Cathy McKeehan v. Katie Price ( 2022 )


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  •                                                                                            01/11/2022
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT KNOXVILLE
    December 1, 2021 Session
    CATHY MCKEEHAN v. KATIE PRICE
    Appeal from the Chancery Court for Loudon County
    No. 12770    Frank V. Williams, III, Chancellor
    No. E2021-00453-COA-R3-CV
    This appeal concerns an issue of whether a modular home violates a subdivision’s
    restrictive covenants. Katie Price (“Price”) wanted to place a modular home on her
    property in Fort Loudon Estates subdivision. Cathy McKeehan (“McKeehan”), a long-
    time resident of Fort Loudon Estates, sued Price in the Chancery Court for Loudon County
    (“the Trial Court”). McKeehan alleged that Price’s modular home violated a subdivision
    restriction against temporary structures. After a bench trial, the Trial Court found in favor
    of Price. McKeehan appeals. The evidence does not preponderate against the Trial Court’s
    finding that Price’s home is not a temporary structure. We hold, as did the Trial Court, that
    Price’s modular home is not prohibited by the subdivision’s restrictions. We affirm the
    judgment of the Trial Court.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed;
    Case Remanded
    D. MICHAEL SWINEY, C.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JOHN W.
    MCCLARTY and KRISTI M. DAVIS, JJ., joined.
    Donald Capparella and Patrick Riley, Nashville, Tennessee; and Kimberlee A. Waterhouse
    and Taylor E. Jenkins-Dowd, Lenoir City, Tennessee, for the appellant, Cathy McKeehan.
    Brian T. Mansfield, Sevierville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Katie Price.
    OPINION
    Background
    In May 2020, Price bought Lot 25 in Fort Loudon Estates in Loudon County. She
    soon thereafter obtained a permit to place a “double-wide” mobile home on her lot. In July
    2020, McKeehan, a long-time resident of Fort Loudon Estates, filed her Petition for
    Enforcement of Covenants and Restrictions and for Temporary Restraining Order and
    Permanent Injunction against Price in the Trial Court. Fort Loudon Estates’ covenants and
    restrictions were recorded in 1959. In her petition, McKeehan relied on Item Four of the
    covenants and restrictions for Fort Loudon Estates, which provides: “4. Temporary
    Structures: No structure of a temporary character, trailer, basement, tent, shack, garage,
    barn or other outbuilding shall be used on any lot at any time as a residence either
    temporarily or permanently.”
    Acting on McKeehan’s petition, the Trial Court entered a temporary restraining
    order against Price, enjoining her “from placing a mobile home, trailer, or other temporary
    structure on Lot 25 located in Fort Loudoun Estates #1 pending further hearing of this
    cause.” Price then filed an answer, stating in part: “The Defendant requests this petition
    … be dismissed as evidence has been provided to the Court, and the Plaintiff’s attorney,
    that a doublewide, nor any type of mobile home, will not be being placed on said property
    by the Defendant nor any other person acting on the Defendant’s behalf.” In October 2020,
    Price filed a motion objecting to injunctive relief and seeking to dissolve the restraining
    order. In her motion, Price stated that she had originally bought a double-wide mobile
    home but had since cancelled that purchase. Price opted for a modular home instead, which
    was “constructed, approved and regulated under the Tennessee Modular Building Act of
    1985, TCA §68-126-301, et seq.” Price asserted that her new modular home was distinct
    from a mobile home and passed muster under the restrictive covenants. The Trial Court
    subsequently entered an order finding that the temporary injunction should issue and
    remain in force through a final hearing on McKeehan’s petition. McKeehan was to post
    an injunction bond of $5,000.
    In January 2021, a trial on the merits was held before the Trial Court. James
    Anthony (Tony) Buhl (“Buhl”), a salesperson for Oakwood Homes—a branch under
    Clayton Homes—testified first. Buhl sold Price a double-wide mobile home, but Price
    received a full refund on it when she opted for a modular home instead. Price had not yet
    paid for the modular home. If Buhl completed the sale, he would earn a commission of
    around 20% of the profit. Appalachia Homes, another subset of Clayton Homes,
    manufactured the home. The home would be delivered first to Buhl at his facility. The
    -2-
    home then would be transported to Price’s lot in two pieces using a tractor and an escort.
