Meriwether Sand & Gravel Co. v. State Ex Rel. Attorney General

26 S.W.2d 57, 181 Ark. 216, 1930 Ark. LEXIS 125
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 3, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 26 S.W.2d 57 (Meriwether Sand & Gravel Co. v. State Ex Rel. Attorney General) 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
Meriwether Sand & Gravel Co. v. State Ex Rel. Attorney General, 26 S.W.2d 57, 181 Ark. 216, 1930 Ark. LEXIS 125 (Ark. 1930).

Opinion

Butler, J.

The appellant, some years ago, secured leases on lands underlaid with gravel situated about four or four and a half miles from Bodcaw creek in Lafayette County, Arkansas. The water’s from the said lands, in their natural flow by means of depressions, sloughs and branches, entered said creek at a point above the lands of the appellees, F. M. Shewmake and E. D. Brown. The appellant erected on its leasehold equipment for the mining of the gravel and for washing a part of it so as to separate the sand and other foreign matter therein from the gravel. The gravel mined was sold by the appellant to. various persons, a considerable quantity being sold to the Highway Department of the State of Arkansas. A part of the gravel was sold in its natural state as when taken from the pits, some was sold after having been washed, and the sand extracted was also marketed for various purposes. As a part of appellant’s equipment, railway tracks were constructed for the purpose of bringing the gravel in its natural state to its washing plant and delivering it at points where it might be transported for use in the building of highways, etc.: A well was sunk from which water was procured. The total amount of money expended by the appellant in erecting and equipping its plant was a large sum. In washing the gravel the detritus held in suspension by the water flowed across the low-lying ground and finally was discharged into Bodcaw creek.

On the 13th day of July, 1929, the State, on relation of the Attorney General (F. M. Shewmake and E. D. Brown joining with it), filed a bill in equity asking that the appellant be permanently enjoined from discharging the washings from its gravel beds into Bodcaw creek— the State on the ground that said creek was a stream in which fish bred and were accustomed to frequent, and that same had been used as a public fishing and outing stream for many years by the citizens of Arkansas, and that the operation of appellant’s equipment had rendered the stream unfit for a spawning and breeding ground, and that the fish had been destroyed and driven from its waters; and Shewmake and Brown .on the ground that they were owners of a part of the stream, its pools and lakes, and the land adjoining the same for a considerable distance, and that the deposits from the washing of gravel were filling the stream, that silt and other material were being deposited in increasing* quantities and over increasing areas each season over their meadows and farms adjacent to the stream, and that the waters of the stream had been rendered unfit for domestic use or for the use of their horses and other domestic animals, and that their fishing rights in said waters were .valuable and had been destroyed.

The appellant filed its motion to strike the cause of action alleged by Shewmake and Brown because, as it said, they were improperly joined with the plaintiff, the State, and also filed a demurrer, which motion and complaint being overruled, defendant answered denying the allegations of the complaint and denying that it had violated any public or private right or encroached upon the property of plaintiffs by doing or omitting to do any act by which commission or omission an injury resulted.

The court heard the testimony on the evidence, which was sharply conflicting, and found the issues in favor of the plaintiffs and rendered a decree holding that the operation of appellant’s plant caused 11 slush, mud and silt to be discharged through natural drainage into the waters of Bodeaw creek which follows through and across the lands belonging* to the plaintiffs, Shewmake aud Brown, and that by reason of the same the waters of the stream were rendered unfit for domestic use for the watering of their animals and for other purposes, and that such discharge constituted a continuing private and public nuisance, and that appellant ought and should be restrained and enjoined from discharging any further quantities of silt, etc., into said creek or into any stream or drainage that would convey the same into the creek.”

For reversal of the decree as to the appellees, Shew-make and Brown, the appellant contends that their several causes of action are barred by the statute of limitation, and for further reason, that they have been guilty* of such laches as would bar the relief sought. Appellant further contends that the State is not entitled to the relief granted; that the damages are shown to be slight, while the relief sought would work great damage to the appellant and great inconvenience and loss to the public; that the relief ought not to have been granted because the operation of appellant’s plant was of importance to the State, and that a dangerous precedent would be set by the upholding of the judgment of the court below.

The testimony on the part of the appellant tended to show that the appellees, Shewmake and Brown, were the owners of the lands alleged to have been damaged, and of the stream at and before the time of the erection of the appellant’s plant; that they knew of the preparations made by the appellant and of the erection by it of its various equipment, and that it was laying tram-roads at great expense, making purchases of gravel in situ from the various landowners, and entering into extensive contracts with the State Highway Department and others for furnishing both washed and unwashed gravel; that its plant was erected and operations begun in the year 1925, more than three or four years before the date of the filing of the complaint in this case, and that shortly after the erection the detritus from the washing plant began to make its way down the lower lying lands and branches, and soon began to discolor the waters of the creek, and to load it -with quantities of various kinds of earth held in suspension, which gradually, as these substances settled, began to fill the stream and to deposit sediment on adjacent lands. These facts, it is argued, bring the case within the rule announced in Brown v. Arkansas Central Power Co., 177 Ark. 1064, and that the appellees’ cause of action is barred because of limitation. To this conclusion we cannot assent. In order for the rule announced in the Brown case, supra, to apply, the erection of the plant and its operation must have been of such nature that the consequences resulting therefrom could have been known and the damage ascertained and fully compensated at the time the injury first occurred. It is shown by the testimony that the injury to the stream was progressive in its nature, being greater or less with the recurring seasons. The -deposits of mud in the flats were precipitated in greater quantities in times of flood than under normal weather conditions. Therefore, it cannot be said that the full extent of the injury could have been foreseen or the damage ascertained at the time of the beginning of the operations of appellant’s plant.

In Brown v. Arkansas Central Power Co., supra, it is said: “If it was known -the damage was probable, or even though some damage was certain, the nature and extent of that damage could not be reasonably known and fairly estimated, but "would be speculative and conjectural,” then the rule announced by the court a-s applicable to the facts of that case would not apply. Bodcaw creek is a well-defined stream, and the owners of lands across which it runs are entitled to see it maintained in its natural state, and this right is a continuing one, and, by virtue of § 3663 of 0. & M.

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Bluebook (online)
26 S.W.2d 57, 181 Ark. 216, 1930 Ark. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meriwether-sand-gravel-co-v-state-ex-rel-attorney-general-ark-1930.