Burel v. Hutson

263 S.W. 57, 165 Ark. 111, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 466
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 23, 1924
StatusPublished

This text of 263 S.W. 57 (Burel v. Hutson) 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
Burel v. Hutson, 263 S.W. 57, 165 Ark. 111, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 466 (Ark. 1924).

Opinion

Wood, J.

This is an action by C. C. Hutson against Lizzie Burel, to recover damages growing out of the alleged construction of a levee. Hutson alleged that he is the owner of a tract of land in Lawrence County, Arkansas, and that Lizzie Burel is the owner of a tract lying immediately south;. that there is a low place or draw across his land which comes down from the lands lying north of it and passes on across the lands of the defendant, Lizzie Burel; that, in the year 1920, the defendant, Lizzie Burel, caused a levee to be built along the north side of her land across the draw or drain, which stopped the flow of the surface water in its natural channel and threw same back upon the lands of the plaintiff, to his damage in the sum of $200; that, in the year 1921, the defendant also caused the levee to be maintained, to the plaintiff’s damage in the sum of $250, and that the same occurred in 1922, to plaintiff’s damage in the sum of $300. The damage to the plaintiff caused by the defendant in the building of the levee as alleged was by reason of the overflow of back-water over the plaintiff’s land and cotton crop.

The defendant, in her answer, denied all the material allegations of the complaint. She alleged that there was a small pond on the north end of her land, entirely cut off from the lands of the plaintiff by the county road and ditch, which ran east and west on her north line; that on the north side of the road was a ditch cut by plaintiff and paid for out of the funds of Lawrence County, running to the right-of-way of the Frisco Railroad lands, much lower than any part of defendant’s land, which point was the natural drain both for her lands and those north of hers, but, at low water, the road prevented the water from getting to the ditch; that, in order to better drain her small pond and keep her lands free from high water overflow when the water would run over the road and1 fill the low spot on her land, she, in 1909, placed a levee on her uwn land across the natural outlet of the water from her land; that some one, in 1920, 1921 and 1922, unknown to her, cut her levee, which she had maintained since 1909, and, upon discovering' the same, she had the «ame rebuilt as it had been since 1909. She alleged that, since the construction of this levee, she had maintained the same' as a permanent obstruction, and she therefore set up the three and seven-year statutes of limitation as a bar to the plaintiff’s action.

The plaintiff testified that he owned the land as alleged in his complaint, and that the defendant owned the land lying south and adjoining his land. There was a low drain which ran through his land and down through the land of the defendant in a southeast course, and went out at the southeast corner of her field into Coon Creek ditch. The water, if not interfered with at all, would go down and drain on through into Coon Creek ditch. Defendant built the levee all the way from twelve inches to two feet high, and it holds the water up in the public road and backs it on the plaintiff’s land. She has a ditch inside of her field up at the head of the levee. It would cost the defendant $25 to make a ditch that would drain off all the water. The levee was first put there nine or ten years ago. It had been washed down and rebuilt at different times — had been repaired from one to three or four times a year; that the levee is on the top of the ground. It is very easily and-cheaply moved. If it had not been repaired from year to year it would have washed away, because the force of the water washes it out. When the big heavy rain comes, it overflows the top of it, and sometimes works through it and washes the levee out. The levee was all the way from a foot to two feet thick at the top and from a foot to two feet high.

There was testimony tending to show that the levee was from fifty to sixty feet long, and several witnesses corroborated the testimony of the plaintiff as to the southeast course of the drainage from the lands of plaintiff on and across the lands of defendant. One witness testified that the levee had been maintained all the time since it had been built, except casual breakage, when it would be rebuilt. One witness testified that, if the levee was left alone, the high water would wash it away, and the main bulk of the water would go into Coon Creek. There was testimony to the effect that plaintiff put a culvert across the road which runs between the plaintiff’s and defendant’s lands; that the high water had washed a ditch across the road, and plaintiff put the culvert in running across the road. The road ditch was about eighteen inches lower than the top of the road, and the water had to go over that eighteen-inch ditch and over the road before it gets into defendant’s land. The levee is across the road from plaintiff’s land. It is fifteen or twenty steps long, or longer, and something like knee-high. The present rains run across the road. The water will go down the road ditch if it is open. The ditch is six inches lower than the road.

One witness stated that the culvert had to be put across the road; that the water could not get off any other way; that the road in some places was three feet higher than the ditch, and the ditch did not carry the water off. If there was no ditch on defendant’s side, the high water would go off. It takes high water to get over the road and ditch to get into defendant’s land.

The defendant testified that the levee was built in 1910. Prior to that time the water stood in her field,' covering twenty-five acres or more. It had no outlet. Other parties would not let her clean out the ditch she had made across her lands to theirs, so she, last year, lost twenty-five acres of crop, by water standing on her land. Bhe had had no work done on the levee, except when some one would cut it, and she would have it refilled. She had never heard of the levee washing away. The road is about a foot higher than the land. In high water the water would have to run over the road to get to her land. She did not think there was any water-on plaintiff’s land caused by ber levee. There was a good ditch on the north side of the road between her land and-plaintiff’s, and if they would keep that cleaned out it would take the water down to the railroad.

One of the witnesses for .the defendant testified that the levee was just as it had been since he had owned the land. It was cut last spring, because the field ditch was not sufficient to take off the water. If the ditch was not there, the water would stay there. The defendant’s field had to take care of the water that runs in there. The levee keeps it from running into the field. If it were not for the levee, the water that ran into the field would not run out. It would have to -stay there and dry up. The road ditch and road do not cause any water to stand on plaintiff’s land. During ordinary rains the water goes down the ditch between the public highway and Hutson’s farm into the Frisco ditch. When big rains come the water backs up over plaintiff’s land before it goes across the road to the levee.

One witness testified that this road is higher than Hutson’s field, some three or four feet. When the water is standing in Hutson’s field, the road is higher than the water. The road keeps it on Hutson’s field, and not the levee of defendant. The levee is about as high as the road. There was other testimony to the same effect, corroborating the testimony of the defendant.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Board of Directors of St. Francis Levee District v. Barton
123 S.W. 382 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1909)
Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co. v. Humphreys
155 S.W. 127 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1913)
Morrow v. Merrick
249 S.W. 369 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
263 S.W. 57, 165 Ark. 111, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burel-v-hutson-ark-1924.