City of Dumas v. Edington

147 S.W.2d 997, 201 Ark. 1021, 1941 Ark. LEXIS 74
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 24, 1941
Docket4-6212
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 147 S.W.2d 997 (City of Dumas v. Edington) 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
City of Dumas v. Edington, 147 S.W.2d 997, 201 Ark. 1021, 1941 Ark. LEXIS 74 (Ark. 1941).

Opinion

Mehaépy, J.

The appellant, city of. Dumas, filed its complaint in the Desha chancery court against the ■ appellee, Gr. C. Edington, asking that the appellee, his agents, servants and employes be permanently restrained from obstructing the street .for sidewalk, and it thereafter filed an amendment praying that in addition to restraining appellee from obstructing the sidewalk, he be required by mandatory injunction to abate the nuisance, and asked also that the deeds to this property held ¡by appellee be reformed so as to make them subject to the public servitude and easement owned by tbe city of Dumas, and that tbe city’s title in and to said sidewalk be by tbe court established, quieted and confirmed.

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Tbe appellee filed answer denying tbe material allegations in the complaint and denied that appellant had established any right or claim of right of easement over and across said strip by long and continuous user under a claim of right or otherwise; alleges that the appellee and his predecessors in title have owned the property since 1851. An amendment was filed to the answer alleging that appellant was estopped from seeking an injunction, and that it was guilty of laches which bars it from seeking the aid of the court.

The complaint alleged that the city of Dumas was created a body corporate in 1904 and made a city of the second class in 1938, and that during all that time it had used the strip of land involved as a sidewalk since a time prior to 1904; that the building now standing on- the said lot was constructed in 1913 abutting the five-foot strip then and now used as a walkway, and that the walk has been used continuously by the public for two score years; that the user was open, notorious and adverse to any claim of ownership in the appellee or any of his predecessors in title.

There was introduced in evidence a plat which shows the situation and location of the five-foot strip involved in this controversy. The plat is shown on the preceding page.

The strip of land involved is a five-foot strip off the east side of the Gr. C. Edington lot located in the northeast corner of lot 1, block 1, Waterman’s Addition to Dumas; the sidewalk is indicated by a red line; the Missouri Pacific Railroad track is shown in a black line; the Missouri Pacific right-of-way extends west from the railroad tracks to the property involved; the railroad right-of-way is used as a street. Photographs were also introduced in evidence.

G-. C. Edington, the appellee, was called as a witness for the appellant, and testified in substance that on June 12/1919, Mrs. Alfie Willeford conveyed to J. B. Brown and Gr. C. Edington the east part of lot 1, block 1, Waterman’s Addition to Dumas, and testified to a particular description of the property conveyed; later witness acquired Brown’s half interest by will, on the death of Brown in 1924, and that since that time he has been the sole owner; his first interest in-the property being acquired June 12, 1919; the brick store was built in 1913 by Dr. T. H. Bowles and was on the property when witness bought it; it is five feet from the northeast corner of the store to the railroad right-of-way and wider on the southeast corner, due to the fact that the railroad runs at an angle away from the building; the west line of the right-of-way is identical with the east line of the property described in the deed from Mrs. Willeford; Mrs. Willeford bought this property from Dr. Bowles.

T. B. Meador testified in substance that he was born in Dumas and has lived there all his life — 43 years; is in the drug business in the store building next-Jo the Eding-top building; remembers when Dr. Bowles, in 1913, built the brick store, replacing a frame store building; as -far back ..as witness can .remember Dr. Bowles had a drug store there in a wooden building which was back 15 or 20 feet from the sidewalk on the east side; witness started working for Dr. Bowles in 1904 or 1906, about 35 years ago; the original store building was built on this property longer ago than witness can remember; the east line of this property is identical with the west line of the right-of-way; as long as witness can remember the public of the city of Dumas has used the east side of this property for a sidewalk; it was originally a board walk, and all traffic passing there went down that sidewalk; the board walk was inside of the property line where the sidewalk is now; the 20 feet of concrete sidewalk which Mr. Edington' built near the front of his store, from the northeast corner running south, is where the old board walk was, except that it extended -about 100 feet further south; Dr. Bowles built that sidewalk for his own convenience and the public used it as long as it was there; before Dr. Bowles built the board walk, the area over which he built. .Ah was used by the public as a sidewalk, especially by tbe people who lived on the lots south; the public has also constantly and continually used the area between the sidewalk and the right-of-way as a street, as long as witness can remember; if another sidewalk was taken by the city between the Edington property line and the railroad, there would not be left enough street to accommodate the traffic; the principal business district of Dumas is located on the opposite side of the railroad northeast from Edington’s store; Waterman Avenue crosses the railroad in front of Edington’s store and leads to that business district; there are about three blocks of business district north of Edington’s store west of the tracks; some of the houses witness referred to were facing east on the railroad right-of-way, and from these houses there was no other way of coming to the business district of Dumas; this street and sidewalk are used in going to and from Union Church; there was no other connection between Waterman Avenue and Bowles Avenue; as long as witness can remember, the city of Dumas was not in the habit of keeping up any of its sidewalks, but it kept this one up as well as any of the others; witness and others have used this sidewalk every day, and Mr. Edington has never objected; the people who live down that street have no other ingress or egress to or from the fronts of their property on the east; Mr. Edington has at times used part of this sidewalk, and sometimes a part of the street to display farming implements; during those periods the public would walk around the plows and sometimes would have to go out into the street to get to that part of town; he used about 20 or 25 feet of sidewalk for this display, but the public continued to use the rest of the sidewalk uninterruptedly and without interference; Mr. Edington built 20 feet of concrete sidewalk from the front of his store on the east side, about five feet wide, which is the area he used to display his implements; as soon as these implements were sold the public immediately resumed the use of the sidewalk along the side of the brick building; never heard of Mr. Edington objecting to the public using the sidewalk along the side of his store.

Senator I. N.

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Related

Kirby v. City of Harrison
148 S.W.2d 666 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
147 S.W.2d 997, 201 Ark. 1021, 1941 Ark. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-dumas-v-edington-ark-1941.