    Asked if a chassis were involved, Buhl stated it was a “wood frame.” The two separate
    pieces of the home would be assembled on-site. Buhl testified that if Price had kept the
    double-wide mobile home, it too would have been transported in two sections. Asked if
    the frame would be removed from the modular home, Buhl stated: “We do two types of
    modular homes, yes. We can do an off-frame mod or an on-frame mod by the stipulations
    set in 2006. They have both. They’re both modular homes.” Price’s home was an “on-
    frame mod.” Buhl stated that the modular home’s dimensions were different from those
    of the double-wide mobile home: “One is 32 wide compared to 28 wide. And one is 76
    and one is 68 foot.” Buhl testified there were mobile homes with the same exterior façade
    as the modular home. Price’s home had already been built; such homes are built to order.
    Asked if Price’s home could be moved once it was placed on her lot, Buhl testified:
    Q. Mr. Buhl, if Ms. Price were to sell her lot and wish to move her home
    somewhere else, is it possible to move the home that she’s intending to
    purchase from one lot and place it on a new lot?
    A. She would not be able to move it, no. I -- can the house be moved? Yes.
    I mean --
    Q. Can it be moved --
    A. - once the axles and the -- okay, I’m sorry. Once the axles and the -- it’s
    on a permanent foundation once we get it there. So we would have to take it
    off of the permanent foundation to move the house.
    Q. Okay. It would be moved in the same manner that it’s moved to your lot
    after it’s constructed?
    A. Yes, ma’am.
    Q. Would the axles be reattached at that point and then pulled on the tractor
    that you mentioned before to relocate the home?
    A. After we removed the permanent foundation, yes, ma’am.
    Q. Okay. And what is this permanent foundation?
    A. There’s several options for permanent foundations. If you have -- we’ve
    got less than ten minutes to describe them, but I do block foundations. We
    can crane them onto the permanent foundations. I can set the permanent
    foundation around the house. I can attach the permanent foundation to the
    house. There’s all different types of permanent foundations, yes, and we’ve
    not decided on which particular permanent foundation we’re doing on this
    one. Does that help?
    Q. Yes. Thank you, Mr. Buhl.
    A. Okay.
    Q. Is it possible to also put a permanent foundation on a double-wide mobile
    home?
    A. Yes, ma’am.
    -3-
    Q. Mr. Buhl, is it fair to say that just as with double-wides, this two-piece
    structure that Ms. Price is wishing to place on her property is likewise
    mobile?
    A. Likewise mobile?
    Q. Uh-huh.
    A. Yes, ma’am.
    On cross-examination, Buhl testified that the home Price was going to purchase
    from him was a modular home, not a mobile home. Buhl was shown documents to the
    effect that this was a “regulated and constructed modular home.” Buhl stated that a
    modular home does not have a title. A modular home also is designed to be permanently
    affixed to a foundation. Buhl testified that a modular home was not designed to be easily
    transportable to different sites like a single-wide trailer or a mobile home. Buhl stated:
    Q. Okay. And some don’t even have a remaining chassis, but some do -- and
    I mean that I’m talking about the metal framing. I believe you told me earlier
    that on this particular home you keep the metal framing in there to maintain
    the integrity and strength of the home; is that correct?
    A. It’s my personal belief leaving the metal frame on the home makes the
    home more structurally sound but some prefer to take the frame off of the
    house.
    Q. Right.
    A. And it’s just -- it’s a preference to either one.
    Buhl stated that modular homes are regulated and dealt with separately from mobile
    homes in terms of construction, design, and qualifications with authorities. The modular
    home has a serial number, as well. On redirect-examination, Buhl testified:
    Q. Mr. Buhl, you had mentioned a serial number. Are all of these units given
    a serial number?
    A. Yes, ma’am.
    Q. Okay. You also testified that this home is not readily removable, can’t be
    readily removed. Is it accurate that you’ve testified that --
    A. It takes a professional to move it, yes. It’s not easily moved, no.
    Q. But it’s moved just as easily as a double-wide?
    A. Depending on the foundation.
    Q. So both the double-wide and the current structure both could have a
    permanent foundation, correct?
