Charles Stinson v. David E. Mensel ( 2019 )


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  •                                                                                             05/17/2019
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT NASHVILLE
    April 3, 2019 Session
    CHARLES STINSON, ET AL. v. DAVID E. MENSEL, ET AL.
    Appeal from the Chancery Court for Hickman County
    No. 12-CV-4872    Deanna Johnson, Chancellor
    No. M2017-02497-COA-R3-CV
    Charles Stinson and Glenda Stinson (“the Stinsons”) appeal the November 17, 2017 order
    of the Chancery Court for Hickman County (“the Trial Court”) expanding the injunctive
    relief granted in our Opinion in Stinson v. Mensel, No. M2016-00624-COA-R3-CV, 
    2017 WL 2972219
    (Tenn. Ct. App. July 12, 2017), no appl. perm. appeal filed. We find and
    hold that the Trial Court lacked the authority to modify or revise the injunction entered
    by this Court in the first appeal of this case. We, therefore, vacate the portion of the Trial
    Court’s November 17, 2017 order modifying the injunction.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court
    Vacated, in part; Affirmed, in part; Case Remanded
    D. MICHAEL SWINEY, C.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which RICHARD H.
    DINKINS and W. NEAL MCBRAYER, JJ., joined.
    E. Covington Johnston, Jr., Franklin, Tennessee, for the appellants, Charles Stinson and
    Glenda Stinson.
    Allston Vander Horst, Centerville, Tennessee, for the appellees, David E. Mensel, Mary
    Ford (Anne) Mensel, Michael Sabol, and Christine A. Sabol.
    OPINION
    Background
    This is the second time this case has been before us on appeal. This Court issued
    its Opinion in the first appeal in July of 2017. Stinson v. Mensel, No. M2016-00624-
    COA-R3-CV, 
    2017 WL 2972219
    (Tenn. Ct. App. July 12, 2017), no appl. perm. appeal
    filed (“Stinson I”). By way of background, we quote liberally from our Opinion in
    Stinson I:
    Appellants, Charles Stinson and his wife, Glenda Stinson
    (collectively “the Stinsons”) initiated this litigation against their neighbors,
    Appellees, David E. Mensel and his wife Mary F. Mensel (collectively “the
    Mensels”) and Michael Sabol and his wife, Christine Sabol (collectively
    “the Sabols”) on October 25, 2012. The Stinsons own land in Hickman
    County, Tennessee and have a home on that land. The Stinsons’ land is
    subject to an easement, which is a 50-foot non-exclusive easement for
    utilities and for ingress and egress to certain neighboring properties (the
    “Easement”). The deed attached to the Stinsons’ complaint indicates that
    the Stinsons’ property line is the center line of the Easement. The Mensels
    and the Sabols live on land accessed by the Easement and use a road built
    on the Easement as the driveway to their homes. This road/driveway
    within the Easement is known as Captain Spence Ridge Road. The
    Stinsons do not actually use Captain Spence Ridge Road as the driveway to
    their home. Captain Spence Ridge Road was built so that it is in the center
    of the Easement. The original width of Captain Spence Ridge Road was
    approximately eight feet wide, but it has been widened over the years. The
    widened road is still within the boundaries of the Easement. Many of the
    landowners who use the Easement are parties to a certain contract that
    governs their respective responsibilities regarding the maintenance and
    improvements to the road within the Easement (the “Driveway
    Maintenance Agreement”). The Stinsons and their predecessors in interest
    chose not to enter into the Driveway Maintenance Agreement.
    The controversy in this case appears to have begun in December
    2008, when Mr. Stinson came to believe that the Sabols had stolen some of
    his chickens that wandered over to the Sabol property. Mrs. Sabol received
    a handwritten letter from Mr. Stinson in her mailbox stating the following:
    Your [sic] a theft [sic]. My checken [sic] have made it over
    to your house. You never came and told me so you caught
    2
    them and keep [sic] them now I’m pisst [sic]. Your [sic] not
    a good neighbor and your [sic] on my [s—t] list.
