Hoover v. Smith

451 S.W.2d 877, 248 Ark. 443, 1970 Ark. LEXIS 1238
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 6, 1970
Docket5-5212
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 451 S.W.2d 877 (Hoover v. Smith) 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
Hoover v. Smith, 451 S.W.2d 877, 248 Ark. 443, 1970 Ark. LEXIS 1238 (Ark. 1970).

Opinion

John A. Fogleman, Justice.

Appellants and appellees are adjoining property owners, the lands of appellants lying east of those of appellees. Both tracts are bounded on the north by Little River. Appellants acquired their property in 1963. Their predecessors in title had owned it since 1929. Appellees have owned their property since 1937.

This controversy involves the right of appellants to continue to use a roadway across the lands of appellees as a means of ingress and egress. This way enters appellees’ property at the extreme southwest corner thereof where it intersects a county road. It meanders northerly along the west boundary of appellees’ land to Little River, thence easterly along Little River to an old ferry landing, then to a campground and, finally, to the boundary between appellants and appellees. It has been in existence many years and was used by appellants and their predecessors in title as their primary means of ingress and egress until November, 1968. The preponderance of the evidence supports the chancellor’s finding that it then constituted the only feasible means of access to appellants’ lands. At least 10 years ago appellees enclosed their lands by fencing the entire tract. A wire gap gate was then placed and has been subsequently maintained across the roadway at its juncture with the county road. In November, 1968, appellees replaced this gate with a metal gate, which they locked. Thereafter, they refused passage across their lands to appellees. There was also a gate at or near the boundary line.

Appellants brought this action to enjoin appellees from denying them use of the roadway, claiming an easement for ingress and egress based upon prescription. Appellees defended upon the ground that any prescriptive rights acquired by the public or by appellants had been lost and that no one had the right to cross their lands except by permission.

The preponderance of the evidence supports the chancellor’s finding that the public established prescriptive easements across appellees’ property, at least as far as the ferry site and old campgrounds. It also supports his finding that at least a private easement by prescription existed from the old ferry site to appellants’ lands. The chancery court, however, denied relief to appellants because it found that gates were erected and maintained by appellees for more than seven years, not only to keep cattle enclosed, but for additional reasons sufficient to bar any use of the roadway by appellants as a matter of right.

Appellants assert that abandonment of their prescriptive rights was not shown by a preponderance of the evidence, and that failure of appellants to take steps to remove the gates within seven years did not constitute a bar to present relief. They argue that no clear intention on the part of appellees to obstruct passage over the road was evidenced until the gate was locked.

It is clearly established that erection and maintenance of a gate by an owner does not give notice that subsequent use of a way across his lands is permissive and not as a matter of right, unless it was maintained as a means of asserting the owner’s dominion over the road. Martin v. Terrell, 229 Ark. 787, 318 S. W. 2d 607. The placing of a temporary device across a roadway for the purpose of restraining livestock, but not for the purpose of obstructing an adjoining owner or the public in the use of the road, is not sufficient to interfere with the reasonable enjoyment of a right to use it. Hockersmith v. Glidewell, (Ark., 1913), 153 S. W. 252. On the other hand, it is well settled that erection and maintenance of a gate or a wire gap across a road, by an owner, when his purpose is not merely to restrain livestock, constitutes notice to the public that, thereafter, any travel upon the road is by permission of the owner and not as a matter of right to the public or to any individual traveling the road, even though the gate or gap may be left open during certain seasons. Porter v. Hugg, 162 Ark. 52, 257 S. W. 393; Mount v. Dillon, 200 Ark. 153, 138 S. W. 2d 59; Kennedy v. Crouse, 214 Ark. 830, 218 S. W. 2d 375.

The cases hereinbefore cited also constitute authority for the proposition that a prescriptive easement may be barred after maintenance of a gate for more than seven years, without any action by one claiming the easement to prevent the obstruction, and that failure to take such action during that period constitutes an abandonment of the easement. Our most recent application of these rules was in Munn v. Rateliff, (November 10, 1969), 446 S. W. 2d 664.

The real point at issue on this appeal is the intention of appellees in placing and maintaining the gates, or at least the gate at the entrance to their property from the county road. In Raney v. Gunn, 221 Ark. 10, 253 S. W. 2d 559, where it had been alleged that there had been an abandonment of permissive and prescriptive rights after the erection and maintenance of gates for the purpose of preventing entry of livestock into a pasture, we held that a landowner seeking injunctive relief against the closing of the gate had the burden of proving that a prescriptive right still existed.

While we agree with the chancellor that the question is a close one, we cannot say that his finding was clearly against the preponderance of the evidence.

Thomas Hoover testified that it had been necessary to open a wire gap to go in and out of the Smith place ever since he could remember and that no one had to ask permission. Those using the gate opened and closed it as they entered the Smith place. Hoover also testified that on the other side of the Smith place he always opened another gate on his own land. Both gates had been in place as long as he could remember. He testified that the latter gate was actually on appellants’ land. According to him, the property line was on the west side of a slough and the fence between the lands of the parties on the east side of the slough. Hoover claimed the fence on the east side and the gate there, but admitted that the fence and gate on the west side of appellees’ property belonged to Smith. The reason for this location of the fence was explained by Glenn Baker, the son of appellants’ predecessor in title and a witness called by appellants, tie said that his father built the fence on the east side of the slough to leave a little road going down through the slough, so people could get to a big bend in the slough without bothering the fence. He stated that most of the slough was on Smith’s land.

Hoover related that he had placed a culvert in the road in 1965 and was assisted by Smith and appellees’ son. He also stated that he htid the county put gravel on about 50 yards of the road from a trestle down to the slough bridge. All this was done, he said, with the knowledge and approval of Smith. Mack Rogers, who helped Hoover with this work, confirmed the presence of Smith when the culvert was installed. Rogers had heard Smith threaten to “cut up the road” on an occasion when Smith • showed him where travel had taken place across his i meadow, making it sort of muddy and “bogged down.”

Smith testified that he had erected a “posted” sign near the entrance gate in 1960. At about the same tíme he also placed an “article” from a farm magazine on a post at the gate.

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Bluebook (online)
451 S.W.2d 877, 248 Ark. 443, 1970 Ark. LEXIS 1238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoover-v-smith-ark-1970.