    A. Yes, ma’am.
    Q. Both have a frame?
    A. Yes, ma’am.
    -4-
    Q. And both can have the wheels and axles reattached?
    A. Yes, ma’am.
    Q. And both can be disassembled and transported in the same manner; is that
    accurate?
    A. Yes, ma’am.
    Q. So is it safe to say that the home that Ms. Price intends to place on her lot
    is just as movable and removable as a double-wide mobile home?
    A. That, like I said before, it all depends on what foundation we put on it.
    Q. If they have the same foundation -- with the same foundation, are they just
    as movable?
    A. Yes, ma’am.
    Q. Okay. You mentioned that you always recommend keeping the steel
    frame on these homes because --
    A. Yes, ma’am.
    Q. It gives extra support?
    A. Yes, ma’am.
    Q. Is that because they’re more -- made of inferior materials to a site-built
    home?
    A. No. They all have 2x4 instructions, eight 2x8 trusses, 16 on the center.
    So I mean as far as site-built homes -- basic plumbing, same shingles, same
    siding, same structure -- it’s just you’re putting it on a metal frame
    underneath with I-beams that if you put a site-built home out there you put I-
    frames down first before you put the trusses, it’s always going to make it
    more structurally sound.
    Q. So is the --
    A. That’s my opinion, my professional opinion.
    Q. Yeah, of course. So is the frame beneficial then to help transport the home
    --
    A. It’s the --
    Q. -- in keeping it secure?
    A. A little of both. I mean, you can put these houses on a trailer and move
    them, but the frame itself is strong enough to withstand that movement.
    Q. Okay. And is it accurate to say that you were not familiar one way or the
    other whether this home complies with the Act?
    A. What Act are you speaking of?
    Q. The Tennessee Modular Building Act. Are you capable of testifying as
    to whether this structure complies with that Act?
    A. Since I didn’t build the house and I didn’t set the standards, no, ma’am, I
    cannot. But I can just tell you when I order it from a manufacturer that builds
    them, they should meet those standards because that’s the way they build
    them.
    -5-
    Q. But you personally cannot say?
    A. I’m not an expert on that, no, ma’am.
    On recross-examination, Buhl stated that with the right person, “any house” in the
    subdivision could be transported on frames and axles whether they were “stick-built or
    not.”
    McKeehan testified next. McKeehan had lived in Fort Loudon Estates since 1985.
    McKeehan testified that the fair market value of her home was around $576,000.
    McKeehan believed Price’s modular home would affect the values of all of the homes in
    the subdivision. McKeehan stated:
    It’s -- all of the subdivision right now are what they call stick-built homes,
    homes that have been up-kept, and some of them are in the process of being
    extensively remodeled. And I just think that this type of home would not --
    would not be beneficial to the neighborhood.
    Before McKeehan sued Price, a letter was sent to Price discussing the subdivision’s
    covenants and restrictions. McKeehan stated there were no other mobile homes or modular
    homes in Fort Loudon Estates.
    On cross-examination, McKeehan stated she had seen the plans and specifications
    for Price’s new home. McKeehan considered it to be a double-wide trailer. McKeehan
    was pressed on why she held this view and whether the restrictive covenants forbade the
    modular home at issue:
    Q. Okay. Are you aware that this particular home that Ms. Price is
    purchasing is a Tennessee modular home?
    A. No.
    Q. You’re not aware of that?
    A. No.
    Q. Do you have any evidence that it is not a modular home?
    A. Your definition of modular home and my definition of modular home are
    two different things.
    Q. So let me reask the question: On your definition of a modular home, do
    you have any reason to believe that this one is not a modular home?
    A. No. It’s not a modular home as far as I am concerned.
    Q. What do you say a modular home is?
    A. A modular home is brought in and put in position by cranes and is usually
    more than one story. It’s usually two stories or several units, not two units.
    Q. And where do you get that information from?
    -6-
    A. Well, I get that information from the reading that I’ve done in the research
    that I’ve done on modular homes and manufactured homes.
    Q. What is your criticism of this particular structure? You said you’ve seen
    the plans. What is wrong with the house that you think is the problem?