    Apparently angry over the chicken incident, the Stinsons thereafter began
    to harass the Sabols and the Mensels. The Stinsons’ behavior that followed
    ranged from petty to outright dangerous. Mr. Stinson began to constantly
    put things in or around Captain Spence Ridge Road and otherwise within
    the Easement. He placed debris in the Easement on several occasions, as
    well as fence posts that were apparently designed to keep people from
    driving on the Easement. When the Mensels attempted to put survey tape
    on the posts to warn their houseguests of the presence of the posts, Mr.
    Stinson promptly removed the tape. Mr. Stinson also dug a ditch in the
    roadway that required drivers to drive more on the Sabols’ side of the road.
    Then, when a flood came in May 2010, the ditch forced unusually high
    water and mud down the driveway, resulting in a considerable amount of
    erosion.
    There were also numerous altercations and screaming matches
    between the Stinsons and the Defendants. The police were called on
    several occasions. When the Mensels went to speak with Mr. Stinson about
    removing the fence posts, Mr. Stinson said that he had been to the
    courthouse and had taken steps to reduce the size of the Easement. This
    was not true. During the discussion, Mr. Stinson became loud, threatening
    and intimidating. Mr. Stinson was often described during the trial as
    aggressive and hostile. In 2009, Mr. Sabol was clearing weeds on Captain
    Spence Ridge Road when Mr. Stinson became angry and told him he could
    not remove the weeds. Mr. Stinson then cut brush and left the brush on
    Captain Spence Ridge Road. He subsequently erected a sign telling the
    Sabols to stay on their side of the Easement. Those passing through the
    Easement would routinely have to drive around the brush put in place by
    Mr. Stinson in order to prevent it from scraping their vehicles. Mr. Sabol
    frequently removed the brush, and Mr. Stinson would replace it. On one
    occasion, Mr. Mensel was working on the Easement when Mr. Stinson
    attempted to call out to him and talk to him. Mr. Mensel was wearing
    protective earmuffs and could not hear Mr. Stinson. Mr. Stinson apparently
    thought Mr. Mensel was intentionally ignoring him, so Mr. Stinson picked
    up a large rock and began following Mr. Mensel down the road. The
    situation was eventually diffused when Mr. Sabol stepped out into the road
    so that Mr. Stinson could note his presence. Shortly thereafter, Mrs.
    Stinson arrived at the Sabols’ home and began to verbally accost Mrs.
    Sabol.
    3
    More chaos followed. Mr. Stinson continued his antics of throwing
    brush onto the Easement, and at one point Mrs. Stinson went so far as to
    throw her body in front of a bulldozer that the Mensels had hired to grade
    the Easement. The police were called again and again. These theatrics
    culminated in a lawsuit filed by the Stinsons against the Mensels and
    Sabols. On October 25, 2012, the Stinsons filed a complaint against the
    Mensels and Sabols claiming that they had caused the easement to be
    graded and bulldozed, encroached onto the Stinsons’ property, and made
    verbal threats and used intimidation in order to prevent the Stinsons from
    coming onto or using the easement. The Mensels and Sabols filed an
    answer and counter-complaint on December 19, 2012. They denied making
    any threats or intimidating the Stinsons and alleged that the opposite was
    actually true.
    The case was tried before a judge sitting without a jury on August 10
    and 11, 2015. On January 6, 2016, the trial court entered an extensive
    memorandum and order dismissing all of the Stinsons’ claims against the
    Sabols and Mensels and holding the Stinsons liable to the Sabols and
    Mensels for nuisance, invasion of privacy, and intentional infliction of
    emotional distress. The court further enjoined the Stinsons from forever
    “using, driving on, damaging, or interfering with Captain Spence Ridge
    Road, or the maintenance of the same,” and from harassing the Mensels and
    Sabols. On February 5, 2016, the Stinsons filed a motion to alter or amend
    the trial court’s judgment, alleging error in some of the court’s factual and
    legal conclusions, as well as asserting that the trial court was “without
    authority to virtually divest the Plaintiffs from the ability to use or be upon
    their property that is part of the subject easement.” The Mensels and
    Sabols also filed a post-judgment motion to clarify and amend the trial
    court’s January 6, 2016 order, but only to generally correct a misspelling
    and some other inadvertent errors. On February 25, 2016, the trial court
    approved the corrections suggested by the Mensels and Sabols and entered
    an amended memorandum and order, which republished the original order
    with the changes incorporated. On March 6, 2016 the trial court denied the
    Stinsons’ motion to alter or amend. The Stinsons timely appealed the trial
    court’s judgment to this Court.
