Wilkerson v. Gerard

138 S.W.2d 76, 200 Ark. 125, 1940 Ark. LEXIS 209
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 18, 1940
Docket4-5836
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 138 S.W.2d 76 (Wilkerson v. Gerard) 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
Wilkerson v. Gerard, 138 S.W.2d 76, 200 Ark. 125, 1940 Ark. LEXIS 209 (Ark. 1940).

Opinion

Baker, J.

Appellant in this case filed his suit in the Saline circuit court alleging that he was the owner of twenty-three acres of land; that he fenced the same in September, 1.936; that he employed a farmer and had part of it cultivated in 1937, and of this cultivated portion there were about eight acres in corn; It had peas planted in the middles of the com; that there was a meadow of about three acres, and a half-acre of turnips. He alleged that in the fall of 1937 the defendant unlawfully cut and severed plaintiff’s wire fence and turned horses and cattle upon plaintiff’s land. He alleged as his second cause of action the fact that the defendant hauled several truck loads of gravel from his lands and appropriated it to his own use; that the gravel was of the value of $25 and that he was damaged by the cutting of the fence in the sum of $10 and damages to his turnips, hay and also to the soil, in the amount of $200.

An answer was duly filed and finally there was a jury trial. A verdict was rendered for the defendant. In the progress of the trial there were several objections and exceptions, all of which were duly brought forward in the motion for a neAV trial and are presented on appeal.

One of the principal controversies arises out of what is alleged to have been a partition fence. In attempting to fence his property the appellant says that he set posts five or six feet apart and strung two strands of stock Avire about his farm. The appellee bought land adjacent to appellant’s land and so fenced it that a part of appellant’s fence became a division fence between the two farms.

There are sharp disputes between the parties as to A\diat actually occurred in regard to the fences and their maintenance. The appellee testified that sometime in the year 1937, while the crops were groAving, a small coav that he owned broke appellant’s fence; that he offered to furnish appellant Avire to rebuild the fence, but that his offer was declined. He says, however, that he sent one of his hired men with wire to patch and restring or rebuild a part of appellant’s fence so as to keep his stock out. A part of the controversy in regard to this division fence is that appellant now insists that since he had built a part of the fence before the appellee inclosed Ms land adjacent thereto, that the appellee owed a duty to fence in his stock so that they might not trespass upon the appellant’s property. No statute or other authority to this effect has been cited.

It can be of no advantage to any one to set forth with any degree of detail all of the controverted facts in this lawsuit, but since there has been a finding by the jury in favor of the appellee, all conclusions necessary to support that finding will be indulged upon appeal. Appellee and several witnesses testify that in the fall of 1937, many or most of the posts supporting appellant’s fence were pushed over, or broken off on account of decay ; that the fence was down and that cattle went from appellee’s inclosed lands npon the appellant’s. The appellant argues most seriously that the testimony of himself, his wife, and several other witnesses, was to the effect that the fence was a good one sufficient for the purposes of turning cattle under ordinary conditions; that except for the conduct of the appellee in cutting the wire and opening the fence the cattle would not have trespassed upon his land and have done the damage complained about. All this is controverted by evidence which seems to us equally convincing and which was, of course, more convincing to the jury than appellant’s evidence and that is conclusive upon all such questions of fact.

The same statements may be made in regard to the care of crops left upon the land, the amount and value thereof. These were factual matters as sharply in dispute as were those in regard to the ldnd and condition of the fence. All these matters were decided against the appellant by a jury who heard all the evidence.

As to the gravel alleged to have been removed from appellant’s land by the appellee, there is a different issue. It seems the court probably committed an error in submitting these facts as he did under instruction No. 5. That instruction is as follows:

“You are instructed that if you find from a preponderance of the testimony that the only gravel hauled away by the defendant was from the right-of-way of the public road, then as to the gravel you will find for the defendant.”

There is little proof about the public road. Indeed, we do not know that there is a public road, except both the appellant and appellee discussed this passageway as the country road. The appellee says that he donated one-half of the road where it was adjacent to appellant’s land and that in order that there might be an inclosure, he put his fence on the line so as to leave one-half of this_ highway for the appellee. Appellee denies that he was so favored and says it was the intention not to favor him, but to leave the road for the public generally. This is not highly material. Where the road went across appellee’s land, not adjacent to the appellant’s, he built the fence on both sides of the road. There is no evidence in the record that the appellant or appellee deeded or conveyed this right-of-way for the road, nor is there any evidence that the right-of-way was condemned by any proceeding in court.

We now call attention to what is the apparent error in the instruction. If there was a donation or conveyance for highway purposes only, or a condemnation, it is most highly probable that there was merely an easement granted over this land and that the title or fee remained in the owners. It must be said that in such an event this particular tract of land could have been used by the public generally for road purposes, or as an easement, but this grant did not justify entry upon the land for other purposes, such as the removal of gravel or sand therefrom by one not an owner. Cathey v. Arkansas Power & Light Co., 193 Ark. 92, 97 S. W. 2d 624.

The above case is conclusive upon the matter under consideration.

After full examination of this matter, however, we have decided that even under such a condition the appellant has not established that there was any error in this regard or if there were error that' any prejudice resulted therefrom. There is some .proof of the removal of some gravel from appellant’s lands, but there was also evidence that the jury might have followed absolving Mr. Gerard from all blame. The road overseer testifies that he removed gravel from this road right-of-way and he goes further and says that it was open to everybody who went there when they wanted gravel. Of course, that fact did not establish a right in the public to remove the appellant’s gravel, but appellant had a right or fee claim to only one-half this right-of-way within the road, if, indeed, he had any claim there. It would certainly be a foolish thing to remand this case for a new trial upon this point and then, upon the new trial, witnesses, who knew of the removal of any gravel by the appellee, when called upon, should testify or explain that all they had removed was from that side of the highway owned by the appellee, or perhaps, no witness might remember from what place gravel was taken.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 S.W.2d 76, 200 Ark. 125, 1940 Ark. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilkerson-v-gerard-ark-1940.