Duty v. Vinson

309 S.W.2d 318, 228 Ark. 617, 1958 Ark. LEXIS 536
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 3, 1958
Docket5-1394
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 309 S.W.2d 318 (Duty v. Vinson) 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
Duty v. Vinson, 309 S.W.2d 318, 228 Ark. 617, 1958 Ark. LEXIS 536 (Ark. 1958).

Opinion

Mm OR. W. Mill wee, Associate Justice.

Appellant, Claud Duty, owns a business building located on the Northwest corner of Block 8, Original Town of Rogers, Arkansas, in the center of the Rogers business district. Duty and his wife brought this suit to quiet title to the property which includes a plot 50 feet wide and 85 feet long on which the building is located and a strip about 15 feet wide and 50 feet long adjacent to the rear of the building on the South. Appellees, Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Vinson and Alice Laner, intervened claiming they and their predecessors in title and the general public had acquired an easement by prescription over the 15 ft. x 50 ft. strip by adverse use for more than 30 years. After an extensive hearing the chancellor held that appellants’ title to the disputed strip was subject to an easement by prescription in favor of appellees and the public as an alleyway. The principal issue is whether this finding is supported by a preponderance of the evidence.

Except for certain additions to the Vinson property, the location of the disputed strip of land in relation to other property in the area is reflected by the following rough sketch of said Block 8 introduced at the trial by agreement:

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It is noted that Walnut Street runs along the north side of the block, First Street along the east side, Elm Street along the south side, Second Street along the west side; and there is an alley 20 feet wide running north and south through the center of the block. The strip in question is also designated “alley” on the sketch and extends from Second Street .east along the rear of the Duty and Laner Buildings to the west side of the rear of the Stroud Building where it comes to a dead end.

Lots 2, 3 and 6 located in the Northwest corner of the block were owned by Stroud & Ferrenberg about 1895 when they began constructing buildings crosswise on Lots 2 and 3 facing north on Walnut Street. The Stroud Building was first erected and occupies the entire east 60 feet of Lots 2 and 3. The Laner Building was next constructed on, the middle 30 feet of the two lots and originally extended from Walnut Street south about 50 feet but was later extended to within 8 or 10 feet of the south line of Lot 3. The Duty Building was next constructed about 1897 and covered all of the west 50 feet of Lots 2 and 3 except the disputed strip on the south. Duty purchased the property in September, 1949.

' Vinson acquired the west 80 feet of Lot 6 in 1933 and the first building was placed on the northwest corner of the lot adjacent to the disputed strip facing Second Street sometime between 1943 and 1947. It is a temporary prefabricated restaurant building about 20 feet long and 20 feet wide. It belongs to the lessee of the property with the right of removal and is known as the “Snack Shack.” In 1954 Vinson constructed the Brewer Building between the “Snack Shack” and the south line of Lot 6 completely enclosing the vacant area of Lot 6 fronting on Second Street.

It is undisputed that the strip of land in question was never platted or dedicated to the City of Rogers as an alley, or for public use, and the city has never so claimed it. Representatives of the city and the gas, telephone and electric companies testified the strip was shown as private property on their records and they disclaimed any right of easement over it. In the chain of title from the Government down to Duty no reference to an easement across the strip has ever been made nor do the deeds to Vinson and Laner contain any reference to an easement. Vinson has never mentioned an easement in his various leases of Lot 6.

Many witnesses testified about the use of the disputed strip and the adjacent area south of it for the past 30 or 40 years. A former owner and several lessees of tlie Duty Building testified that for several years prior to 1933 there was a small sheet iron building on Lot 6 which connected with a shed attached to the rear of the east half of the Duty Building, blocking any use of the disputed strip as a passageway. This was disputed by John Myler who assisted in the original construction of the buildings.

Vance Hill testified that he operated an automotive parts and supply store in the west half of the Duty Building from 1938 to 1947 during which time the disputed strip was used to change and repair tires and for other work in servicing the cars and trucks of his customers; and that it was not used as a driveway while he was there. Prior lessees of that part of the building stated they used the strip for similar purposes; and that before the erection of the “Snack Shack” all of Lot 6 except the space occupied by the small sheet iron building was vacant and unenclosed. Prior to 1946 the customers and tenants of the Duty and Laner Buildings used Lot 6 for their convenience in crossing from Second Street to the alley east of the Stroud Building, for parking wagons, cars and trucks and for transfer of merchandise to and from the stores. According to witnesses on both sides there was no systematic or exclusive use of any particular portion of either the disputed strip or Lot 6 during this period, but people entered upon the entire area at random. Similar use of the area south and east of the “Snack Shack” continued after it was placed on the Lot until 1954 when the Brewer Building was constructed.

Ivan Bose had operated a drug store in the west 25 feet of the Duty Building for about seven years prior to the trial. He stated he had an agreement with two successive operators and lessees of the “Snack Shack” permitting them to use the 15 foot strip for parking cars in the back of the restaurant in exchange of their agreement to allow him to park his car there; and that the agreement continued until about three months prior to the trial when T. A. Bichards, lessee of the “Snack Shack” for 5 years prior to the trial, notified him not to park there any more unless he paid a fee. The testimony of Richards tends to corroborate that of Rose as to the arrangement although he further stated the strip had also been used for the delivery of merchandise through two doors on the north side of the “Snack Shack” adjacent to the strip, and that it had been used generally as a passageway for many years without objection.

John Haw testified that he and two others operated a tire and battery shop in the east side of the Duty Building for about 10 years prior to 1931 and used a shed in the disputed strip behind the building for storage of old tires and the installation of new tires and other accessories. They buried an oil tank in the disputed strip which they used in their business and it is still there. He stated no use was made of the strip as a driveway or alley while they were there; that vehicles could not have been driven over the strip to the Laner Building; and that he never heard of any one claiming a right-of-way over it. Elvin Buell who had operated a paint store in this part of the building for about 5 years prior to the trial stated the strip had been used to haul trash from a bin behind the “Snack Shack” and the unloading of merchandise by trucks that back in from Second Street.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
309 S.W.2d 318, 228 Ark. 617, 1958 Ark. LEXIS 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duty-v-vinson-ark-1958.