    Stinson I, 
    2017 WL 2972219
    , at **1-2.
    In Stinson I, this Court affirmed the Trial Court’s judgment “that the Stinsons are
    liable to the Mensels and Sabols for nuisance,” reversed the Trial Court’s judgment that
    4
    the Stinsons had committed the tort of invasion of privacy, reversed the Trial Court’s
    judgment that the Stinsons were liable for intentional infliction of emotional distress, and
    vacated a portion of the Trial Court’s injunction. Stinson I, 
    2017 WL 2972219
    , at *5.
    Specifically, with respect to the Trial Court’s injunction, this Court found and held:
    To be clear, the Stinsons’ decision to not enter into the Driveway
    Maintenance Agreement does not curb their interest in the property or their
    ability to lawfully use and maintain the Easement. By the same token, the
    Stinsons cannot prohibit the dominant tenements from coming upon or
    making repairs to the Easement that are reasonably necessary for its express
    use.
    ***
    After finding that the Stinsons are liable to the Mensels and Sabols
    for nuisance, invasion of privacy, and intentional infliction of emotional
    distress, the trial court imposed the following injunction:
    [T]he Stinsons are forever prohibited from coming onto,
    using, driving on, damaging, or interfering with Captain
    Spence Ridge Road for the entire 50-foot width of the
    easement, or the maintenance of same. The Stinsons are also
    enjoined from harassing the Mensels and Sabols, or
    interfering with their personal enjoyment of Captain Spence
    Ridge Road. Any reference in this Order to Captain Spence
    Ridge Road is a reference to the entire 50-foot wide easement
    known as Captain Spence Ridge Road.
    Portions of this injunction essentially divest the Stinsons of any use
    or interest in their property that is subject to the Easement, prohibiting even
    lawful activity thereon. “Injunctions, however, are drastic remedies that
    should be used only if no other adequate relief is available.” West v. Luna,
    No. 01A01–9707–CH–00281, 
    1998 WL 467106
    , at *5-6 (Tenn. Ct. App.
    Aug. 12, 1998) (citing Butts v. City of South Fulton, 
    565 S.W.2d 879
    , 882
    (Tenn. Ct. App. 1977). In general, “[i]njunctions will not issue merely to
    relieve the fears or apprehensions of an applicant.”               Wallace v.
    Andersonville Docks, Inc., 
    489 S.W.2d 532
    , 535 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1972)
    (internal citations omitted). “They should be used sparingly if the nuisance
    is being created by an otherwise lawful activity, and they should be limited
    to the acts causing the nuisance.” West, 
    1998 WL 467106
    , at *5-6.
    5
    Easement rights are not so great that they completely deprive the
    owner of the servient estate of any use or enjoyment of his or her property.
    The rights of neither party are “absolute, irrelative, and
    uncontrolled, but are so limited, each by the other, that there
    may be a due and reasonable enjoyment of both the easement
    and the servient estate.” Carroll v. Belcher, 
    1999 WL 58597
    ,
    at *1 (Tenn. Ct. App. Feb.9, 1999) (quoting 10 TENNESSEE
    JURISPRUDENCE, Easements § 6 (1994)). The rights of
    each party must be examined in the context of the entire
    situation and should be balanced so as to protect the rightful
    use by each party of his or her interest. Rogers v. Roach, No.
    M2011–00794–COA–R3–CV, 
    2012 WL 2337616
    , at *8-9
    (Tenn. Ct. App. June 19, 2012).
    It is well settled that, because an easement is limited to
    the purposes for which it was created, an owner of an
    easement “cannot materially increase the burden of it upon
    the servient estate or impose thereon a new and additional
    burden.” Adams v. 
    Winnett, 156 S.W.2d at 357
    (quoting 17
    AM. JUR. 996, sec.98); Shew v. Baugus, 227 S.W.3d [569,
    576–77 (Tenn. Ct. App. Feb. 20, 2007) ].