    A. I think it’s a double-wide and therefore I think some of the products used
    to construct it are inferior.
    Q. How do you know that?
    A. Just by looking at the plans, by looking at the virtual tour of the home.
    Q. Okay. So you just think it’s an inferior constructed home; that’s your
    concern?
    A. Yes, sir.
    Q. Have you read the covenants and restrictions that are applicable to the
    subdivision?
    A. Yes, sir.
    Q. You’re familiar with them?
    A. Yes, sir.
    Q. Do you know what provisions are in there that discuss the quality of the
    construction of the homes?
    A. Yes. I don’t have that in front of me, but yes, I did read the quality of the
    homes.
    Q. Okay. Well, so are you aware of any provision, for example, in the
    covenants and restrictions that say the construction has to be of a certain type
    of materials and certain quality?
    A. There is a restriction on the size and that it can’t have a veneer on it and -
    - let’s see.
    Q. Well, let me see if this sounds familiar to you. It says that “No dwelling
    shall be permitted on any lot which shall have a ground floor area of the main
    structure, exclusive of one story open porches and garages, of less than 900
    square feet.” Does that sound right?
    A. Yes, sir.
    Q. So you can build a 900-square-foot mini-house in your subdivision; is that
    correct?
    A. It says of less than one-story dwelling of 900 square feet, which in 1959
    was a good size house.
    Q. Okay. That’s still the rule, right?
    A. Yes.
    Q. And then it says you can’t have any brick siding, but it has no restriction
    on the type of materials at all that can be used for the construction, does it?
    A. It says “inferior materials.”
    Q. You can’t have inferior materials. Do you know what that means?
    A. It just means that you can’t -- something that is not -- how can I explain it
    -7-
    to you? You couldn’t build a house and not put drywall in it. You couldn’t
    build a house and not put plumbing in it. You couldn’t build a house that
    doesn’t have a good basic structure to it or one that doesn’t have an adequate
    foundation --
    Q. Okay.
    A. -- or one that doesn’t have adequate electricity.
    Q. Okay.
    A. That’s inferior quality, to me.
    Q. Fair enough. But you could have an exposed foundation and you could
    make it out of any siding other than brick veneer. You could have a flat roof
    --
    A. It does not say that. It doesn’t say that you can have an exposed
    foundation.
    Q. It doesn’t say you can’t, does it?
    A. But it doesn’t say you can.
    Q. Okay. But these are restrictions. Does it say you can’t?
    A. No, sir, it doesn’t.
    ***
    Q. Is there a prohibition against having a hundred-foot antenna or five
    antennas in the front yard of a house in your neighborhood?
    A. Not to my knowledge.
    Q. How about junk cars or a tractor-trailer out front?
    A. I don’t think so, no.
    Q. How about a flat roof?
    A. I don’t think so, no.
    Q. How about a fence, a chain link fence or a blockade fence all the way
    around the perimeter?
    A. No.
    Q. How about chickens or pigs?
    A. We don’t have chickens or pigs.
    Q. They’re not prohibited, are they?
    A. No.
    Q. Do you agree that the homeowners have the ability to amend the covenants
    and restrictions?
    A. Yes, sir.
    Q. And that’s never been done?
    A. Because we’ve never felt the need.
    Q. But could have if you wanted to?
    A. Yes, sir, we could have if we wanted to.
    -8-
    Price moved for dismissal. The Trial Court found in favor of Price on all issues. In
    February 2021, the Trial Court entered its Order and Decree. The Trial Court stated:
    This matter was heard on the merits before the Honorable Frank [V.]
    Williams, III, Chancellor, via Zoom hearing on January 14, 2021, whereupon
    the Court was provided various exhibits introduced by the parties, heard the
    testimony of the Petitioner, Cathy McKeehan, and the witness, Tony Buhl,
    as a representative of Oakwood Homes, considered the arguments of counsel,
    the applicable statutory and case law and the record as a whole. The
    Petitioner presented the testimony of Ms. McKeehan, Mr. Buhl and the
    submission of various documents in evidence and then rested. Thereupon,
    the Respondent, through counsel, moved for a dismissal of the case, which
    the Court granted, finding that the applicable Covenants and Restrictions for
    Fort Loudon Estates subdivision of record in Book 66, Page 235 of the
    Register of Deeds Office for Loudon County, Tennessee — particularly the
    provisions against “Temporary Structures” — do not prohibit the Respondent
    from erecting on her lot in the subdivision as a residence her modular home
    as identified in the documents submitted by Respondent and as testified to
    by the witness, Tony Buhl. A…1
    ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED as follows:
    1. The Complaint of the Petitioner, Cathy McKeehan, is hereby
    dismissed.
