Terral v. Brooks

108 S.W.2d 489, 194 Ark. 311, 1937 Ark. LEXIS 361
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 21, 1937
Docket4-4696
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 108 S.W.2d 489 (Terral v. Brooks) 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
Terral v. Brooks, 108 S.W.2d 489, 194 Ark. 311, 1937 Ark. LEXIS 361 (Ark. 1937).

Opinion

GrieeiN Smith, C. J.

Appellees, W. E. Brooks and Adeline E. Brooks, filed suit against the Southwestern Bell Telephone Company on March 12, 1936, praying for a temporary restraining order to prevent defendant from erecting a telephone pole in a driveway used by appellees as a part of the facilities of their residential property identified as plot No. 52 of Prospect Terrace Addition to the city of Little Rock. The temporary order was issued, and was later made permanent.

It is alleged in the complaint that plot 52 was purchased by appellees in 1925; that appellees immediately moved into the residence on plot 52, and that they had occupied the premises since 1925, with all appurtenances, openly, notoriously, and with the claim of title in fee simple thereto, adversely to all others.

It is further alleg’ed that before and at the time ap-pellees moved into the residence on said property, the driveway was laid out and was in use as the sole means of ingress and egress to the garage; that Edgewood road, which was the street opened and dedicated and on which appellees’ property abutted, was paved, and a .curbing-separated the pavement from plot 52; that there was an opening about eight feet wide in the curbing, with rounded ends, through which the driveway opened into Edgewood road; that 'appellees had continuously, from 1925, used said driveway daily and at all times as a service entry to their premises, without interference, and that such use was with the claim of title through the whole length and width of the driveway; that the driveway in-question consists of a strip of land between plots 51 and 52.

In its answer, the telephone company denied that ap-pellees were owners of the real property used as a driveway, and alleged that appellees ’ acquisition of plot 52 was subject to certain restrictions and reservations; that the grantor from whom appellees took title reserved a strip of land between plots 51 and 52 for use of utilities, such easement being more particularly described in the original bill of assurance; that such reservation or limitation was of record in deed book 168 of the records of Pulaski county, as follows:

‘ ‘ The grantor herein, his successors and assigns, further reserve the right to lay or cause to be laid, gas, water, and sewer pipes and mains and conduits, and the right to place poles for carrying wires or any other purpose, on, under, through and across any and all of said addition noted on said plot or map as easements, paths, walks and cross-walks, and said grantor, his successors and assigns, or any person, corporation or utility so authorized by him or them shall have free ingress and egress in, from and over said easements, walks, crosswalks and paths for the purpose of erecting, maintaining, or repairing such gas, water and sewer pipes or mains, conduits, wires and poles.”

On May 23, 1936, after the temporary injunction had been issued by the chancellor on March 12, Tom J. Terral filed an intervention, alleging that he was the owner of plot 51 described in appellees’ complaint; that the strip of land between plots 51 and 52 was ten feet wide; that the bill of assurance contained the reservations mentioned in the telephone company’s answer; that the easement was formed by taking five feet from plot 52, and five feet from plot 51, and that during the latter part of 1935 agents of appellees had offered intervener $200 for his five-foot strip. He prayed that the telephone company be required to remove its poles, and lines from his lands, and “that such easement be declared to be an easement according to its purposes, as shown by the bill of assurance referred to and that appellees be enjoined from further use of said easement as a driveway.”

There was no appeal by the telephone company.

The contention of intervener, appellant herein, is that-any rights appellees might acquire through adverse possession would not begin to run until some act had been committed, or some fact had arisen, the effect of which would be to put appellant oh notice that a hostile claim was being interposed; also, that recognition of the owner’s title by one who occupies property will disprove adverse possession, if such recognition is made before the statutory period has run.

Appellant Terral testified that he owned plots 50 and 51 of Prospect addition; that Mr. Brizzolara of the Union National Bank called him on two occasions and offered to buy his five-foot strip of land for Mr. Brooks, and was willing to pay $200 therefor. He said that Brizzolara told him the reason Brooks wanted to buy was because he (Brooks) recognized that'it belonged to appellant. Mr. Brooks’ son also offered to buy the land “so his mother and father would not be troubled as to whether they owned it.” Witness said lie knew lie could not sell tlie strip except subject to the easement for utilities; that Mr. Kahn, from whom be purchased plot 51, told him that if he put anything in this strip that would block the utilities, he did so at his own risk. He said that appel-lees had built a sun-porch on plot 52 contiguous to the easement and this had the effect of narrowing the space so that appellees ran against his (appellant’s) shrubbery in getting cars in and out of the garage; that Mr. Kahn told him, before he bought plot 51, that the easement was for use of utilities and was not intended as a driveway.

On cross-examination appellant Terral testified that the first offer of Brizzolara as agent for Brooks was made about two years ago, before any controversy over the land had arisen; that the trouble started when Mrs. Ter-ral undertook to project a walk over the five-foot strip on plot 51, and was stopped by Mr. Brooks, who claimed it was a private driveway and directed her not to walk on that space. Witness said he first bought plot 50 some time after Brooks moved into the residence on plot 52, and about a year later witness bought plot 51. The telephone pole was on the corner before he (Terral) bought plot 51. He admitted that appellees had been using the driveway for about ten years.

W. E. Brooks testified that when he bought plot 52 the dwelling thereon had just been completed, but the garage had not been finished when appellees moved in; that in 1934 or 1935 a sunporch was added to the western end of the house; that the driveway was used in getting in and out of the garage, but was also used by the telephone company’s trucks in hauling material in that vicinity. When appellees first moved in, the driveway was open from Edgewood through Sherwood to Crestwood, and was used as a passway for the public from the street car line. Gilbert Blass, who owned property a little south and west of plot 52, closed this pathway by building a wall across it at the alley back of plot 52. Witness had used the pathway as a driveway since that time, and before. The driveway as at present outlined is about eight feet wide and runs to the rear of the plot. There has never been a telephone pole in the driveway, the nearest being about twenty feet south of Edgewood and 10 or 12 inches west of the west side of the- driveway, on plot

51. No suggestion of placing a pole in the driveway had ever been made, and the only actual use by the telephone company was erection of two poles, neither of which was in the driveway. Witness said that Mr. McCall of the telephone company called and told him Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
108 S.W.2d 489, 194 Ark. 311, 1937 Ark. LEXIS 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/terral-v-brooks-ark-1937.