    ....
    The owners of the land under and surrounding an easement,
    the servient estate, while he may use his property in any
    manner consistent with the existence of the easement, ...
    cannot make any alterations in his property by which the
    enjoyment of the easement will be materially interfered with
    and has no legal right to interfere with an easement holder’s
    enjoyment and use of the easement. Charles v. Latham, No.
    E2003–00852–COA–R3–CV, 
    2004 WL 1898261
    (Tenn. Ct.
    App. Aug. 25, 2004)(citing Cooper v. Polos, 
    898 S.W.2d 237
    ,
    242 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1995)). See also 28A C.J.S. Easements §
    175 (1996).
    Keenan v. Fodor, No. M2012–00330–COA–R3–CV, 
    2014 WL 793713
    , at
    *7 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2014).
    6
    To the extent the trial court issued an injunction that prohibits the
    Stinsons from accessing property they own, albeit servient to the Easement,
    such an injunction was improper. The Stinsons cannot be “forever
    prohibited from coming onto, using, [or] driving on” property they own.
    Since a portion of their property is, in fact, a servient estate, they can be
    enjoined from damaging or interfering with the Easement, including the use
    or maintenance of the Easement. Accordingly, we vacate the trial court’s
    injunction with respect to the Stinsons’ access and use of the servient
    estate.
    Stinson I, 
    2017 WL 2972219
    , at *4, **8-9.
    While the appeal in Stinson I was pending before this Court, the Mensels and
    Sabols filed a petition for criminal contempt seeking, among other things, to have the
    Stinsons held in contempt for allegedly violating the Trial Court’s injunction. After this
    Court entered its Order in Stinson I, the Mensels and Sabols filed another motion seeking
    to amend their motion for criminal contempt requesting “appropriate relief . . . be
    fashioned to protect the Mensels and Sabols from what the Court of Appeals found as
    Stinson’s ‘. . . acts causing nuisance.’” The Mensels and Sabols withdrew the contempt
    charges but sought to have the Trial Court enter a new permanent injunction.
    A hearing was held on Defendants’ motion, and the Trial Court heard testimony.
    David Mensel testified that since the Trial Court entered its February 25, 2016 order that
    there were “primarily petty, instances of brush piles along the roadway, of stringing up
    surveyor’s tape, just things that were ugly.” Mr. Mensel testified that a few months
    earlier someone had shot his daughter’s cat. Mr. Mensel also testified about things that
    happened after the trial but before the Trial Court entered its February 25, 2016 order.
    Christine Ann Sabol testified that since the trial she has not been harassed, but she stated
    that her husband has. Michael Sabol testified that he has seen Mr. Stinson walking in the
    woods on his own side of the property and looking in the direction of the house of the
    Mensel’s daughter. Mary Ford Mensel testified: “I don’t think [Mr. Stinson] is going to
    physically harm [my daughter]. I don’t think he is going to do that, but I know you can’t
    back down to a bully.” Ms. Mensel testified that Mr. Stinson has not suddenly appeared
    out of nowhere on the easement since the “last court date.” She agreed: “There has been
    considerable improvement” in the situation. Ms. Mensel also stated:
    I would like to think that the Stinsons would like to put this behind
    them as much as we want to put it behind us. I would like to think that they
    would not use this as a way to continue harassing us. I just would like to
    think that they are that good of people that they would try to do that. I
    know particularly [Ms. Stinson] will not harass me.
    7
    Charles E. Stinson denied shooting the Mensels’ daughter’s cat and claimed he has not
    shot a gun since the trial. He testified that when he was in the woods he was looking at
    cameras that the Defendants had installed, not at the Mensels’ daughter’s house.
    After the hearing, the Trial Court entered its order on November 17, 2017 finding
    and holding, inter alia:
    The parties further came before the court upon the request of the Mensels
    and Sabols to review the Court’s February 25, 2016 Amended Order in
    light of the Court of Appeals Order of July 12, 2017, and to determine what
    relief, if any, is still part of the court’s original Order and what additional
    remedies should be imposed, if any, to protect the Mensels and Sabols from
    the clear nuisance of the Stinsons, which nuisance was upheld by the Court
    of Appeals. David E. Mensel and Mary Ford (Anne) Mensel, Michael
    Sabol and Christine A. Sabol, and Charles Stinson all testified.