    2. All Orders previously entered in this cause granting or extending
    injunctive relief to the Petitioner against the Respondent are dissolved and of
    no further effect. The Respondent may place, erect and retain on her lot in
    Fort Loudon Estates, the modular home she is purchasing.
    3. The attached transcript of the Court’s findings and rulings is
    incorporated herein and made a part of this Order.
    4. Any claim the Respondent, Katie Price, may have upon the
    Petitioner’s surety injunction bond is reserved.
    5. The clerk’s court costs are taxed against the Petitioner, Cathy
    McKeehan.
    (Footnote added).
    Price thereafter filed her Motion for Recovery Under Injunction Bond, stating in
    part: “[T]he Respondent requests that she be awarded a judgment against the Principal and
    1
    At this point in the Trial Court’s order, a line was crossed out and the following words were handwritten
    and initialed by the Chancellor: “The findings of fact and conclusions of law are a part of the transcript and
    not the Order or Judgment.” Neither party raises as an issue the sufficiency of the Trial Court’s findings.
    -9-
    Surety under the Injunction Bond in the amount of $5,000.00, jointly and severally, for her
    costs and damages or pursuant to TCA§ 29-23-104 for the wrongful restraint and injunction
    against her.” For her part, McKeehan filed a motion to alter, amend, or set aside the Trial
    Court’s judgment. In March 2021, the Trial Court heard the outstanding motions. At this
    hearing, Price testified to her damages. In April 2021, the Trial Court entered an order
    denying McKeehan’s motion to alter, amend, or set aside its judgment. The Trial Court
    also entered an order on the injunction bond, stating in part: “[T]he Court finds that the
    Respondent’s claim for attorney’s fees and additional transportation costs is not sustained,
    but the claims for loss of use and additional lot rent are sustained, which amounts exceed
    the $5,000.00 limit of the bond.” The Trial Court ordered judgment in favor of Price in the
    amount of $5,000. McKeehan timely appealed to this Court.
    Discussion
    Although not stated exactly as such, McKeehan raises the following issues on
    appeal: 1) whether the Trial Court erred in interpreting the Fort Loudon Estates covenants
    and restrictions as not prohibiting the modular home Price wants to put on her lot and 2) if
    the Trial Court erred as to the first issue, whether the Trial Court should be directed to
    enjoin Price from placing the modular structure or any other temporary residential structure
    on her lot and to set aside the $5,000 injunction bond awarded to Price.
    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). Regarding how we are to construe restrictive covenants,
    the Tennessee Supreme Court has stated:
    [B]ecause such restrictive covenants are in derogation of the right to free use
    and enjoyment of property, Tennessee courts construe them strictly. Hughes
    [v. New Life Dev. Corp.], 387 S.W.3d [453] at 481 [(Tenn. 2012)] (citing
    Williams v. Fox, 
    219 S.W.3d 319
    , 324 (Tenn. 2007); Arthur v. Lake Tansi
    Vill., Inc., 
    590 S.W.2d 923
    , 927 (Tenn. 1979)). Thus, “if the right to enforce
    the covenant as to other property is doubtful such right will be denied.” Shea
    v. Sargent, 
    499 S.W.2d 871
    , 874 (Tenn. 1973) (quoting S. Advert. Co. v.
    Sherman, 
    43 Tenn.App. 323
    , 
    308 S.W.2d 491
    , 493 (1957)). Similarly, we
    have stated that any doubt concerning the applicability of a restrictive
    covenant will be resolved against the restriction and in favor of the property’s
    unrestricted use. Hughes, 387 S.W.3d at 481 (citing Massey [v. R.W. Graf,
    Inc.], 277 S.W.3d [902] at 908 [(Tenn. Ct. App. 2008)]); Parks v.
