Lake v. Combs

104 S.W. 544, 84 Ark. 21, 1907 Ark. LEXIS 148
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 104 S.W. 544 (Lake v. Combs) 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
Lake v. Combs, 104 S.W. 544, 84 Ark. 21, 1907 Ark. LEXIS 148 (Ark. 1907).

Opinions

Hike, C. J.

A. C. Lake, as guardian of Ernest B. Lake and Louise Bradford, minor heirs of D. W. Lake, deceased, filed a complaint in the Marion Circuit Court against Thomas Combs, in which he sought to recover for his wards certain real estate held by 'Combs, and also a ferry boat and outfit.

The case was tried before the circuit judge sitting as a jury. He gave judgment for the defendant, and the plaintiffs have appealed; the minors in the meantime having reached majority.

The record is peculiarly constructed. There are depositions and oral testimony copied in the transcript, without any authentication, and following these depositions and testimony is the bill of exceptions, which contains in a concise form the evidence of witnesses. Only the testimony authenticated is considered.

The testimony on behalf of the plaintiffs (appellants here) is substantially as follows:

Wilber testified that he made a contract with A. C. Lake, guardian of these minors, which was introduced. By it he leased a tract of land for a ferry privilege on White River at Lake’s Ferry; and he was to put in a ferry boat at a cost of not less than $50, the boat to be large enough to carry a wagon and team hitched to it, and to expend not less than $50 on repairing the road leading to the ferry, and to run a ferry regularly for a period of two years from July x, 1903; and at the end of that time to return the land, together with the ferry outfit, to the Lake heirs; and other details not necessary to notice.

About the time he made this contract with Lake, or shortly before it, Keener,, Cowdrey and Jones built a ferry boat, and began. operating a ferry at this point. Their ferry boat was run by means of poles and oars, and landed at the public road on each side of the river. The land on the Baxter side of the river, opposite the Lake tract, belonged to Combs. When Wilber got this contract with Lake, he formed a partnership with Keener, Cowdrey and Jones; and Gray, Keener’s partner, was also taken into the company, making it consist of five. They then bought a wire cable with which to operate the ferry, and attached it to the Lake land 40 or 50 feet outside of the public road, and stretched it across the river, and fastened it at the other end to a tree in the public road. They did not touch on- Combs’s land on the Baxter side of the river. A windlass was placed on the Lake land, and by it the cable controlling the ferry was operated.

Wilber said that Keener, Cowdrey, Gray and Jones knew of said contract, and operated the ferry under it. "They, his partners, claimed that they could operate a ferry at that point without a lease from Lake or anyone else, there being a public road on each side of the river; but they did not claim that they could attach their wire cable to the Lake land without a contract, and they did attach their cable to- the Lake land and operated their ferry from it under and by virtue of his contract with the Lakes. That the partners were cognizant of the fact that under the contract the ferry outfit was to be the property of the Lakes at the termination of the contract as part of the consideration for the use of the land, and that they were willing to this, as they anticipated that by that time the railroad would be built across the river near there, rendering the ferry of little value. He and his co-owners performed the $50 worth of road work required by the Lake lease. He said he never sold his interest to -Cornell, or to anyone else; that Cornell simply operated the ferry for the co-partnership.

When the ferry license was first issued, it was in the name of Jones; but Combs, who owned a ferry a short distance up the river, brought'a suit in Baxter County to enjoin Jones from running the ferry; and in order to defeat this injunction the license was shifted from Jones to Cornell and run in his name, so that the ferry would not be stopped. Wilbur said that he did not know of this at the time it was done, and did not consent to it, and that he afterwards learned that Cornell did not -pay anything for the ferry, and that no sale was made to him. Cornell was a clerk in the employ of Gray and Keener.-

D. T. Jones, another member of the partnership, testified to substantially the same effect as Wilber, and stated that he . transferred the license to Cornell in order to defeat the suit of Combs against them, and that there was no sale to Cornell. He says that -Cornell did not buy the ferry, and never did own any part of it. He further says that Combs saw the lease from Lake to- Wilber prior to the time he claims to have bought, when it was used in the trial of the injunction suit.

Jones says that he and Cowdrey, Keener and Gray contended that they had a right to operate the ferry by means of poles and oars without a lease from the Lakes, but they did not consider that they had a right to attach the ferry to the Lake land without a contract from them permitting it. That the firm put the ferry in with the intention of operating it until the expiration of the lease of Wilber, and then the railroad would be built, and the ferry business would not amount to much, and that they were willing for the ferry outfit to go to the Lakes at the end of the lease, and knew that was the effect of using the Wilber lease of the Lake land.

A. C. Lake testified to the execution of the contract and the operation of the ferry under it. He said that Combs, after he got possession of the ferry outfit, moved the wire cable further back on the Lake land and fastened it to an iron bar driven in a permanent rock on said land. He testified as to the amount of damages he thought that his wards had suffered by reason of the action of Combs, and of his efforts to have Combs vacate the lands and ferry at the expiration of the lease.

The evidence on behalf of the defendant was as follows: Combs testified that he claims he bought the ferry from Cornell, the party whom he found in possession of it, and claims that he paid $250 in cash for it. That he thought the ferry belonged to Cornell, as Keener told him it belonged to Cornell and for him to buy it. He admits that he saw the lease which Lake gave to Wilber before he bought the ferry from Cornell. He says he let Keener have a lot in Cotter which went in payment for the ferry in controversy. He does not claim that he bought the ferry from Wilber or anyone except from Cornell, as the license was in the name of Cornell. That when he bought the ferry oufit he went to where Wilber, Cowdrey, Keener, Gray and Jones had attached the end of the wire cable to a tree on the Lake land, and moved it further back upon the bluff on the Lake land, and there fastened it to an iron bar in a rock. He also took the opposite end of the wire cable from the public road, and moved it on his own land on the Baxter side of the river, thus making the ferry run from the Lake land to his land, and so operated it from said points.

Keener testified for Combs that he and his partners did not consider the lease which Wilber made with the Lakes as necessary. That they thought they had a right to put in a public ferry there and fun it because of the public road which they used on either side of the river. That he declined at all times to recognize Wilber’s lease from the Lakes because he thought-it was unnecessary. But he admits that his firm fastened the wire cable to a tree on the Lake land, and operated it from there. He says that they sold the ferry to Cornell, and that “D, T.

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Bluebook (online)
104 S.W. 544, 84 Ark. 21, 1907 Ark. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lake-v-combs-ark-1907.