Arkansas State Highway Commission v. Partain

90 S.W.2d 968, 192 Ark. 127, 1936 Ark. LEXIS 47
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 3, 1936
Docket4-4180
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 90 S.W.2d 968 (Arkansas State Highway Commission v. Partain) 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 State Highway Commission v. Partain, 90 S.W.2d 968, 192 Ark. 127, 1936 Ark. LEXIS 47 (Ark. 1936).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Appellee Partain brought this suit against the Arkansas Highway Commission, and for his cause' of action alleged the following facts. He owns and resides upon, certain lots having three hundred feet frontage on Jefferson Street in the city of Van Burén. Just east of Jefferson Street and one block from said street, U. S. Highways 64 and 71, and State Highway 45 are routed on Broadway Street, coming across the Arkansas River from the city of Port Smith. Such highways have been located by the State Highway Department through the city of Van Burén, from the end of the bridge over the Arkansas River, across or above the tracks of the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company. It is contemplated by the State Highway Department to build and construct, and to cause to be built and constructed, an overpass or viaduct across the tracks of the railroad company in said'city of Van Burén leading* from and off the bridge across the Arkansas River and along Jefferson Street, adjacent to Partain’s residence. The petitioner alleged that the construction of this viaduct or overpass would destroy the value of his property, and that this was about to be done without compensating him for the damages he would sustain.

A temporary restraining order was granted. Pending* final submission of the cause, certain citizens and taxpayers of Van Burén who are the owners of real estate in the Port Smith and Van Burén Bridge Improvement District filed an intervention in which they adopted the allegations of Partain’s petition and joined with him in the prayer that the construction of the viaduct or overpass be restrained. They alleged, as an additional reason why this should be done, that the construction of this viaduct in the manner proposed would destroy the value of the bridge across the' Arkansas River, which the improvement district had constructed for use by railroads and street car lines. It was alleged that the bridge had been built to accommodate railroad and street car traffic at a cost far greater than would otherwise have been required, and that this was done pursuant to the acts of the General Assembly, authorizing* the construction of the bridge. Interveners alleged that the commissioners of the bridge improvement district were without authority to make any contract or to enter into any arrangement having that result.

Upon the final submission of the cause the relief prayed by the original petitioner and the interveners was granted, and the State Highway Commission, and the contractor to whom the construction contract had been awarded, were permanently enjoined and restrained “from the construction of a viaduct or overpass on Jefferson Street in the city of Van Burén, Arkansas, along side or by the property and homes of the plaintiff and the interveners herein described, or along and over the property of the Fort Smith and Van Burén Bridge District or into, or on, the bridge of said district. ’ ’

At the trial from which this appeal comes, there was offered in evidence an ordinance of the city of Van Burén which provided “that Jefferson Street between First and Fourth streets, in the city of Van Burén, Arkansas, be and the same is hereby closed, and is dedicated to the construction and use of an overpass to be constructed by the Arkansas State Highway Commission.”

There was also offered in evidence an agreement between the commissioners of the bridge improvement district, and the State Highway Commission which recites the purpose and intention of the Commission to construct the viaduct in question and the necessity therefor. In this agreement the bridge district grants to the Highway' Commission the right “to construct, complete and maintain at its sole expense viaduct and appurtenances as designed by the 'Commission’s engineer and approved by the U. S. Board of Public Roads.” The Commission agreed to construct and maintain the viaduct at its own cost. The Commission also agreed to indemnify and save the district harmless for “damages, loss or destruction either suffered or caused to airy person or to any property incident to the construction of the viaduct.” It thus appears that while the city has authorized the erection of the viaduct in one of its own streets, it is proposed to have it done at the expense of the State Highway Commission.

Counsel for the appellant Highway Commission say that the proposed improvement is in effect a change of the grade of a street in the city of Van Buren which the council has authorized, and we are cited to the case of Eickhoff v. Street Improvement Dist. No. 11 of Argenta, 120 Ark. 212, 179 S. W. 367, which holds that the cities and towns have this power. But the same case also held that, while this could be done, yet, if and when done damages resulted to a property owner, the damages must be paid by the city.

There was offered in evidence a resolution adopted by the Highway Commission making provision for the payment of those damages reading as follows: “Motion by Mr. Murphy, seconded by Mr. Black, that funds now in the State Contingent Fund to the amount of fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) are hereby allocated to job No. 4176, U. S. P. W. Proj. N. B. M. 216-C, for the purpose of paying any damages to privately owned property adjacent to the project which the State might be adjudged to pay by reason of the construction of said project. Motion unanimously carried.”

Our attention is also called to act No. 160, of the Acts of 1935, page 438, § 1, reading as follows: “The Arkansas State Highway Commission is hereby authorized, empowered and directed to allocate and use such part of the sum of $15,000 remaining in its custody or under its control from unused Federal funds, as the said Commission may find necessary for the erection of the Yan Burén viaduct, or in securing any rights or title to property or paying damages in connection therewith; provided, nothing herein shall be construed as giving to the Arkansas State Highway Commission the power to condemn private property in connection with the building of said viaduct. That, if for any reason said project fails, the said Commission may make such other allocation of said sum of money as it may deem proper.”

But, notwithstanding this resolution and this act of the General Assembly, it appears that only $7,000 of this money is now available to pay the prospective damages. This appears fromn, letter written by the secretary of the Highway Commission to petitioner Partain.

So far as tlie question of tlie probable damages and the compensation therefor is concerned, the case is not unlike that of Campbell v. Arkansas State Highway Commission, 183 Ark. 780, 38 S. W. (2d) 753, in that a viaduct was constructed in one of the streets of Newport, which it was alleged occasioned damages to real estate similar to those which the parties here allege that they will sustain. The fact is stated in the opinion in that case that the State Highway Commission did not institute condemnation proceedings, but that the suit was brought by the damaged property owners after the construction of the viaduct. We held that the construction of the viaduct in the street adjacent to the owners’ property was a taking thereof, to the extent that its value had been destroyed, and that damages to compensate that destruction might be recovered. It had not then been held that the State Highway Commission as an agency of the State could not be sued. Ark. State Highway Commission v. Nelson Bros., 191 Ark. 629, 87 S. W. (2d) 394.

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Bluebook (online)
90 S.W.2d 968, 192 Ark. 127, 1936 Ark. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arkansas-state-highway-commission-v-partain-ark-1936.