W. R. Wrape Stave Co. v. Arkansas State Game & Fish Commission

219 S.W.2d 948, 215 Ark. 229, 1949 Ark. LEXIS 723
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 2, 1949
Docket4-8849
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 219 S.W.2d 948 (W. R. Wrape Stave Co. v. Arkansas State Game & Fish Commission) 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
W. R. Wrape Stave Co. v. Arkansas State Game & Fish Commission, 219 S.W.2d 948, 215 Ark. 229, 1949 Ark. LEXIS 723 (Ark. 1949).

Opinion

Griffin Smith, Chief Justice.

The State Game and Fish Commission sought by Circuit Court action to condemn lands in Faulkner County for a game and fish reserve, under authority of Amendment No. 35 to the Constitution. By construction of a dam across Palarm Creek a lake covering between six and seven thousand acres would be created at a maximum elevation of 261 feet above sea level. The creek, sluggish in dry weather, accounts for a swampy area not reasonably adaptable to agriculture, but yielding commercial timber, such as oak, pine, etc. In addition to the property to be inundated, a margin of twenty feet bordering the shoreline would be included, all in designated sections of Townships Four and Five North, Range Thirteen West. The complaint listed sixty tracts and 132 defendants, of whom but three have contested court action — W. R. Wrape Stave Company, Dierks Lumber and Coal Company, and Magnolia Pipe Line Company.

Wrape’s holdings include 160 acres from which all of the timber has been taken, and 700 acres of partly cut land. The property is not for sale and no definite value was stated, although $10 per acre might be a fair price for the cutover acreage. Dierks owns 680 acres purchased in 1946 and 1947 for $21,800. It was thought to be worth $25,000 for timber and growing purposes.

Magnolia Pipe Line Company has projected a twenty-inch line from Texas to Illinois, beginning at Corsicana, traversing Arkansas, and terminating near Patoka, in Marion County, Ill.

In a joint action by Wrape, Dierks, and Magnolia, the condemnation suit was removed to Federal Court, but was remanded upon determination by Judge Lemley that in respect of the relief sought, the Commission was the State, and the State, acting in its sovereign capacity, is not a “person” within the Act of Congress. Jud. Code, § 28, 28 U. S. C. A., § 71. Arkansas State Game and Fish Commission v. W. R. Wrape Stave Co., et als, 76 Fed. Sup. 323. On remand the defendants alleged equitable defenses not cognizable at law, and the causes were transferred to Chancery on petition for injunctions and on cross-complaints.

Allegations were (a) that condemnation was not authorized for the purposes contemplated, (b) the Commission was not the real party in interest, (c) funds were not available to finance the undertaking or to pay damages, (d) Conway sewage would contaminate the lake and destroy fish, (e) no effort was made in any case to acquire property by purchase or gift, (f) maps were not filed, (g) the Commission’s resolutions authorizing the project were insufficient, and (h) “Where land has been devoted to a public use, [as in case of rights acquired by the Pipe Line Company] it may not be subjected to subsequent condemnation for another public use which would impair its first use, in the absence of constitutional or statutory authority, either expressed or necessarily implied.”

Five express findings were made by the Court, upon which the decree dismissing the cross-complaints for want of equity was predicated: (1) On the issue of authorized purpose — that is, whether Amendment No. 35 intended that Commission funds should be spent for a preserve such as was indicated by the Palarm dam, and whether property involved could be taken by condemnation — the Chancellor said the only testimony was that of T. A. McAmis, Executive Secretary of the Commission, who in all respect verified the contention that the end sought was “. . . for the conservation of birds, fish, game, and [other] wild life, and to create a recreational area for use of the citizens of the State at large.” (2) That at a pre-trial conference May 29 it was determined that the Commission was the real party. (3) The cross-complaint could not, as a defense to the Commission’s proposal to condemn, question the source from which payments would come. (4) The Court would assume good faith upon the part of Conway municipal authorities in pledging an appropriate diversion of sewage, to the end that contamination of the lake would not occur. (5) Section 4994 of Pope’s Digest relating to negotiations in an effort to agree upon easements, applies to railroad, telegraph, and telephone companies, “ora pipe line company. ’ ’

The Commission, said Judge Ward, had been importuned by many citizens of Faulkner and Pulaski Counties, who urged that the preserve be established, and “interested representatives” of local groups had acted for the Commission, relieving it of the imputed duty of negotiating, since the contracts so made took the place of direct action by the Commission. The Court was not convinced that Magnolia was a common carrier devoted to public service of a character preventing the State from condemning, for concurrent use, land over which the pipe line passed, hence a subsequent grant in the circumstances shown would not destroy the primary right, or impair appellant’s property in a way not compensable in damages. 1

First — Amendment No. 35. — The underlying purpose seems to have been (<§ 1) to vest in the Commission “The control, management, restoration, conservation, and regulation of birds, fish, game, and wild life resources of the State.” Funds arising from all sources, including the sale of property, (§8) shall be expended by the Commission “. . . for the control, management, restoration, conservation, and regulation of bird, fish, and wild life, . . . including the purchases or other acquisitions of property for said purposes and for the administration of the laws pertaining thereto, and for no other purpose. [The Commission shall have the power] to acquire by purchase, gifts, eminent domain, or otherwise, all property necessary, useful or convenient . . . in the exercise of any of its duties, and in the event the right of eminent domain is exercised, it shall be . . . in the same manner as now or hereafter provided for the exercise of eminent domain by the State Highway Commission. ’ ’

The Highway Commission, (Pope’s Digest, § 6593) if it condemns, must proceed in the manner provided for railroad, telegraph, and telephone companies. Act 71 of 1929.

The Game and Fish Commission is given a very broad discretion in determining how wild life shall be conserved. Not only may it acquire, by condemnation or otherwise, the property actually needed, but it may also procure any that may be “useful or convenient . . . in the exercise of any of its duties”; and, while in matters of mere convenience the power would not be unlimited, yet the intalicized words serve to emphasize a plan by those who framed the Amendment — a bilateral purpose to conserve wild life, and to place that duty with the Commission. Although appropriations must come from the General Assembly, money received from sources mentioned in the Amendment is not.available— even with legislative approval — for any uses other than those expressed or necessarily implied; and the Commission determines what property is needed.

In the case at bar it is insisted that sportsmen from Conway and Little Rock, for reasons of personal convenience, have promoted the project, and that in yielding to importunities by these groups the Commission has not acted for the best interests of all of the people.

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Bluebook (online)
219 S.W.2d 948, 215 Ark. 229, 1949 Ark. LEXIS 723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-r-wrape-stave-co-v-arkansas-state-game-fish-commission-ark-1949.