McKown v. Stroud

470 S.W.2d 929, 251 Ark. 104, 1971 Ark. LEXIS 1103
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 4, 1971
Docket5-5558
StatusPublished

This text of 470 S.W.2d 929 (McKown v. Stroud) 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
McKown v. Stroud, 470 S.W.2d 929, 251 Ark. 104, 1971 Ark. LEXIS 1103 (Ark. 1971).

Opinion

J. Fred Jones, Justice.

This appeal is from a decree of the Conway County Chancery Court concerning public rights to an easement by prescription over Lot 2, and particularly over the west half of Lot 2, in Block 5 of Moose Addition to the town of Morrilton. Lots 1 and 2 lie beside each other with the east end of each lot fronting 50 feet on East Street. They extend from East Street west 151.25 feet to an alley. Lot 1 lies south of Lot 2 and Lot 1 is bounded on its south side by North Street.

Robert Lane is the owner of the west half of Lot 2 and the west 79.1 feet of Lot 1. Mrs. R. H. Dickenhorst is the owner of the east half of Lot 2 and the east 72.15 feet of Lot 1. Lane owns a brick building on the southwest corner of Lot 1. It fronts 55.5 feet on North Street and extends north along the alley a distance of approximately 50 feet to the north line of Lot 1. Lane originally owned a cafe building on his east 23.6 feet of Lot 1 but it has been torn down to provide a private driveway from North Street across the east end of Lane’s portion of Lot 1 to his west half of Lot 2.

Mrs. Dickenhorst owns a brick building which extends across the entire length of her east 72.15 feet of Lot 1. Her building also fronts on North Street and extends north approximately 45 feet. All of Lot 2 lying north of Lot 1, and behind the buildings on Lot 1, is vacant except for a small taxi stand owned by Mrs. Dickenhorst in the northeast corner of Lot 2.

Lane leased his building to the appellee, L. D. Stroud, with right to use the vacant area north and east of the building for customer parking and for ingress and egress from North Street and the alley on the west. Mrs. Dickenhorst leased her building to the appellants, John and Christine McKown. Mrs. McKown owns and operates a tavern where beer is sold and consumed in her leased building and Stroud owns and operates a liquor store where beer is also sold in his leased building.

Mr. Stroud decided to install a “drive-in window” on the east side of his building, thus enabling customers to drive in from North Street over the 23.6 foot area between his building and the McKown Tavern; make their purchases at the drive-in window, then drive around his building over the west half of Lot 2 and exit from the premises via the alley west of his building. In preparing the premises for this use and purpose, Mr. Stroud, with Mr. Lane’s approval, erected a fence from the northeast corner of the west half of Lot 2 along the east boundary line of the west half of Lot 2, to a point adjacent to the northwest corner of the McKown Tavern building, thus preventing vehicular traffic from passing from the rear of the tavern building to the rear of the liquor store and vice versa.

The McKowns objected to the erection of the fence and Mr. Stroud objected to McKowns’ customers parking in the area behind and adjacent to his liquor store. The objections finally grew into charges and countercharges of tacks and broken glass in driveways, destruction of fences and damage to business, and resulted in a petition in chancery filed by Stroud for an injunction against Mr. McKown restraining him from trespassing on his leased premises and from interfering with the fence erected by Stroud. Mr. McKown denied in his answer that he owned the tavern or that he interfered with the fence or its erection, but Mrs. McKown filed a separate petition contending that the general public had acquired an easement over the entire length of Lot 2 by prescription and she prayed an order requiring Stroud to remove the fence he had erected across the property subject to such easement. Each of the parties claimed damages against the other.

The cases were consolidated for trial and from the evidence submitted at the trial the chancellor found that the sporadic use by the general public of the lands in the rear of the buildings involved was not sufficient to enable either the McKowns or the public generally to acquire an easement for either parking or passage. The chancellor entered a decree enjoining the McKowns from interfering with the fence erected by Stroud and from trespassing thereon. Damages were denied to both parties and the costs were assessed equally against Stroud and the McKowns. Mr. and Mrs. McKown have appealed to this court and they rely upon the following point for reversal:

“That the findings of the trial court are against the preponderance of the evidence when it found that there had only been sporadic use of the premises to the rear of the buildings which had not ripened into a public way by prescription.”

We are of the opinion that the chancellor’s findings were not against the preponderance of the evidence.

In establishing easements over unenclosed private lands by prescription, the actual use, sporadic or otherwise, is not as important as is the claim of right under which the use is made or exercised. Duty v. Vinson, 228 Ark. 617, 309 S. W. 2d 318.

There had never been an alley or passageway platted or dedicated to the public over the land involved in the case at bar. As a matter of fact there is no evidence of a well-defined right-of-way claimed in this case and the entire east and west halves of Lot 2 are involved. Stroud testified that he has designated private parking areas on Lot 2 at the rear of his liquor store for the use of employees. and customers, leaving room for his customers to drive between the rear of his store building and the parking area. He testified that on many occasions the McKown Tavern customers would park their automobiles in this area for long periods of time blocking the rear doors to his building and the passageway around his building.

There was considerable evidence to the effect that the area involved behind the buildings leased by the respective parties in this case had been used by the general public for parking wagons and automobiles for many years, and that on many occasions people driving to the rear of the buildings on Lot 1 would drive through the length of Lot 2. There is also considerable evidence to the effect that the area involved behind the buildings leased by the parties in this case was no different in public use from many other vacant lots and areas behind business buildings in the town of Morrilton — simply used by the general public for off-street parking and convenient passage without claim of right adverse to the owners. ■

The evidence in this case also indicates that there has always been little occasion for the public generally to use Lot 2 except for off-street parking and for going to and from the rear of the buildings on Lot 1. The evidence is to the effect that at oné time there were four different businesses in the building occupied by the Mc-Kowns, and that for the past few years all of the building has been used for their tavern except for a barber shop in the east end of the building.

Mr. Lane testified that at one time there were five different business tenánts in his building and that they had private parking areas marked as such on his portion of Lot 2 behind their respective businesses. He testified that in recent years someone knocked the curb off the west side of East Street with a sledge hammer in order to drive into the area; that a part of the area is real rough and that he has never driven, and has never seen others drive, an automobile all the way through the area from East Street to the alley.

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Related

Fullenwider v. Kitchens
266 S.W.2d 281 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1954)
Barbee v. Carpenter
267 S.W.2d 768 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1954)
Duty v. Vinson
309 S.W.2d 318 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1958)
Bond v. Stanton
31 S.W.2d 409 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1930)
Rochelle v. Piles
427 S.W.2d 10 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1968)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
470 S.W.2d 929, 251 Ark. 104, 1971 Ark. LEXIS 1103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckown-v-stroud-ark-1971.