    ***
    Based on the entire record in this matter, including the Court of Appeals
    Order, the Stinsons’ Motion to Dismiss, and the testimony of witnesses, the
    Court finds that the Mensels and Sabols are entitled to the following
    injunctive relief.
    The Court permanently enjoins the Stinsons from directly or
    indirectly harassing, intimidating, threatening, intentionally disturbing or
    annoying, confronting, threatening, cursing, stalking, or intentionally
    following Mensels and Sabols and are further enjoined from disturbing
    their quiet and peaceful enjoyment and use of Captain Spence Ridge Road
    and their property on Captain Spence Ridge Road. The Stinsons are
    permanently enjoined from harming or damaging any of the Mensels’ and
    Sabols’ pets, vehicles or other personal or real property. The Stinsons are
    further enjoined from interfering with or damaging Captain Spence Ridge
    Road. They are further permanently enjoined from intentionally creating
    noxious smells, defacing or trashing said easement, or endangering or
    impeding travelers on the easement by placement of trees, limbs, rocks,
    brush, eggs, dead animals or any other objects whether on Captain Spence
    Ridge Road or on any other part of the 50-foot easement for the purpose of
    harassing the Mensels and Sabols. The Stinsons are further enjoined from
    interfering with the Mensels and Sabols and their agents maintenance of
    Captain Spence Ridge Road including that part of the easement within 15
    8
    feet from the center of the roadway which the court finds is appropriate in
    order that the roadway itself can be maintained. Said maintenance shall
    include but not be limited to the Mensels’ and Sabols’, and their agents’,
    right to mow, weed eat, remove rocks, or eyesores intentionally placed by
    the Stinsons. The Mensels and Sabols shall have a right to repair, maintain
    and improve the roadway in order for the Mensels and Sabols to keep
    Captain Spence Ridge Road as a functional year round easement.
    Because of the overwhelming evidence in the record of the Stinsons’
    nuisance, much of it evidenced by their intentional damage and obstruction
    to the Captain Spence Ridge Roadway, as partially identified by the Court
    of Appeals, and because they have never done anything to “maintain” or
    improve said roadway, but have committed many acts to damage it, the
    Stinsons are hereby permanently enjoined from the “maintenance”,
    improvement or repair of the Captain Spence Ridge Roadway or the land
    within 15 feet from the center of the roadway. The Stinsons are further
    permanently enjoined from doing anything on or in relationship to the
    roadway that would alter or interfere with its present width, condition, or
    use, whether temporarily or permanently.
    The Stinsons appeal the Trial Court’s November 17, 2017 order to this Court.
    Discussion
    The Stinsons raise three issues on appeal, which we quote:
    1. The Trial Court erred in significantly expanding the injunctive relief
    against the Plaintiffs on remand by permanently enjoining the Plaintiffs-
    Stinsons, directly or indirectly, harassing, intentionally threatening,
    intentionally disturbing or annoying, confronting, threatening, cursing,
    stalking, or intentionally following the Mensels and Sabols, harming or
    damaging any of the Mensels’ pets, vehicles, or other personal or real
    property, interfering with or damaging Captain Spence Ridge Road,
    intentionally creating noxious smells, defacing or trashing easement, and
    endangering or impeding travelers on the easement by placement of trees,
    limbs, rocks, brush, eggs, dead animals on the easement.
    2. The Court erred in permanently enjoining the Plaintiffs from the
    maintenance, improvement or repair of the Captain Spence Ridge
    Roadway, or the land within fifteen (15’) feet from the center of the
    roadway.
    9
    3. The Court erred in ordering the Plaintiffs to pay damages and costs of the
    original trial previously ordered by the Trial Court.
