Beck v. State Ex Rel. Attorney General

14 S.W.2d 1101, 179 Ark. 102, 1929 Ark. LEXIS 27
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 4, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 14 S.W.2d 1101 (Beck v. State Ex Rel. Attorney General) 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
Beck v. State Ex Rel. Attorney General, 14 S.W.2d 1101, 179 Ark. 102, 1929 Ark. LEXIS 27 (Ark. 1929).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Suit was filed by the Attorney General, on the relation of the State, against J. O. E. Beck and other riparian owners of lands adjacent to Horseshoe Lake, in Crittenden County, Arkansas, in which it was alleged that the defendant landowners had constructed a ditch from a bayou, referred to interchangeably 'as Jennings or Berlin Bayou, to Fish- Bayou, which was carrying and would reduce the water of Horseshoe Lake to such a level that the navigation of the lake and its fishing and hunting value would be interfered with and greatly diminished. Certain fishing and hunting clubs intervened, and enlarged upon these allegations, it being recited in their intervention that they had expended large sums of money in building club and other houses, boat docks, etc., to enable them and their guests to enjoy the sports of-hunting and fishing upon the lake, and that this right would be greatly interfered with if the defendants were not required to dam their ditch, thereby stopping the flow of water out of the lake.

Answers were filed by'the defendants, in which it was admitted that the 1-ake was a navigable stream, and had great value to the public for hunting and fishing, but it was denied that it was proposed to destroy or diminish these values. It was alleged that the defendant Beck had constructed a system of underground tile drains for his plantation, to drain the surface water from his land into the lake, which he had done and could do at the normal flood level of the lake, but it was alleged that, through the closing- up of the outlet from the lake into the Mississippi River and other outlets from the lake into the St. Francis River, the normal flood level of the lake had been raised to the point where Beck’s drainage system not only did not drain into the lake, but the water ran back the other way and made impossible the cultivation of a large quantity of Beck’s land. It was alleged also that, by reason of the increased flood level, the outer banks of the lake — which are bluff — are caving, and it was alleged by the defendant Snowden that he had lost between twenty and thirty acres of valuable land, and that he had spent four thousand dollars driving piles in an unsuccessful attempt to save the front yard of his home, which opened out upon the lake.

Defendants denied that they had dug a ditch into Horseshoe Lake, but alleged the facts to be that Jennings and Fish Bayous were natural outlets of the lake, whereby excess water was carried into the 'St. Francis River through Fifteen-Mile Bayou, and that these 'bayous had been filled up by 'Cutting’ the timber to clear the land, and by its cultivation, until they no longer served as natural drains, which they in fact were. Fish Bayou connects with the lake on the northeast side thereof, and then winds a tortuous course north of the lake to the northwest side thereof, where it connects with Jennings Bayou.

The length of Fish Bayou is twelve or fifteen miles, and it was alleged and shown that the cost of clearing it out from its mouth to its intersection with another bayou, called Caruthers Bayou, would be very great,' whereas the same results could be achieved by digging a ditch connecting Fish Bayou with Jennings Bayou, which last named drain emptied into the lake on its eastern side. This is the ditch which the landowners dug, and this proceeding was brought to require them to dam it up. This ditch begins at a point in Jennings Bayou 1,800 feet from the lake, and runs 4,400 feet to the point where it empties into Fish Bayou. The answer alleged that, by digging this ditch, defendants have accomplished the same purpose that would have been accomplished had they opened up and cleared out Fish Bayou, Defendants alleged their intention to be only to restore the flood level of the lake to its normal stage.

A description of Horseshoe Lake will be found in the cases of Barboro v. Boyle, 119 Ark. 377, 178 S. W. 378, and State ex rel. Thompson v. Parker, 132 Ark. 316, 200 S. W. 1014.

It was said in tibe Parker case, supra, that the lake was so named 'because of its shape, and that the inner bank of the lake is low and sloping, while the onter hank is high and clearly defined. An area of about a thousand acres in the bend of the horseshoe, known as Happy Jack, was flooded when the St. Francis levee was built in 1905 across the outlet which connected the lake with the Mississippi River. This levee impounded the waters, as is stated in the opinions above mentioned and in that of Parker v. Frierson, 124 Ark. 238, 187 S. W. 162 also, and resulted in raising the level of the lake about five feet.

It was the opinion of the chancellor, as is indicated by the decree from which this appeal comes, that the State had acquired, under the decisions of this court in the cases above referred to, the prescriptive right to maintain the increased level of the water of the lake, aid that the defendants were about to reduce the superficial area of the lake, and in doing this materially diminished the value of the lake to the public for hunting and fishing purposes. The court decreed that the defendants should permanently maintain >a dam or obstruction across the mouth of the ditch, and that the dam or obstruction be maintained so as to prevent at all times escape or drainage of any of the waters of Horseshoe Lake through said ditch. This appeal is from that decree.

"We have before us a large record, which we will not review, but will state only our conclusions concerning the testimony, after having carefully considered it.

The testimony on the part of the State and the intervening sportsmen is to the effect that the waters impounded by the St. Francis levee, upon its construction in 1905, overflowed Happy Jack, and that this and the adjoining similar area remained submerged until the summer of 1926, when, on account of decreased rainfall and the absence of any seepage from the Mississippi River into the lake, the water level was so lowered that Happy Jack and the adjacent areas reappeared as land, and shallow water over the Happy Jack area affords an ideal place for fish to spawn and for ducks to feed, but if the water is taken off this area it becomes valueless for that'purpose, and the value of the remainder or deep portion of the lake for hunting purposes is greatly diminished.

The testimony on the part of the landowners is to the effect that the ditch will not take off all the water from the Happy Jack area, hut that, if it does, the hunting and fishing value of the lake will not be thereby diminished.

We think the testimony, in its entirety, establishes the fact that the ditch will not reduce the water level more than two or three feet lower than it would be without the ditch, unless the ditch was deepened by the flow of the water through it, but we think the testimony clearly shows this scouring out will not occur, because the ditch does not have enough fall to accomplish that result. For the first 2,100 feet the ditch is on a one-tenth of one per cent, grade; the next 1,500’ feet is on a level grade, and for 300 feet is on a two-tenths per cent, grade, and from there to its entrance to Jennings Bayou is one-half of one-tenth per cent, grade, and the testimony of the engineers is to the effect that a ditch of this grade will not deepen.

H. N. Pharr, the chief engineer of the St.

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Bluebook (online)
14 S.W.2d 1101, 179 Ark. 102, 1929 Ark. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beck-v-state-ex-rel-attorney-general-ark-1929.