    -10-
    Richardson, 
    567 S.W.2d 465
    , 467-68 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1977)). Likewise,
    when the terms of a restrictive covenant can be construed in more than one
    way, courts must resolve any ambiguity against the party seeking to enforce
    the restriction and in a manner that advances the unrestricted use of the
    property. 
    Id.
     (citing Williams, 
    219 S.W.3d at 324
    ).
    Phillips v. Hatfield, 
    624 S.W.3d 464
    , 475 (Tenn. 2021).
    In Williams v. Fox, the Tennessee Supreme Court reversed the Court of Appeals and
    the trial court’s holding that language in a subdivision’s restrictive covenants against
    temporary buildings like trailers and mobile homes applied to modular homes, stating: “We
    reverse, holding that ‘modular homes’ are distinct types of structures from ‘mobile homes’
    and ‘trailers’ and because the restrictive covenant did not expressly prohibit ‘modular
    homes,’ the courts cannot expand the plain wording of the covenant to include the
    defendant’s modular home.” 
    219 S.W.3d 319
    , 321 (Tenn. 2007). The Tennessee Supreme
    Court explained:
    Unlike a mobile home or house trailer, a modular home is not built on
    a permanent chassis, and for that reason, it is not able to be readily moved to
    another location once installed or erected. Moreover, while mobile homes
    are titled as vehicles, modular homes are not. Once delivered and erected on
    the property, they become part of the property as a permanent improvement
    to the real estate similar to a “site-built” home.
    The Oma Lee Williams subdivision’s restrictive covenant does not
    define what is meant by “mobile home” or “trailer.” However, the covenant
    was recorded on January 11, 1995, well after modular homes were
    specifically defined and regulated by statute as something distinct from
    mobile homes and trailers. Additionally, at the time the covenant was
    recorded, the difference between mobile homes and modular homes was
    already being recognized and addressed in restrictive covenants for nearby
    subdivisions. The following are excerpts from the recorded restrictive
    covenants containing reference to modular homes, along with their date of
    record: “No roundettes, modular or mobile homes shall be permitted on the
    Property.” (Nov. 4, 1993); “No mobile homes, doublewides, trailers, modular
    homes, shacks or tents shall be used as either temporary or permanent
    residential or non-residential structures on any lot or parcel.” (Nov. 5, 1993);
    “Mobile homes, modular or pre-fabricated homes shall not be permitted.”
    (Nov. 8, 1993); “All trailers, mobile homes and/or modular homes are
    expressly prohibited.” (April 13, 1994); “Mobile homes and/or modular
    homes are expressly prohibited . . . .” (Oct. 31, 1994); “All trailers, motor
    -11-
    homes, mobile homes, and/or modular homes are expressly prohibited.”
    (Nov. 21 1994). Unlike the language of these restrictive covenants, however,
    the Oma Lee Williams subdivision’s restrictive covenant does not
    specifically refer to or make mention of modular homes.
    ***
    [P]ast cases have tended to broadly construe restrictions against “trailers”
    and “mobile homes” on the basis that such a broad construction was
    consistent “with the desire of developers to prevent property owners from
    placing residential units that were constructed off-site onto subdivision lots.”
    Hicks v. Cox, 
    978 S.W.2d 544
    , 548 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998). However, the
    present case is the first case to involve a modular home. The prior cases,
    including the Apollo Shores [Cmty. & Maint., Inc. v. Lynn, No. E-1999-
    00946-COA-R3-CV, 
    2000 WL 796126
     (Tenn. Ct. App. June 21, 2000)] case
    which was relied on by the trial court, all dealt with mobile homes built on
    permanent chassis and titled and registered pursuant to the Motor Vehicle
    Title and Registration Law. See Hicks, 
    978 S.W.2d at 546-47
    ; Beacon Hills
    [Homeowners Ass’n, Inc. v. Palmer Props., Inc.], 911 S.W.2d [736] at 738
    [(Tenn. Ct. App. 1995)]; Albert v. Orwige, 
    731 S.W.2d 63
    , 64 (Tenn. Ct.