    The first two issues concern the Trial Court’s ordering additional injunctive relief
    against the Stinsons. In their brief on appeal, the Mensels and Sabols argue that this
    Court remanded the case to the Trial Court in Stinson I, and that “[o]nce an Appellate
    Court remands a case to the trial court, the trial court has every right to hold hearings and
    enter orders and when appropriate, ‘enlarge relief’, provided there is a factual and legal
    basis for that relief, and that it does not violate or undermine the Appellate Court’s
    holding in its remand Order of July 12, 2017.”
    To begin, the Mensels and Sabols are incorrect in their assertion that this Court
    remanded this case to the Trial Court for further proceedings. In Stinson I, this Court
    remanded the case to the Trial Court solely for collection of the costs below. We did not
    remand the case for any further proceedings or determinations by the Trial Court beyond
    collection of the costs.
    Additionally, the Trial Court lacked the power to change in any manner this
    Court’s injunction. To do so would undermine our Opinion, a situation this Court
    discussed in Duke v. Duke stating:
    [T]he trial court had a duty not only to effectuate its own prior orders but
    also to effectuate this Court’s decision upon remand. As this Court has
    previously explained:
    After a case has been appealed, a trial court does not
    reacquire jurisdiction over the case until it receives a mandate
    from the appellate court. Once the mandate reinvests the trial
    court’s jurisdiction over a case, the case stands in the same
    posture it did before the appeal except insofar as the trial
    court’s judgment has been changed or modified by the
    appellate court. Raht v. Southern Ry., 
    215 Tenn. 485
    , 497,
    
    387 S.W.2d 781
    , 786 (1965). The appellate court’s opinion
    becomes the law of the case, Gill v. Godwin, 
    59 Tenn. App. 582
    , 786, 
    442 S.W.2d 661
    , 662-63 (1967), foreclosing and
    excluding any complaint, constitutional or otherwise, as to the
    issues addressed and decided in the appellate court’s opinion.
    Cook v. McCullough, 
    735 S.W.2d 464
    , 469 (Tenn. Ct. App.
    1987). Thus, the trial court does not have the authority to
    modify or revise the appellate court’s opinion, McDade v.
    McDade, 
    487 S.W.2d 659
    , 663 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1972), or to
    10
    expand the proceedings beyond the remand order. Cook v.
    
    McCullough, 735 S.W.2d at 470
    . The trial court’s sole
    responsibility is to carefully comply with directions in the
    appellate court’s opinion. Raht v. Southern 
    Ry., 215 Tenn. at 497-98
    , 387 S.W.2d at 786-87.
    Earls v. Earls, No. M1999-00035-COA-R3-CV, 
    2001 WL 504905
    , at *3
    (Tenn. Ct. App. May 14, 2001). Furthermore, as our Supreme Court has
    elucidated:
    The phrase “law of the case” refers to a legal doctrine
    which generally prohibits reconsideration of issues that have
    already been decided in a prior appeal of the same case. 5
    Am. Jur. 2d Appellate Review § 605 (1995). In other words,
    under the law of the case doctrine, an appellate court’s
    decision on an issue of law is binding in later trials and
    appeals of the same case if the facts on the second trial or
    appeal are substantially the same as the facts in the first trial
    or appeal. Life & Casualty Ins. Co. v. Jett, 
    175 Tenn. 295
    ,
    299, 
    133 S.W.2d 997
    , 998-99 (1939); Ladd v. Honda Motor
    Co., Ltd., 
    939 S.W.2d 83
    , 90 (Tenn. App. 1996). The
    doctrine applies to issues that were actually before the
    appellate court in the first appeal and to issues that were
    necessarily decided by implication. 
    Ladd, 939 S.W.2d at 90
                 (citing other authority).
    Memphis Pub. Co. v. Tenn. Petroleum Underground Storage Tank Bd., 
    975 S.W.2d 303
    , 306 (Tenn. 1998).
    Duke v. Duke, 
    563 S.W.3d 885
    , 895-96 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2018). The Trial Court had no
    authority on the remand, which was limited to collection of costs below, to modify or
    revise the injunction we entered in Stinson I.
