Smith v. Magnet Cove Barium Corp.

206 S.W.2d 442, 212 Ark. 491, 1947 Ark. LEXIS 741
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 8, 1947
Docket4-8347
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 206 S.W.2d 442 (Smith v. Magnet Cove Barium Corp.) 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
Smith v. Magnet Cove Barium Corp., 206 S.W.2d 442, 212 Ark. 491, 1947 Ark. LEXIS 741 (Ark. 1947).

Opinion

Griffin Smith, Chief Justice.

Town Creek, with its source north of Malvern, runs through part of the City, and eventually, empties into Ouachita River. Magnet Cove Barium Corporation in its milling operations utilizes the creek for disposal purposes. Ore-bearing earth, from which barium is separated, goes through the mill where large quantities of water are used in conjunction with chemicals, in consequence of which a liquid residue passes into the drainway. When dry it becomes whitish gray; and because of the high state of pulverization, this excess — referred to as “tailings’’ — hardens and forms a coating on lands adjacent the creek, or it is deposited irregularly'when during wet weather an overflow of the stream occurs.

J. Millard Smith owns 145 acres, some on either side of the creek, beginning at a point approximately a mile below the mill. The farm was purchased “twenty or thirty years ago ” at a cost of $120 per acre. In a complaint filed February 12, 1945, Smith alleged that mud and slush discharged from the Corporation’s mill impaired the creek to such an extent that its waters were destroyed for fishing purposes. Cattle, drinking, from the stream, were injured or found the adulteration so offensive as to avoid it. During high water deposits containing minerals and chemicals flooded valuable parts of Smith’s lands. When the creek returned to its banks sediment caused permanent impairment, resulting in damages of $2,500. In addition to compensation, the plaintiff asked that the defendant be enjoined from dumping its tailings into the creek.

In response to the Court’s direction that the complaint be made more definite and certain, an amendment filed April 27th described the land with particularity and increased from $2,500 to $9,000 the amount of damages alleged.

August 3d of the same year J. B. Smith and Guy Haltom intervened, each alleging he owned lands “adjacent to Town Creek and to the Ouachita River.” They adopted Millard Smith’s complaint in so far as applicable to them, emphasizing that prior to pollution the river was a clear, navigable stream, to which game fish and other varieties were indigenous. The waters, it is said, “ . . . have been extensively used as a public fishing and outing stream since Arkansas has been inhabited by the white race — much used by the public for bathing, watering stock, and for sport and commercial fishing by those living in the vicinity, and by visitors.” The defendant Corporation’s conduct in dumping its refuse into Town Creek, said the complaint, damaged these two interveners, who asked that an injunction issue. There was no demand for compensation.

Answering Haltom and J. B. Smith, the Corporation asserted that Hot Spring Circuit Court consolidated complaints filed by them in which they alleged that by reason of the defendant’s act in dumping its tailings into Town Creek, use of their lands had been totally destroyed. Haltom recovered judgment for $600, and Smith $100.

The Chancellor rejected injunction pleas of each of the three, holding — in respect of Haltom and J. B. Smith —that their rights were adjudicated in the Circuit Court action, hence res judicata barred them. J. Millard Smith was not entitled to this extraordinary remedy, there being adequate facilities at law.

The contention that rights of Haltom and J. B. Smith had been adjudicated is, prima facie, correct. There is nothing in the abstract to show that the Circuit Court judgments did not compensate the prevailing plaintiffs in all respects. If full payment were made for total injury, there could be no recurring loss. Since the pleadings are not available we must assume that matters covered by the judgments justified the Chancellor’s findings. We also think the Chancellor acted with judicial discretion in declining to restrain appellee on the showing made by J. Millard Smith. 1

A great deal of testimony was supplied from which the Chancellor could have found that J. Millard Smith’s farm had been extensively damaged. Austin. Inglis, surveyor, had prepared a drawing (spoken of by attorneys and witnesses as a map) showing the Smith property, with designation of areas believed to have been damaged by deposits of barium sediment, boundaries marking cultivated and non-tillable lands, and giving other information helpful to the trial Court in arriving at an understanding of the physical layout. This witness “thought he would be safe in saying something like half of the land had been overflowed, ‘and has this on it.’ ” He then added, “You can find evidence, [but] of course they cultivated it.”

Specifically the Court understood (as indicated by a question) that Inglis had testified damages extended to 20.4 acres. A question on cross-examination was: “The only land that has been greatly damaged is this piece right here — I am talking about the land they have been farming recently: the only appreciable damage is in the south corner of the northeast southwest?” Answer: “I don’t know what it would take to damage a piece of land, because it did have an awful lot of it. I don’t know whether it damaged it or whether it didn’t. ” Inglis later testified that during the preceding four years half of the twenty acres affected by sediment had been in cultivation: — “that is just an estimate; it could vary from it a little bit. I made this map. ’ ’

There were other references to the map. Unfortunately it has not been included in the bill of exceptions; hence the Chancellor had access to it, but we do not. It would be helpful in understanding what other witnesses had in mind — areas to which they pointed while testifying.

Source of Smith’s damages — whether from appellee’s mill, or contributed to by others — is in substantial dispute. Town Creek has its source three or four miles north and east of Malvern. It flows in a southwesterly direction through a part of the City. Ouachita River is three miles southwest of Malvern. The creek has been intersected at a point two miles north of the municipality by a canal cut for-use of Acme Brick Company. Through it sand and clay are carried into the creek during high water periods. The industrial community of Perla, two miles north of Malvern, disposes of sewage through two septic tanks. These empty into the creek. Another septic tank appurtenant to Jernigan Addition east of Malvern connects with Town Creek. In addition the Negro settlement east of the City, with out-of-doors toilets, drains into the creek. A stockyard, railroad refueling station, and other sources of contamination add to the burden of pollution.

. Appellants introduced testimony that except during rainy - weather the creek was clear before its waters reached appellee’s mill, and discolored thereafter. On the other hand there was testimony that the flowage was laden with feculence to such an extent that human consumption of fish would endanger health; nor was it advisable that the waters be used for bathing or swimming.

In arriving at a determination of apportionable responsibility the Chancellor had to consider contributing causes that were not easily divisible by any accepted method of admeasurement.

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Bluebook (online)
206 S.W.2d 442, 212 Ark. 491, 1947 Ark. LEXIS 741, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-magnet-cove-barium-corp-ark-1947.