    App. 1987); Apollo Shores, 
    2000 WL 796126
    , at *3.
    Williams, 
    219 S.W.3d at 323-24
    .
    After reviewing certain cases pertaining to restrictive covenants against temporary
    structures, the Williams Court concluded:
    In all the aforementioned cases, the restrictive covenants were
    recorded prior to the Tennessee Modular Building Act of 1985, which
    specifically defined modular homes as something very different and distinct
    from trailers or mobile homes. Had the developers of the Oma Lee Williams
    subdivision wished to prohibit modular homes in addition to mobile homes
    and trailers, such language should have been included. Because modular
    homes are defined by statute as different structures and because they have
    been recognized as different structures in other surrounding subdivisions at
    the time in question, we cannot expand the restrictive covenant to prohibit
    that which it does not explicitly state is prohibited.
    Williams, 
    219 S.W.3d at 326
    . A “modular building unit” is defined by statute as follows:
    “Modular building unit” means a structural unit, or preassembled component
    -12-
    unit, including the necessary electrical, plumbing, heating, ventilating and
    other service systems, manufactured off-site and transported to the point of
    use for installation or erection, with or without other specified components,
    as a finished building. “Modular building unit” does not apply to temporary
    structures used exclusively for construction purposes, nonresidential farm
    buildings, or ready-removables that are not modular structures[.]
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 68-126-303(8) (2013).
    McKeehan argues that Williams is not controlling because it dealt with a restriction
    recorded after the 1985 enactment of the Tennessee Modular Building Act; the restrictions
    of the present case were recorded in 1959. McKeehan argues further that Williams did not
    overrule a long line of Tennessee cases broadly interpreting restrictive covenants against
    temporary structures. McKeehan cites among other cases the 2016 case of Napier v.
    Howard from the Tennessee Court of Appeals, in which we concluded:
    The Supreme Court has yet to hold against a broad construction of the
    terms “mobile home” and “trailer.” On the contrary, in Williams v. Fox, the
    High Court openly acknowledged how the Court of Appeals had deviated
    from the general principle that restrictive covenants are to be strictly
    construed when analyzing restrictions on “mobile homes” and “trailers.” 
    219 S.W.3d at 324
    . In its opinion, the Supreme Court discussed the cases we
    have previously mentioned and did not overturn a single one of our holdings,
    which were all predicated on a broad interpretation of “mobile home” and
    “trailer.”
    ***
    The Supreme Court has subsequently reinforced the view of mobile homes
    and trailers as short-term and transportable residences by saying, “[t]he very
    nature of a . . . trailer park containing house trailers and mobile homes give[s]
    rise to the assumption of transient occupancy[.]” Smith Cnty. Reg’l Planning
    Comm’n v. Hiwassee Vill. Mobile Home Park, LLC, 
    304 S.W.3d 302
    , 315
    (Tenn. 2010). Moreover, mobile homes and trailers are both built on
    permanent chassis, thus making them easily capable of being transported
    elsewhere. Williams, 
    219 S.W.3d at 323
    . When taking all of these facts into
    account, it appears to us that a restrictive covenant barring “single wide
    mobile homes” would evidence a clear intent to prohibit temporary housing
    from occupying lots in the subdivision. In our view, such a prohibition would
    naturally include the “camper trailers” at issue in this case, a conclusion
    further supported by the fact that Howard rents out her camper trailer sites
    -13-
    on a month-to-month basis. Accordingly, we conclude the trial court was
    correct in holding that the restrictive covenant against “single wide mobile
    homes” would extend to “camper trailers.”
    Napier v. Howard, 
    516 S.W.3d 477
    , 482 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2016).
    In response, Price argues that Williams is conclusive authority; that the Williams
    Court clearly distinguished modular homes from mobile homes or other such temporary
    structures; and that the Williams Court did not limit its holding to covenants and restrictions
    adopted after enactment of the Tennessee Modular Building Act. According to Price, the
    Fort Loudon Estates covenants and restrictions do not prohibit her modular home.
