary
dismissal without prejudice only when the plaintiff had decided to abandon the enterprise for which
condemnation was sought. Mr. Wolfe, on the other hand, asserts that, under Rule 41.01, Tennessee
Code Annotated § 54-14-101, et seq., and Anderson v. Smith, 521 S.W.2d 787 (Tenn. 1975), he may
obtain a voluntary dismissal without prejudice at any time prior to the retirement of the jury in a new
trial by jury as provided by Tennessee Code Annotated § 54-14-114.3

         3
        Tennessee Code Annotated § 54-14-114 as it existed when this matter was before the trial court subsequently
was amended by chapter 1082 of the Public Acts of 2008, effective June 3, 2008. The section as it existed prior to the
2008 amendments provided:

         Either party may within thirty (30) days appeal to the court from the finding of the jury of view, and
         demand a trial by a jury and, upon giving security for costs, m ay have a new trial before a jury of
         twelve (12) persons to be summoned and impaneled by the court in the usual way.

The section as amended effective June 3, 2008 provides:

         (a) Within thirty (30) days, either party may appeal to the court from the finding of the jury of view,
         and demand a trial by a jury and, upon giving security for costs, may have a new trial before a jury
         of twelve (12) persons to be summoned and impaneled by the court in the usual way.
                  (b) The demand for a trial by a jury in accordance with subsection (a) shall be the exclusive
                                                                                                            (continued...)

                                                           -5-
        We turn first to the Jaegers’ assumption that a jury of view is a “jury” for the purposes of
Rule 41.01. It is not. The historical jury of view as provided for by the condemnation statutes
currently codified at Tennessee Code Annotated § 54-14-101, et. seq., was “merely for the
information of the [county] court and ex parte.” Hawkins v. Justices of Trousdale County, 80 Tenn.
351 (1883). The jury of view’s report may be contested by any party to the condemnation action.
Tenn. Code Ann. § 54-14-112(a)(2008).4 If no objection is filed, or following a hearing on an
objection, the trial court may confirm the report of the jury of view, or set it aside and order another
“writ of inquiry.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 54-14-112(b). The trial court also may modify the report and
grant the easement as it deems proper. Tenn. Code Ann. § 54-14-113.5 Within 30 days from the trial
court’s order on the jury of view’s report, either party may appeal to the court and demand a “trial
before a jury of twelve (12) persons to be summoned and impaneled by the court in the usual way.”




        3
         (...continued)
        remedy for relief from the finding of a jury of view and no other appeal from the finding shall lie. The
        jury must either affirm the finding of the jury of view or set apart a different quantity of land or
        property for ingress or egress to the land of the petitioner; but, in no event, shall the party petitioning
        for a right of way pursuant to this part be left without a sufficient outlet of ingress and egress.

Tennessee Code Annotated § 54-14-114(2008).

        4
         Section 54-14-112 was amended in 2008 to provide:
        if an objection is filed by the owner or owners of land selected by the jury of view, the objection must
        be served upon all parties to the action. Further, the person making the objection must prepare a plat
        that contains an alternative route to the one identified by the jury of view. The plat shall be served on
        all parties and filed with the court within thirty (30) days of the objection. The alternative route that
        the person proposes to substitute for the identified route shall be clearly marked on the plat. If the
        petitioner or any other party who owns the land on which all or part of the alternative route is located
        objects to the alternative route, the only remedy available to the petitioner or other party at the trial
        court level is to demand a trial by jury pursuant to § 54-14-114. An appeal from an adverse decision
        at the trial court level may be appealed by any party to the action as provided by law.
        5
            Sections 54-14-112 and 113 were unaffected by the 2008 amendments.

                                                           -6-
Tenn. Code Ann. § 54-14-114(a)6; see Hawkins v. Justices of Trousdale County, 80 Tenn. 351
(1883)(observing that the report of the jury of view does not determine the rights of the parties).

        The Jaegers’ argument that the supreme court’s decision in Lacy controls here accordingly
is misplaced. The Lacy court held that a trial court “has no authority” to enter a Rule 41.01 voluntary
dismissal without prejudice after the jury has retired to deliberate. Lacy v. Cox, 152 S.W.3d 480,
488 (Tenn. 2004). It held that the dismissal in that case must be deemed to have been with prejudice.
 Id. at 490. The rule in Lacy would be applicable in a trial by jury upon appeal as provided by
Tennessee Code Annotated § 54-14-114.

        We turn next to whether the trial court may grant a plaintiff’s motion for voluntary dismissal
without prejudice under Rule 41.01 after the jury of view has filed its report, but before the trial court
has acted on the report, in a private condemnation proceeding under section 54-15-101, et. seq. The
supreme court addressed the time-frame in which a Rule 41.01 dismissal is permissible in Anderson
v. Smith, 521 S.W.2d 787 (Tenn. 1975). Synthesizing earlier rules set forth in Cunningham v.
Memphis Railway Terminal Co., 149 S.W. 103 (Tenn. 1912), and Ragland v. Davidson County
Board of Education, 312 S.W. 855 (Tenn. 1958), the Anderson court held:

        The condemner has the right to take a nonsuit at any time prior to the case being
        submitted to the trier of fact for decision, unless the condemner has taken possession
        of the property under court order issued under circumstances leaving nothing to be
        decided by the court except the compensation to be paid the owner for the land taken.

