Chicago Mill & Lumber Co. v. Tully

130 F.2d 268, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3084
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJuly 30, 1942
DocketNo. 12143
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 130 F.2d 268 (Chicago Mill & Lumber Co. v. Tully) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago Mill & Lumber Co. v. Tully, 130 F.2d 268, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3084 (8th Cir. 1942).

Opinion

WOODROUGH, Circuit Judge.

This suit was brought April 20, 1938, by Chicago Mill & Lumber Company to quiet title to an area of land in Desha County, Arkansas, of which the metes and bounds description in the complaint is:

“Beginning in the center of ‘Chute of Island 73’ where the same leaves the Mississippi River, as presently located; thence in a southerly direction along the center of said Island Chute and Knowlton’s Bayou to where the same empties into the Arkansas River; thence in an easterly direction to a point on the bank of the Mississippi River as now located; thence in a northerly and northwestwardly direction along the bank of the Mississippi River, as presently located, following the meandering thereof to the point of beginning. It being the intention to describe all that area lying east of ‘Chute of Island 73’ and ‘Knowlton’s Bayou’, North of Arkansas River and West of the Mississippi River.”

Plaintiff alleged that the described lands are wild and unoccupied timber lands and that plaintiff claims title to them as an accretion to lands of which it is the owner, described as fractional section six on Island 73. Judgment was also demanded against the defendants for the value of timber wrongfully cut and removed from the lands. The defendants named in the complaint, B. C. Tully and Anderson & Tully Lumber Company, denied that the described lands are an accretion to the said land of the plaintiff and alleged that the part of the described lands which lie south of the rwrth line of Section 13, Township 9 South, Range 1 West, extended east to the Mississippi River, are an accretion to Section 13 and to the adjoining section to the south numbered 24, both in Township 9 South, Range 1 West, North of Arkansas River, to which B. C. Tully has the legal title and that said accretion belongs to him. The pleadings presented other issues to be discussed later.

It appeared to the court that a master should be appointed in the cause to hear the evidence and to make and report findings of fact and law, and reference was accordingly made on the court’s own motion to Mr. Charles S. Harley as such master. He heard the testimony and arguments of counsel and on the final submission of the matter to him the plaintiff requested a finding of fact that the area in controversy was an accretion to its fractional Section six on Island 73, but the master reported that he found as a fact that “B. C. Tully holds the legal title to Sections 13 and 24, T. 10 S., Range 1 W., 5 P.M., in Desha County, Arkansas”, and that the lands in dispute “are in fact accretions” to said sections, and he concluded as a matter of law that “B. C. Tully is the owner of the lands in controversy as accretions to his lands.” Upon exceptions taken to the master’s report the District court considered the evidence and arguments extending over two days and overruled and denied the exceptions. It adopted the findings and conclusions of the master, and in the final decree the court finds that the lands in controversy are in fact accretions to the said land of defendant Tully and declares that Tully is the owner of them as accretions to his land.

The plaintiff contends in its present appeal that the finding and decision of the trial court and the master is not supported by the evidence and is against the weight [270]*270of the evidence or induced by an erroneous view of the law, and that it is entitled to reversal and decree in its favor.

The master reported that the proper description of the area in controversy, that is, the area claimed by defendants within the metes and bounds set forth in the complaint, is: “All that part of Sections 13 and 24, Township 10 South, Range 1 West of the 5th Principal Meridian, North of the Arkansas River, which lies east of Knowlton’s Bayou, and all the area lying east of said Sections 13 and 24 to the Mississippi River;, being all of the area described in the plaintiff’s complaint which lies south of a line made by extending the north boundary line of said Section 13, Township 10 South, Range 1 West, N. A. R., east to the Mississippi River, and which if surveyed would be described as all of Sections 17, 18, 19 and 20, Township 10 South, Range 1 East, North of the Arkansas River, in Desha County, Arkansas.

“The defendants Anderson-Tully Company and B. C. Tully do not claim to own any of the area lying north of this line (the north boundary line of Section 13 extended east to the Mississippi' River) which would be designated, if surveyed, as Frl. Sections 6, 7 and 8, Township 10 South, Range 1 East of the 5th Principal Meridian, N.’ A. R.” ‘ '

This description of the area as the area claimed by defendants and in controversy was agreed upon by the parties and it will be observed upon comparing it with the metes and bounds description in plaintiff’s complaint that in the complaint the west line of the lands claimed by plaintiff is the center of “Chute of Island 73” and “the center of said Island Chute and Knowlton’s Bayou”. The “chute” of an island in the - Mississippi River is a channel of the river flowing between the island and the nearer mainland and plaintiff’s description was meant to convey that a chute or channel of the Mississippi River ran from the north to the south extremities of its lands on the west side thereof. It gave the river itself as the east boundary, so it pictured an island entirely surrounded by the Mississippi River and a western channel thereof. Although its description recognizes the existence of waters designated “Knowlton’s Bayou”, it identifies the chute and bayou as one river channel along the center of which it drew its west line. The defendants recognize no chute or channel of the river in the area they claim to be an accretion to their Sections 13 and 24. They claim the water found there is not and never has been a channel of the river, but is a bayou properly designated Knowlton’s Bayou, which drains a local water shed and lakes and emptied originally into the Mississippi River above their north line but which has later turned southerly and found its way in a winding course across their accreted land on south into the Arkansas River.

The master found:

“In 1834 and 1835, when the first government survey of lands in this section was had, there was lying in the navigable stream of the river and separated from the west bank of the Mississippi River, " which is the eastern shore line of the State of Arkansas, a small island, denominated upon the plat as Island 73, the intervening channel between that island and the Arkansas shore being known as the chute of Island 73. On the south end of this Island was surveyed a parcel of land as Fractional Section 6, Township 10 South, Range 1 East, NAR, 59.49 acres. The testimony of witnesses and the exhibits introduced disclose that the channel of the Mississippi .River flowed around Island 73, turned in .a southwesterly direction until a point opposite Sections 13 and 24, Township 10 South, Range 1 West, 5th Principal Meridian, NAR, hereinafter mentioned, and then turned in a southeasterly direction and around a peninsula, and then in a direction southwest by west, forming a narrow neck of land just below Sections 13 and 24 between the Mississippi and Arkansas Rivers. During this period, when this current of the river was impinging upon the shore line of Sections 13 and 24, there was a caving hank from above the north line of Section 13, down to the shore line of the SE)4 SE^, Section 24.

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Bluebook (online)
130 F.2d 268, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3084, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-mill-lumber-co-v-tully-ca8-1942.