    To recap, the restriction at issue, Item Four of the Fort Loudon Estates covenants
    and restrictions, provides: “4. Temporary Structures: No structure of a temporary character,
    trailer, basement, tent, shack, garage, barn or other outbuilding shall be used on any lot at
    any time as a residence either temporarily or permanently.” In her brief, McKeehan states
    that “[t]he covenant’s language shows an express intent to prohibit ‘temporary structures’,
    including ‘trailers.’” McKeehan points out that Price’s modular home has many of the
    same features of a mobile home or trailer, which she contends would plainly be barred by
    the restriction. McKeehan argues further that Fort Loudon Estates’ covenants and
    restrictions did not need to specifically include the term “modular home” as the term was
    not defined for another 26 years after the subdivision’s covenants and restrictions were
    recorded. We agree with McKeehan that the precise term for a structure need not
    necessarily be spelled out to fall under a restriction against temporary structures. The term
    “modular home” may not have occurred to the drafters of the covenants and restrictions in
    1959. Nevertheless, while we are to give effect to restrictive covenants, we are not to
    expand them. The dispositive issue is whether Price’s modular home is, in fact, a
    temporary structure prohibited by the restrictions of Fort Loudon Estates. The Trial Court
    found it is not.
    With respect to whether Price’s modular home is a temporary structure, the Trial
    Court had the benefit of Buhl’s testimony, among other evidence. Buhl testified, to wit:
    that while he personally could not state whether it complies with the Tennessee Modular
    Building Act of 1985, Price’s home is a “regulated and constructed” modular home rather
    than a mobile home; that a modular home is designed to be permanently affixed to a
    foundation; and that a modular home is not designed to be easily transportable to different
    sites like a single-wide trailer or mobile home. Buhl acknowledged that Price’s home could
    be moved after it is put into place, although not easily. However, Buhl also testified that,
    in principle, any house in the subdivision could be moved. In addition, the Trial Court had
    the benefit of documentary evidence, including the Compliance Certificate and Building
    Plans, the Data Plate, and the Spec Sheet. As explained by the Tennessee Supreme Court
    -14-
    in Williams and, in keeping with the Tennessee Modular Building Act, Tenn. Code Ann.
    §§ 68-126-301, et seq., a modular home is not the equivalent of a mobile home or trailer;
    it is of a more permanent nature. We are not at liberty to ignore this distinction.2
    The evidence at trial, summarized above, reflects that Price’s home is a modular
    home. It was designed and intended to be permanent. It is not easily movable once affixed.
    While manufactured off-site, the record reflects nonetheless that Price’s modular home is
    meant to be rooted in one place indefinitely, as would be true for any other home built in
    the subdivision. It would become, as our Supreme Court in Williams described, “part of
    the property as a permanent improvement to the real estate similar to a ‘site-built’ home.”
    
    219 S.W.3d at 323
    . Meanwhile, the record is bereft of evidence that Price’s modular home
    was designed or intended to be a temporary structure. There is nothing in the record to
    indicate that Price’s modular home is designed or intended for transient occupancy or ready
    transportability, characteristics mentioned in Napier as associated with mobile homes
    and/or camper trailers. The fact that Price’s home may superficially resemble a mobile
    home in some ways does not make it one, nor does it make it a temporary structure. If Fort
    Loudon Estates homeowners wished to prohibit modular homes in their subdivision, they
    could have amended their covenants and restrictions to do so. However, they did not. The
    evidence does not preponderate against the Trial Court’s finding that Price’s modular home
    is not a temporary structure. We hold, as did the Trial Court, that the Fort Loudon Estates
    covenants and restrictions do not prohibit Price’s modular home. McKeehan’s second
    issue is pretermitted. We affirm the judgment of the Trial Court.
    Conclusion
    The judgment of the Trial Court is affirmed, and this cause is remanded to the Trial
    Court for collection of the costs below. The costs on appeal are assessed against the
    Appellant, Cathy McKeehan, and her surety, if any.
    ______________________________________
    D. MICHAEL SWINEY, CHIEF JUDGE
    2
    We recognize that, in theory, a structure could merely be labeled a modular home and not actually fit the
    definition of one. However, the evidence in the record on appeal reflects that Price’s home is a bona fide
    modular home, and as such, comes under the holding of Williams. In her reply brief, McKeehan
    acknowledges that the home Price wants to buy is a modular home.
    -15-