Anderson, 521 S.W. 2d at 791. The rule in Anderson clearly reiterates and expands upon the rule
set forth in 1926 by this Court in Huff v. Department of Highways & Public Works of the State of
Tennessee, 3 Tenn. App. 277 (Tenn. App. 1936). In Huff, we held that a nonsuit without prejudice
may not be granted after the land to be condemned has been decreed to the plaintiff and title has
vested in the plaintiff/petitioner. Id. The Anderson court expanded upon our holding in Huff to
provide that a plaintiff does not have a right to a nonsuit without prejudice when the nonsuit would

        6
            Section 54-14-114 provides:

        Within thirty (30) days, either party may appeal to the court from the finding of the jury of view, and
        demand a trial by a jury and, upon giving security for costs, may have a new trial before a jury of
        twelve (12) persons to be summoned and impaneled by the court in the usual way.

As amended in 2008, section 54-14-114 currently further provides:

        (b) The demand for a trial by a jury in accordance with subsection (a) shall be the exclusive remedy
        for relief from the finding of a jury of view and no other appeal from the finding shall lie. The jury
        must either affirm the finding of the jury of view or set apart a different quantity of land or property
        for ingress or egress to the land of the petitioner; but, in no event, shall the party petitioning for a right
        of way pursuant to this part be left without a sufficient outlet of ingress and egress.

Tenn. Code Ann. § 54-14-114(2008).



                                                             -7-
“deprive the defendant of some right that became vested during the pendency of the case.”
Anderson, 521 S.W.2d at 790. The Anderson court held that the plaintiff in that case lost the right
to take a voluntary nonsuit when it obtained a court order for possession of the property regardless
of the extent to which it actually exercised any authority over the property. Id. at 791.

        In the case now before us, the Jaegers do not assert that Mr. Wolfe obtained or exercised
possession of, title to, or authority over the property across which he sought an easement. Rather,
the Jaegers argue that the matter was submitted to the trier of fact and could not be nonsuited without
prejudice when the jury of view filed its report. We must disagree for two reasons. First, as noted
above, a jury of view in a condemnation proceeding is not the equivalent of a jury in a jury trial for
the purposes of Rule 41.01. Second, reading the body of case law together, we do not agree that the
filing of the jury of view’s report submits the matter to the trier of fact for the purposes of limiting
the right to a Rule 41.01 voluntary dismissal.

        In Cunningham v. Memphis Railway Terminal Co., the court identified the three points in a
condemnation suit which cut off the plaintiff’s right to a voluntary nonsuit: (1) when the jury of
view’s report has been confirmed without exception or appeal and the land decreed to the plaintiff;
(2) where an appeal is brought only on the issue of damages where possession has been decreed to
the plaintiff and; (3) when the matter is “finally submitted to the jury or the trial court for
determination.” Anderson, 521 S.W.2d at 790(emphasis added)(citing Cunningham v. Memphis R.R.
Term. Co., 149 S.W. 103 (Tenn. 1912)). Reading Anderson and Cunningham together, a voluntary
nonsuit under Rule 41.01 may be taken after the jury of view has filed its report until the trial court
has confirmed the report if no exceptions have been made, or if an exception has been made, after
the court has confirmed or modified the report following a hearing and before the plaintiff has
exercised authority over the property. Id.; see also, Tenn. Code Ann. § 54-14-112 & 113; Barge v.
Sadler, 70 S.W.3d 683 (Tenn. 2002)(court has no authority under statutes to grant petition in private
condemnation action until after the jury of view has submitted its report); Huff v. Dep’t of Highways,
3 Tenn. App. 277 (Tenn. App. 1926)(holding a nonsuit may be taken before jury has retired to
consider its verdict unless report of jury of view is confirmed without exception or appeal and land
has been decreed to petitioner).

        Simply stated, the plaintiff’s right to a voluntary nonsuit is extinguished upon an order of the
court depriving the property owner of the free and complete use of his property. Anderson, 521
S.W.2d 787, 791 (Tenn. 1975). After the court has disposed of exceptions or objections, if any, and
entered its order on the report of the jury of view, the remedy available to either party, including a
dissatisfied plaintiff, is not a nonsuit but an appeal pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated § 54-14-
114.7 See Pound v. Fowler, 133 S.W.2d 486 (Tenn. 1939)(statute authorizing appeal must be strictly
construed; appeal must be taken within 30 days of the order disposing of exceptions or objections).
Additionally, we must disagree with the Jaegers’ assertion that Mr. Wolfe lost his right to object to
the report of the jury of view where he failed to do so within 30 days. Section 54-14-112 provides


         7
           The section as amended in 2008 provides that the demand for trial by a jury shall be the exclusive remedy for
relief from the finding of a jury of view. Tenn. Code Ann. § 54-14-114(b)(2008).

                                                          -8-
that any party may file objections to the report, but specifies no time within which the objection must
be filed.8 Where the statute prescribes no time for the taking of the appeal from a jury of view’s
report, it must be taken within a reasonable time unless circumstances indicate the intent to waive
the right to appeal. Officer v. E. Tenn. Natural Gas Co., 239 S.W.2d 999, 1001 (Tenn. 1951).

                                               Holding
        In light of the foregoing, we affirm the judgment of the trial court denying the Jaegers’ Rule
60.02 motion. Costs of this appeal are taxed to the Appellants, O. Michael Jaeger and Janet A.
Jaeger, and to their surety, for which execution may issue if necessary.



                                                                 ___________________________________
                                                                 DAVID R. FARMER, JUDGE




         8
          Section 54-14-112 as amended in 2008 provides that, if an objection is filed by the owner or owners of land
selected by the jury of view, the objection must be served upon all parties and that a plat indicating an alternate route
must be filed with the court and served on all parties within 30 days of the objection. Tenn. Code Ann. § 54-14-
112(a)(2008).

                                                          -9-
