Eads v. Brazelton

22 Ark. 499
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 22 Ark. 499 (Eads v. Brazelton) 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
Eads v. Brazelton, 22 Ark. 499 (Ark. 1861).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Fairciuld

delivered the opinion of the Court.

When things that become property from being appropriated are the property of nobody, are in a state, of negative community, the first finder may reduce them to possession, which is a good claim, and under the name of title by occupancy is regarded as the foundation of all property. 2 Blk's. Cora. 3, 258; 1 Bouv. Am. L. 194, No. 491; Pothier Droit De Propriete, Nos. 20, 21; La. Civil Code, Art's 3375, 3376.

Hence, wild animals, that are not property in their natural condition, may be captured, will belong to the first taker by occupancy, and will so belong while in the keeping of the taker, or person claiming under him, or while in domestication. 2 Kent. 348; Coop. Just. Lib. II. Tit. 1. sec. 12; 1 Bouv. Am. L. 194, No. 492; La. Civil Code, Art. 3379.

So, the finder of things that have never been appropriated; or that have been abandoned by a former occupant, may take them into his possession as his own property; and the finder of any thing casually lost is its rightful occupant against all but the real owner. 1 Blks. Com. 295; 2 Ib. 3, 9, 402; 16 Vin. Abr., Possession F. 3; 1 Domat's Civil Law, by Cushing, 856, No. 2155; Coop. Just. Lib. II, Tit. 1. sec. 18; La. Civil Code, Art's 3,383, 3,384; Pothier Droit De Proprieie, Nos. 58, 60, 267; Armory vs. Delamirie, 1 Strange, 505; Brandon vs. Huntsville Bank, 1 Stew. 342, 344; Eastman vs. Harris, 4 La. Ann. R. 194.

The bill in this case is founded upon a right of occupancy which Brazelton, the plaintiff, insists was vested in him by his discovery of the wreck of the steam-boat America, and by his intentions and acts relating thereto. Because this right was not respected by the defendants, partners and servants of a firm of wreckers doing business in the Mississippi river and its tributaries, under the style of Eads & Nelson, Brazelton filed his bill on the chancery side of the Circuit Court of Mississippi county, to obtain the protection of the court, to relieve him from the interference of the defendants in his own intended labors, to recover the property in the wreck, and to obtain compensation for what they had taken therefrom.

From what is before us it maybe taken as shown in the case that, in November, 1827, the boat named sank in the Mississippi river, within the limits of Mississippi county; that, of her cargo, shot and bundles of bar lead of an unascertained quantity, and lead in nigs to about the numher of three thousand, remained in the river, wholly abandoned by the owners; that Brazelton, having information of the place where the boat sank, proceeded, in December, 1854, to ascertain its exact locality in the bed of the river, with the view of raising the sunken lead; that, in January 1855, he arrived at the vicinity of the wreck, with his diving boat, to carry out his intention, and fastened a buoy to a weight that rested upon the wreck, with the expectation of putting his boat over it the next day, but that he was detained by other business, and by the difficulties and dangers of the work in the existing state of water, with boats like his, and by the necessity for making repairs upon his boat, and apparatus for raising the cargo, till the defendants, upon the 28th of September, 1855, caused one of their boats to' stop at the shore near the wreck, to search for and find it, to place their boat over it, and to commence raising the lead.

The quantity of lead raised by the defendants Was stated in their answer, and applying'the price thereto, as shown by the evidence, its value was found to be four thousand, five hundred and seven dollars and ninety-six cents, for which sum the court below gave a decree, perpetuated the preliminary injunction which was granted at the beginning of the suit, and which arrested the defendants in their labor upon the lead.

After the injunction had been served, and the defendants, in obedience thereto, had withdrawn their boat from the wreck, and while the plaintiff in his turn, was engaged in bringing up the lead left by the defendants, they brought their boat back near to the plaintiff’s boat and anchored, thereby obstructing his operations, for which two of the defendants that were within the jurisdiction of the court, were brought before it for contempt in disobeying the injunction, and were fined one thousand dollars, which was, by order of the court, paid to the plaintiff for-his damages from the obstruction.

The defendants appealed, and contend here that the injunction was illegally granted, for being granted by the judge in vacation, that it was issued against acts for which a legal remedy was the only proper one to be pursued, and upon a case that failed to show a right to the plaintiff to any relief, and that the decree is for a sum too large, in being for the gross value of the lead without any deduction for the expense of its being raised. Questions are also made upon the testimony.

The foregoing summary, although it may embrace all, or the more important of the facts upon which the injunction was obtained, and which must be the grounds of final relief, is intended, as was in effect stated, to be a recapitulation of facts, either admitted or established, and not a statement of allegations that were not proved or were disproved, or of testimony that was insufficient to establish the positions for which it was adduced, or that was neutralized or overthrown by counter evidence. But as the principal ground of controversy in the case, and one that may supercede all others, is Brazelton’s right of occupancy of the wreck by finding, and as that may depend upon its possession, the pleadings which allege and deny the possession, and the facts relative to this issue may well be subjected to closer scrutiny.

When Brazelton found the wreck he traced lines to it from different points on the Arkansas side of the river, so that their intersection would show the situation of the wreck, and the lines were indicated by marks upon the trees. It was upon the return of Brazelton from St. Louis with his bell boat that a float or buoy was placed by Brazelton over the wreck, and this was done with the intention of signifying the place to which the diving boat was to be dropped the next morning. It was not to be expected that such objects would remain permanent fixtures, as the wreck was in the main channel of the river, and it is evident that Brazelton considered them as guides to the sit-' uation of the wreck, as the marked trees were, as he stated to Seth Daniel, in the presence of Reese Bowen, that it would make no difference if they should be washed away, as he could find the wreck from the ranges of his lines. Brazelton does not pretend to have put his boat over the wreck, or to have had any claim to the wreck but by occupancy, which depended upon his finding it, upon his providing means for easy approaches to it by land-marks, and floats upon water, and upon his being in the neighborhood of the wreck from January to the last of September, without any other appropriation of the wreck, but with a continual assertion of his claim, and with the intention of making it good by future action. This, doubtless, he would have done in the winter of 1855, had not the sinking of the steamboat Eliza afforded the opportunity of other work to which he confined himself till June.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Ark. 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eads-v-brazelton-ark-1861.