    Furthermore, in the case now before us on appeal, there was no factual and legal
    basis for granting additional relief. The facts presented at the hearing were substantially
    the same as those that had been presented at the trial of this case except that things had
    gotten better. As discussed above, there was insufficient evidence of acts that occurred
    since entry of the Trial Court’s February 25, 2016 order sufficient to justify and support
    an order for further injunctive relief. Rather, the proof offered at the hearing shows that
    there has been “considerable improvement” and that any incidents have been “primarily
    11
    petty.” This evidence is wholly insufficient to support the additional injunctive relief
    granted by the Trial Court.
    Additionally, this Court quite specifically found and held in Stinson I that an
    injunction that prohibited the Stinsons from accessing property that they own was
    improper. Yet that is what the Trial Court’s new injunction entered in its November 17,
    2017 order attempts again to do. We are not unmindful of the anguish that the Mensels
    and Sabols have suffered as a result of the actions of the Stinsons, but an injunction
    prohibiting the Stinsons from accessing their own property is legally untenable. We note
    that the behavior of the Stinsons prior to trial, although characterized by Mr. Stinson as
    ‘maintenance’ of the easement, was clearly destructive to the easement and that such
    behavior in the future is prohibited under our injunction. In our injunction the Stinsons
    are expressly prohibited from damaging the easement or interfering with the other
    parties’ right to use and maintain the easement. Should the Stinsons decide in the future
    to expend time and money engaging in lawful maintenance of the easement they have the
    right to do so. The record on appeal, however, reveals that in the past the Stinsons never
    have expended time or money maintaining the easement.
    We express our considered hope that in the future these neighbors will learn to
    coexist in harmony and that the actions of the Stinsons that led to our upholding the Trial
    Court’s judgment that the Stinsons were liable to the Mensels and Sabols for nuisance
    will not be repeated. We wish to point out that our Opinion does not prevent the Mensels
    and Sabols from ever obtaining further injunctive relief if the facts then justify it. What
    our Opinion does do is prohibit the Trial Court’s modifying our injunction. If, in the
    future, the Mensels and Sabols believe they have new grounds to support further
    injunctive relief, they are free to file an action for such relief based upon the new facts
    and circumstances.
    As the Trial Court lacked the power on remand to modify, revise, or change in any
    way our injunction, we vacate the injunction entered by the Trial Court in its November
    17, 2017 order and reinstate the injunction from our Opinion in Stinson I.
    Having addressed the first two issues, we turn to the third issue raised on appeal,
    whether: “The Court erred in ordering the Plaintiffs to pay damages and costs of the
    original trial previously ordered by the Trial Court.” With regard to this issue, in its
    November 17, 2017 order, the Trial Court found and held:
    The Stinsons asked that the costs and damages that were assessed
    against them by the Trial Court be evenly split as it had been by the Court
    of Appeals with the Appellate costs. The court finds that the two situations
    are entirely different. At trial the Stinsons as Plaintiffs did not prevail on
    12
    any issue presented in their Complaint. Further, they were not entitled to
    recover the expense of their surveyor because the Stinsons’ surveyor’s
    expert opinion agreed with the Mensels’ and Sabols’ surveyor, and was
    contrary to the apparent position the Stinsons personally took. The Mensels
    and Sabols prevailed in their Nuisance action which was upheld by the
    Court of Appeals, even if the remedies for that Nuisance were curtailed by
    the Court of Appeals. Therefore, the Stinsons’ request is denied.
    Pursuant to Tenn. R. Civ. P. 54.04: “Costs not included in the bill of costs prepared by
    the clerk are allowable only in the court’s discretion.” Tenn. R. Civ. P. 54.04(2). We
    agree with the Trial Court’s stated rational for denying the Stinsons’ request and find no
    abuse of discretion. We, therefore, affirm this portion of the Trial Court’s November 17,
    2017 order.
    Conclusion
    The judgment of the Trial Court is vacated as to the injunction entered by the Trial
    Court and affirmed as to the remainder of the Trial Court’s order. This cause is
    remanded to the Trial Court for collection of the costs below. The costs on appeal are
    assessed against the appellees, David E. Mensel, Mary Ford (Anne) Mensel, Michael
    Sabol, and Christine A. Sabol.
    _______________________________
    D. MICHAEL SWINEY, CHIEF JUDGE
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