Dermott Drainage District v. Cherry

233 S.W.2d 387, 217 Ark. 829, 1950 Ark. LEXIS 511
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 30, 1950
Docket4-9226
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 233 S.W.2d 387 (Dermott Drainage District v. Cherry) 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
Dermott Drainage District v. Cherry, 233 S.W.2d 387, 217 Ark. 829, 1950 Ark. LEXIS 511 (Ark. 1950).

Opinion

Griffin Smith, Chief Justice.

Trustees of the W. R. Cherry estate joined with Roy Morrison in .an action against Dermott Drainage District, and Drainage District'No. 4.1

In November, 1947, each District approved by resolutions certain work the United States proposed to do under authority of § 2 of the Flood Control Act of August 28, .1937, as amended. It was stated that Big Bayou Slough should be opened and cleared “to take care of the flood waters flowing or emptied thereinto.” The Districts agreed to provide without cost to the Federal Government the necessary lands, with a guarantee against damages, and to maintain the system in accordance with regulations prescribed by the Secretary of War under terms of the Flood Control Act of June 22, 1936, or similar legislation.

The complaint alleged .that Clearing and excavation work incident to reconditioning of Big Bayou Slough would not be a completed drainage undertaking when finished according to plans supplied the Government’s contracting finny2 that unconfirmed promises for additional work had been made by Government agents who had authority to make them, but even so, the promises were vague and indefinite. It was finally alleged that the Districts were without sufficient funds to adequately compensate landowners for increased damages they would sustain, hence the Commissioners were misinformed when they adopted the resolutions.

About twelve years before the trial of this case in September, 1949, considerable drainage work was done in a part of the area here involved when the Federal Government undertook to reclaim approximately 10,000 acres of overflow land partially drained by Big Bayou, or Big-Bayou Slough. The bayou’s course is generally north and south, and it lies mostly in Desha County, but partly in Chicot. There is testimony that in connection with this work ditches spoken of as laterals were cut. W. H. By-num, who personally owned 700 acres just east and north of Dermott, and who held stock in a corporation that owned 2,500 acres in Chicot County,' and an equal amount in Ashley County immediately west, testified that before the laterals were cut, Big Bayou served as a reservoir or receiving place for all of these lands and its general utility for' this purpose was reasonably satisfactory except when extreme floods came. With completion of the Government’s reclamation project, adjacent lands began to get-1 ‘ a considerable amount of water. ’ ’

When the appellant drainage districts passed their resolutions in 1947 authorizing Government work, the contractor started dredging and snagging at a point where Black Pond Slough empties into Big Bayou, not far from Bellaire, and proceeded north. The northern extremity of Ditch No. 4 is a mile or more north of Highway No. 4, on or near Sec. 30, Township 12 South, Range 4 West, in Desha County, and slightly more than two miles west of McGehee. Dermott Drainage District is approximately 22 miles long.

The landowners as appellees, in whose favor the Chancellor granted a restraining order, say that the construction complained of consists of eleven miles on the upper reaches of Big Bayou. A question asked by one of the attorneys for appellees and the answer indicate that assessed benefits against the Dermott District “were based upon a ditch extending from just east of the Missouri Pacific’s tracks north of Dermott and extending south” beyond the lands owned by those who are complainants here. In the course of trial where testimony was heard ore tenus by the Chancellor, many references were to a map filed as plaintiffs’ Exhibit No. 2, but the method of identification was not such as to bring into the record the places pointed to. For this reason we must assume that in this respect the trial Court was better informed as to landmarks, relative distances, and related matters not susceptible of determination here through answer of witnesses who were looking at places indicated, but not named for the record.

But generally it appears that Big Bayou Slough was originally utilized by the Dermott District in Chicot Count}''. An inset map shows the slough as beginning west of McGehee, extending south past Masonville, but west of that town, veering east in Sec. 29 in Chicot County, then southeast and south to its confluence with Black Pond Slough. An engineer’s drawing shows a line beginning more than a mile west and a little north of where the two sloughs join. It passes through Der-mott and extending northward parallels “Ditch No. 4,” terminating more than two miles west of McGehee. It is marked, ‘‘ Channel Clearing and Snagging, ’ ’ and the . distance is indicated as 11.6 miles.

Appellees contend that much of the Government work is new construction in that the bayous and original ditches are being widened and deepened. The defense answers that fresh soil near the old embankments was used as a foundation or base for machinery operating within the original confines and that it has been mistaken for new structure. It is also contended that because of imperative economy when the original work was done, stumps and an occasional tree were left. Dermott District was created in 1915 and its bonds have been paid. The dredge boat used in building the ditch was constructed slightly east of the Missouri Pacific Bailroad in Section 29, township thirteen south, range three west, Chicot County. But a witness for the protesting landowners testified that the point so described “was the most northern point of Big Bayou Slough that was dibg at that time.” This testimony adds confirmation to the general trend of discussions by witnesses who thought the bayou was a part of the drainage ditch system. B. W. Parrish, Chancery Clerk, testified that the organization papers affecting the Dermott District were not on file with other records relating to the undertaking, and that a diligent search for them was unavailing.

Appellees confine their complaint to that part of the Government work on the upper limits of Big Bayou. Six miles of the work is in the Dermott District. It follows that if appellees are correct in stating that the Dermott District “lies within Chicot County, with no part of it in Desha,” the litigating parties are not in disagreement on this point. But in designating the injury occasioned by District No. 4, (or, as the brief says, “Black Pond District No. 4”) appellees describe it as being immediately north of the Dermott District within Desha County. They also say that‘ ‘ five miles of said work has been and will be done in this District. ’ ’ They further complained that the 11.6 in mileage “of continuous work” would connect with District No. 4.

Testimony varied regarding the actual work that was being done, and witnesses for the plaintiffs did not all agree. D. W. Nall, a Chicot County Boad Supervisor, thought that near the Crenshaw dump on the Bellaire road paralleling Big Bayou the ditch would be 40 feet wide at the top, 20 feet at the bottom, and four feet deep, with a 15-ft. berm.3

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Bluebook (online)
233 S.W.2d 387, 217 Ark. 829, 1950 Ark. LEXIS 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dermott-drainage-district-v-cherry-ark-1950.