Arkansas Game and Fish Commission and Jeff Crow, as Director of the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission v. Greg Heslep and Keith Heslep

2019 Ark. 226
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 20, 2019
StatusPublished

This text of 2019 Ark. 226 (Arkansas Game and Fish Commission and Jeff Crow, as Director of the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission v. Greg Heslep and Keith Heslep) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arkansas Game and Fish Commission and Jeff Crow, as Director of the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission v. Greg Heslep and Keith Heslep, 2019 Ark. 226 (Ark. 2019).

Opinion

Cite as 2019 Ark. 226 SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS No. CV-18-136

Opinion Delivered: June 20, 2019 ARKANSAS GAME AND FISH COMMISSION AND JEFF CROW, AS DIRECTOR OF THE ARKANSAS GAME APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI AND FISH COMMISSION COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, SECOND APPELLANTS DIVISION [NO. 60CV-17-6603] V. HONORABLE CHRISTOPHER GREG HESLEP AND KEITH HESLEP CHARLES PIAZZA, JUDGE APPELLEES AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART AND REMANDED.

ROBIN F. WYNNE, Associate Justice

The Arkansas Game & Fish Commission (AGFC) and Jeff Crow, as director of

AGFC (collectively referred to as “AGFC”),1 appeal from an order of the Pulaski County

Circuit Court denying their motion to dismiss appellees’ complaint. AGFC raises the

following points on appeal: (1) Does the sovereign immunity of the State and its agencies

under article 5, section 20 of the Arkansas Constitution bar the Hesleps’ civil action

against AGFC and Director Crow in his official capacity? and (2) Did the circuit court err

when it, without hearing evidence, stating reasons in its order, or requiring security,

granted the Hesleps a temporary injunction and required AGFC to provide them with a

1 The circuit court granted a motion to dismiss Jeff Crow in his individual capacity. key to the locked gate across the road on AGFC property pending appeal? 2 In this

interlocutory appeal, this court has jurisdiction under Arkansas Rule of Appellate

Procedure–Civ. 2(a)(10) (an order denying a motion to dismiss based on the defense of

sovereign immunity or the immunity of a government official is an appealable order) and

2(a)(6) (an interlocutory order by which an injunction is granted is an appealable order).

We affirm the denial of the motion to dismiss on sovereign-immunity grounds, reverse the

grant of the temporary injunction, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this

opinion.

Appellees Greg Heslep and Keith Heslep own 260 acres in White County, which

they use primarily for hunting. A major portion of the property adjoins the White River.

The Hesleps’ only access to their property is an unpaved road that crosses AGFC property.

In 2015, AGFC installed a locked gate over the road after someone had done work on the

road and allegedly damaged plants and trees. After that, AGFC allowed use of the road

only if the person signed its Land Use Permit Agreement (LUPA). The Hesleps allege that

the LUPA is unconscionable and against public policy in that it includes a precondition

2 This court previously granted the Hesleps’ motion to dismiss the following point on appeal: “Can the Pulaski County Circuit Court proceed to determine whether to declare that a road on AGFC property in White County is a county road or, alternatively, is subject to prescriptive easement in favor of the Hesleps or the public?” along with its subpoints concerning proper venue and whether White County is a necessary party. Those arguments are not properly before this court on interlocutory appeal under Ark. R. App. P.–Civ. 2(a).

2 waiver of constitutional rights, including the right of notice, cause, and hearing in the

event of a dispute.3

In November 2017,4 the Hesleps filed a complaint in the Pulaski County Circuit

Court alleging that AGFC had blocked their only access to their property—a road that had

been used by surrounding landowners and their lessees, as well as the general public, since

approximately 1936. The road commences from the end of Highway 36 in Georgetown

and traverses north across AGFC’s land.5 According to the Hesleps, they purchased their

property in 2004 in reliance on the road and its status as a county or public road, and

AGFC, which obtained title to its property in the 1950s, continued to allow public use of

the road until 2015. The Hesleps further state in their complaint that, prior to 2015, they

had maintained the road, adding gravel as needed, without objection or contribution by

AGFC.

In their complaint, the Hesleps seek a determination by the circuit court of the legal

status of the road and seek enforcement through injunctive relief. The Hesleps allege that

the road is a county or public road; alternatively, they allege that the long-time open use of

the road has ripened into a prescriptive easement that preceded AGFC’s interest in the

3 The Hesleps entered into a temporary agreement for the 2015–2016 hunting season, but no such agreement exists now. 4 Prior litigation in the White County Circuit Court had been removed to federal court and ultimately dismissed without prejudice. 5 The AGFC property at issue is part of the Henry Gray Hurricane Lake Wildlife Management Area (the “WMA”).

3 land. The Hesleps further allege that AGFC’s actions are ultra vires under amendment 35

to the Arkansas Constitution; that AGFC’s demand for its LUPA violates its powers under

amendment 35; and that AGFC’s actions in depriving the Hesleps the use of their property

constitutes a violation of the Fifth Amendment. The Hesleps state that sovereign

immunity does not bar their complaint because they seek injunctive and equitable relief for

actions that are illegal, ultra vires, and done in bad faith, arbitrarily, and capriciously. In

their prayer for relief, the Hesleps asked the circuit court to:

a. Find the Road at issue is a public road and has been a public road binding upon all servient estates, particularly AGFC’s, since at least the 1930s; b. Issue a permanent injunction against AGFC from hindering and interfering with Plaintiffs’ use of the Road for access; c. Allow Plaintiffs or others who rely on this access to perform maintenance and repair without damaging AGFC lands; d. Declare AGFC’s actions in this case of blocking access and making unreasonable demands to Plaintiffs as violating its authority under Amendment 35; e. Declare the Land Use Permit Agreement unnecessary and outside the scope of AGFC’s powers in Amendment 35 because it contains provisions that are unnecessary, unconscionable and against public policy; f. Find AGFC’s actions constitute a temporary or complete taking without due . . . process and without compensation; and g. For all other relief this Court deems necessary and proper. The Hesleps also filed a motion for immediate temporary injunction and brief in support.

In response, AGFC filed a motion to dismiss as well as a memorandum in

opposition to the Hesleps’ request for preliminary injunction. AGFC advanced multiple

bases for dismissal, including that AGFC has sovereign immunity under article 5, section

4 20 of the Arkansas Constitution. The Hesleps filed their brief in opposition to the

motions to dismiss, and on December 19, 2017, the circuit court held a hearing on the

pending motions. After hearing the arguments of counsel, the circuit court ruled from the

bench and subsequently entered its written order granting dismissal of Director Crow

individually, denying dismissal of AGFC and Director Crow in his official capacity, and

granting the Hesleps a temporary injunction. The order stated that the circuit court, “after

considering the pleadings and motions and hearing arguments of counsel but taking no

testimony nor admitting evidence, finds” that AGFC is not entitled to sovereign immunity

and that the complaint states sufficient facts upon which relief can be granted.

Additionally, the circuit court ordered AGFC to “immediately provide a key to the locked

gate” on the WMA road and “allow [the Hesleps] vehicular access using the road (including

the recently-established alternate route as depicted in Exhibit 5 to [their] Complaint) for

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