Rauls v. Costner

143 S.W.2d 1090, 201 Ark. 155, 1940 Ark. LEXIS 314
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 21, 1940
Docket4-6057
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 143 S.W.2d 1090 (Rauls v. Costner) 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
Rauls v. Costner, 143 S.W.2d 1090, 201 Ark. 155, 1940 Ark. LEXIS 314 (Ark. 1940).

Opinion

Humphreys, J.

Appellee brought this suit against appellants in the circuit court of Mississippi county, Chickasawba district, to recover damages in the sum of $3,'651.75 to a certain tract of land owned by him containing 28.61 acres, particularly described as the fractional south half, northwest quarter, and fractional northwest quarter, southwest • quarter, section 6, township 13 north, range 9 east', in .Mississippi county, Arkansas, by reason of the construction of a new levee in Drainage District 16 in said county alleging in part that in the construction thereof appellants created a “bottle neck” above his land in locating and building the new levee close to the old levee so as to divert surface water and high water and throw same upon his land at a greatly accelerated rate and in greater volume than before; and by tying the new levee into a road embankment below said land, so as to place said land in a pocket between the old and new levee resulting in damming up and impounding surface and high water, thereby diverting and backing same onto his. land.

Appellants filed an answer denying these and other allegations contained in the complaint.

The cause was submitted to a jury upon the pleadings, evidence introduced by both parties and the instructions of the court resulting in a verdict and judgment against appellants for $700, from which is this appeal.

Appellants in briefing the case have made a statement gleaned from the pleadings and evidence adduced on the trial of the cause which is illuminating and helpful to an understanding of the controversy which we incorporate with a few changes in this statement rather than attempt a statement ourselves. Appellee does not suggest that the statement is incorrect in any material particular. The statement is as follows with the exception of a few changes' made by us:

“Drainage District No. 16 was organized in 1916 under the Alternative Drainage District Acts. It comprises an area of 58,000 acres, which is that portion of the Chickasawba district of Mississippi county, lying west of Big Lake and the right-hand chute of Little River. Soon after the creation of the district, appellants constructed a levee along the western banks of Big Lake and the right-hand chute of Little River which proved to be inadequate.

“In 1927, an extraordinary flood created grave damages for both the inhabitants and the lands of this section of Mississippi county. Rain waters from southeast Missouri, a basin with a watershed of more than 2,000 square miles, poured into Big Lake with great velocity. The levee of appellant drainage district, as well as the levee on the east side of Big Lake and the right-hand chute of Little River, that Drainag*e District No. 17 had constructed, were inadequate. The crowns and bases of the levees were too small; the barrow pits were too close to the levees; and the floodway between the levees was too narrow. In 1933, 1935, and 1937, there were more high waters; the United States engineering department, and all parties concerned, were convinced that a new levee was necessary to protect the lands of the district. Although there was no levee break in 1937, more than four-fifths of the lands in the district were covered by flood waters. This water came around the north end of the levee, from Missouri, and from crevasses in the levee south of the boundary line of the district. During each flood threat, thousands of dollars were expended to keep the levee from breaking, both by appellant district and Drainage District No. 17. In fact, Drainage District No. 17 had suffered from actual levee breaks. The gravity of the situation became apparent to Congress which had.long recognized that this alluvial valley, of which Mississippi county is a part, deserved the same protection from flood waters as the lands immediately adjacent to the Mississippi River. In 1937, Congress enacted the Overton Flood Control Act, which included Big Lake and the right-hand chute of Little River in the Mississippi River flood control program. The act provided that the United States Government would construct new levees along these navigable streams, if the drainage districts would provide rights-of-way. The United States engineers prepared plans for new levees, and as soon as these were submitted to the commissioners of both drainage districts, they agreed to co-operate with the Government, and arranged with the Reconstruction Finance Corporation for loans in order to pay landowners for the rights-of-way. The sketch will show that the new levees broaden the width of the floodway on right-hand chute of Little River from a distance of a quarter of a mile to about a mile at the nearest point. These levees will now take care of a volume of about 30,000 feet of water a second and a maximum flood with an allowance of three feet above the highest expected crest of the water.

“Appellee is the owner of a small 28.61 acre tract of land that lies in a ‘V’ shape along a gravel road, state highway No. 77, and angles back against the old levee, bordering the right-hand chute of Little River. This tract is shaded on the rough sketch, and is colored blue on one of the exhibits. The land is not in the Chickasawba district, but lies in the Osceola district of Mississippi county. It is neither in Drainage District No. 16 nor any other drainage district. Appellee has paid no drainage taxes of any kind. It so happens that the old levees along the right-hand chute of Little River were nearer to each other at the point of the land in suit than at most other places. The new levee-on the west side of the river is about one-half mile from the land in suit, and the floodway at this point is now a mile in width.

“As has been indicated, the new levees have been completed on both sides of the right-hand chute of Little River, within the boundaries of appellant drainage district and Drainage District No. 17. During flood times, the waters of the right-hand chute of Little River, within the boundaries of appellant drainage district and Drainage District No. 17 may flow unimpeded from the Missouri line into Big Lake and southwesterly into the St. Francis River. The land in suit and all other lands between the new levees will be covered by the right-hand chute of Little River as it spreads outside its banks, but when the flood waters subside, these lands will drain according to their natural topography. The old levee has already been leveled to the ground in many places, especially where the construction of the new levee was sufficiently close to the old levee so that the dragline could utilize that soil. In addition, appellants have offered to crevasse the old levee at any place where the landowner wants it done. Appellants have not wished to leave any obstruction in the way of the drainage of lands adjacent to the river and now lying between the new levees. The old levee along the tract of land of appellee is still standing intact, solely because he has insisted on leaving it like it is.”

Attached to the statement is a map of Drainage District No. 16 showing the location of the old levee as well as the new levee bordering on the right-hand chute of Little River and also the old and new levees on the east side of the right-hand chute of Little River and for the purpose of showing the location of the land in question and the situation before and after the new levees were built.

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Related

Gladish v. Drainage District No. 17
230 S.W.2d 490 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1950)

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Bluebook (online)
143 S.W.2d 1090, 201 Ark. 155, 1940 Ark. LEXIS 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rauls-v-costner-ark-1940.