McCoy v. Board of Directors

129 S.W. 1097, 95 Ark. 345, 1910 Ark. LEXIS 185
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 13, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 129 S.W. 1097 (McCoy v. Board of Directors) 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
McCoy v. Board of Directors, 129 S.W. 1097, 95 Ark. 345, 1910 Ark. LEXIS 185 (Ark. 1910).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

Plum Bayou Levee District was created by an act of the General Assembly in 1905 for the purpose of constructing a levee along or near the east bank of the Arkansas River, in the counties of Pulaski, Lonoke and Jefferson, to protect the lands embraced in the specified territory from inundation of waters of that river. The levee constructed pursuant to the creation of the district is 42 miles long, commencing in Pulaski County about the head 'of -Plum Bayou, and extending into Jefferson County, within two miles and a half of what is known as Rob Roy bridge. The levee is a solid, continuous embankment, of sufficient height and width to prevent the spread of waters overflowing from the Arkansas River. It protects from overflow about 270,000 acres of fertile land, a considerable portion of which is improved and in a high state of cultivation. The general direction of the river course in front of the' levee is south, but there is a wide reverse bend which changes the local course east and west, and the levee is constructed across the bend instead of following it. Plaintiff, Mrs. Sallie E. McCoy, owns land embracing three hundred acres in cultivation, fronting on the east bank of the Arkansas River, and situated at the lower end of the reverse bend and in front of the levee — that is to say, between the river and the levee.

After the levee was constructed, and after the overflow of 1908, plaintiff instituted this action against Plum Bayou Levee District to recover damages for alleged injuries done to her land by reason of the construction of the levee. She alleged in the complaint that the levee was constructed across - two streams, known as Gar Slough and Plum Bayou, and stopped up said streams so that no water can pass from them into the Arkansas River, or from the river into those streams; that said streams are well-defined, natural streams, with clearly marked banks and beds, and carry well-defined and constant flow of water; that, until the levee was constructed by defendant, when the river reached flood stage Gar Slough and Plum Bayou would drain the water from the Arkansas River, thus relieving the river from a vast volume of water at flood stage at points above plaintiff’s land, thereby relieving the main channel of the river to such an extent that, even in the highest flood ever known, plaintiff’s land was secure from overflow; that after the construction of the levee, the natural outlet of flood water through Gar Slough and Plum Bayou being obstructed as aforesaid, so that all the water coming down the Arkansas River was confined to the main channel of the river and the lands lying between the river and the levee, it thereby caused the water to rise at least six feet higher on those lands than it would have risen if the escape of water through Gar Slough and Plum Bayou had not been obstructed; that, on account of said raising of the waters at flood stage, the lands of plaintiff during the overflow of 1908 were permanently damaged, and the crops thereon destroyed.

Defendant in its answer denied that Gar Slough is a well-defined, natural stream with clearly marked banks and beds, or that it carries a well-defined and constant flow of water, but. that said slough is a depression or swag about one and one-fourth miles in width, about 15 or 16 miles north of plaintiff’s land, and carries no water except in wet seasons, and has no natural flow or outlet except the common territory comprising the Plum. Bayou Levee District; that, since the construction of the levee, said slough is in as high a state of cultivation as is common to the remaining vast territory situated behind the levee. Defendant admitted that Plum Bayou is a natural stream with natural banks, and in most seasons contains water, said stream having its source many miles north of plaintiff’s land and running generally in a southeasterly direction from the Plum Bayou Levee District community into the Arkansas River several miles below the end of the levee. It denied that it has constructed its levee across Plum Bayou, but that the levee at the point mentioned in the complaint is constructed about 500 feet west of Plum Bayou, across a cut-off extending from the Arkansas River to said bayou, which -cut-off, pri-or to the construction -of the levee, contained water only in very wet weather, and the bayou, which is a sluggish stream, was unaible to hold within its banks the increasing volume of water, thereby causing water from the bayou to overflow into and through the cut-off into the Arkansas River. Said cut-off is situated about four miles north of plaintiff’s lands. It denied that when the river reached a flood stage the said two streams, or either of them, was sufficient for and did in fact drain the water from the Arkansas River, or that such so-called streams were the natural drainage for water from the Arkansas River, or that they or either of them relieved the Arkansas River at flood stage from the vast volume of water at points above plaintiff’s land, thereby so relieving the main channel of the river as to secure the plaintiff’s land from overflow, as alleged, or that the construction of the levee, as alleged, has so stopped up and cut off the flood waters of the river as to cause the water in the river to rise not less than six feet higher than it would have risen had the levee not stopped up and cut off the said so-called streams.

There was another issue in the case, as to the damage to plaintiff’s land actually used in the construction of the levee, but that was settled by the verdict of the jury awarding a certain amount to plaintiff, and it passed out of the case, so far as. concerns its consideration here. The verdict was in favor of defendant on the issue of damage for raising the flood water on the land.

The testimony was conflicting, but there was sufficient to sustain defendant’s contention as to. the situation of Gar Slough and Plum Bayou and the effect of the construction of the levee upon the flow of water. It shows, too, that, in order to protect the land within the bounds of the district, it was necessary to build the levee across the depressions which permitted flood water to pass through to the surrounding low lands of the district. Plaintiff’s land was, according to the evidence, subject to overflow before the construction of the levee. But the water rose' higher on it in 1908 after the construction of the levee; and the evidence establishes the.fact that the land was seriously and permanently injured by the overflow of 1908.

Plaintiff requested the court, to give instructions which in substance stated the law .broadly to be that she would be entitled to compensation for damages done to her land by reason of the levee having been built so as to prevent the escape of flood water through Gar Slough and Plum-.Bayou, and confine its flow to the channel of the river and to the space between the levee and the river. The court refused to so instruct the jury, but instructed that defendant was not liable for the construction of the levee unless it be found that the slough and bayous obstructed were natural outlets of the river, and were of sufficient capacity to have relieved the river from the increased flood water which caused the injury to plaintiff’s land.

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Bluebook (online)
129 S.W. 1097, 95 Ark. 345, 1910 Ark. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccoy-v-board-of-directors-ark-1910.