Wylie v. Wooldridge

447 S.W.2d 851, 247 Ark. 780
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 1, 1969
Docket5-5087
StatusPublished

This text of 447 S.W.2d 851 (Wylie v. Wooldridge) 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
Wylie v. Wooldridge, 447 S.W.2d 851, 247 Ark. 780 (Ark. 1969).

Opinion

Carleton Harris, Chief Justice.

Wayne J. Wylie and Winnie Bell Wylie, his wife, appellants herein, are the owners of certain land lying on the south side of a bay or inlet of Lake Hamilton near Hot Springs. Robert A. Wooldridge1 and Lois Y. Wooldridge owned property partly to the west and partly to the north of appellants’ property, the Wooldridge’s lake frontage being on the west end of the bay. In June of 1963 the Wooldridges began to dig a channel oí inlet along the south line of their property, filling in between the channel and the old shore line and to the north line of appellants’ property, and appellants contend that, as a result of the fill, they have been cut off from access to the water front along their north line. The Wylies instituted suit in the Garland County Chancery Court in August, 1963, against appellees and Arkansas Power and Light Company, seeking an order enjoining the Wooldridges from excavating, bulldozing, filling in, or changing the contour line of appellants’ property; damages were sought in the amount of $10,000.00. The complaint asserted that the Wylie land:

“* * * borders on and fronts the 400 foot contour line on Lake Hamilton and is separated from the defendants land by an inlet or channel of the backwater of Lake Hamilton. That the Defendants land is on the other side of said inlet or backwater channel of Lake Hamilton, being separated from the plaintiffs land by that portion of land between defendants and plaintiffs land below the 400 foot contour line.* * *
“That the defendants are claiming said strip of land and are trying to deprive the plaintiffs of the benefit of the waters of Lake Hamilton below the 400 foot contour line to which they are entitled.”

As to the Arkansas Power and Light Company, the complaint alleges that it:

“ * * * is the owner of the right to use and to flood any part of said lands by water or waters impounded by a dam or dams now or hereafter constructed and/or maintained across the Ouachita River under the authority of the Federal Power Commission. Said lands being the land in question below the 400 foot contour line between the property of the plaintiffs and the defendants, Robert A. Wooldridge and Lois V. Wooldridge, his wife.”

A demurrer was filed by the power company, and was sustained by the court on July 15, 1964, appellants consenting thereto. The case then proceeded to trial, and, at the conclusion of the presentation of evidence, was taken under advisement by the then Chancellor. However, no decree was rendered prior to the Chancellor’s death, and thereafter, the cause was assigned to the Circuit Judge, acting as Special Chancellor, who decided the case on the transcript of testimony, all of such testimony having been heard by the regular Chancellor, prior to his death. A decree was rendered for the Wooldridges, and from the decree, appellants bring this appeal. For reversal, it is first asserted that the decree is contrary to the evidence, and secondly, that the decree does not conform to the court’s finding of fact, and conclusions of law.

The actual question in this litigation is whether the appellees, in clearing and leveling their land while preparing a channel on their property, filled a portion of the area of Lake Hamilton at the west end of this bay below the 400-foot contour line, thereby cutting off the appellants’ lake frontage for a distance of approximate-225 feet at the west end of the Wylie property. The descriptions of the lands owned by the parties are not of a great deal of aid, because they are based on a 400-foot contour line along Lake Hamilton, and no contour map was offered in evidence. Accordingly, this litigation can only be determined on the basis of the evidence offered by those who were familiar with the area. A number of witnesses testified for each side, and the testimony appears to be in irreconcilable conflict. A detailed discussion of the testimony of .all witnesses would serve no useful purpose, appellants ’ evidence being largely directed to the contention that the area in dispute had previously contained water, prior to the fill-in. James Hall, a surveyor, testified that he took elevations around the land in question, noted a shght depression between the new fill and the old shore line, and found it to be the old 400 foot contour line, which compared favorably with an old Arkansas Power and Light Company map. A drawing, prepared by the witness, depicting elevations, was offered in evidence by the witness. Fred Thompson, ,a veterinarian of North Little Bock, testified that he owned a cottage in the area, and had been familiar with the property in question since 1959. He said that he had previously fished in the area, and had observed water 100 to 150 feet from Wylie’s west line. Mr. Wylie testified that he had placed a fence near the contour line to keep his cattle out of the shallow basin; that the fence was near the water line, all the way from his west line, and along the north line for a short distance. The area in the basin was covered with trees and brush, except for a creek bed. He said that the creek followed his shore line, and would be dry when the lake was down to the “395 level part * * * but when the lake was to standard level around 399 or 398,” the water stood in the creek bed. The witness added that the water extended beyond his west line when the lake was “at its full 400.” Mrs. Wylie testified that she had fished in the area as close as 50 feet from the west line. H. H. Wylie, a nephew, testified that in 1947 there was water in the bay to the Wylie fence line, and on a visit five or six years previously, he had observed the same condition. C. C. Wylie, a brother of appellant, testified that there was water west of the fence line in 1955, and there was a creek chánnel three or four or five feet wide; however, he did not know whether the water was higher than normal at the time. Olynda Bondurant, a daughter of appellants, testified that she fished near the fence line when a sma1! child. A sister, Waneta Morris, concurred with the testimony of her sister, .and she added that the area where she had fished had now been covered with dirt. Her husband, William R. Morris, agreed.

Luther Phillips, a former County Surveyor, testified that he surveyed the property when Meadows purchased it from the Arkansas Power and Light Company, and had also made a survey for Wylie in 1947. He said that the north line of Wylie’s property described in the deed as “thence west along this contour line 685 feet to a point,” tested out as 685 feet. The witness stated that it had been 17 years since the survey, and he could not remember any of the details. The testimony of other witnesses on behalf of the appellant relative to whether water was in the area, or whether it was creek or lake water, was rather indefinite.

On behalf of appellees, Irving Meadows, the common grantor of both Wylie and Wooldridge,2 testified that he had been over every foot of the territory numerous times, had seen the area twice after it was filled, and many times before, and that there had never been any water in the area in question. He said there was a “little bitty old crawdad ditch,” which ran only in wet weather, but that it didn’t run at the corner of the fence. “There’s no water up there where he filled in, there never has been and never will be, because the lake won’t put it there.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
447 S.W.2d 851, 247 Ark. 780, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wylie-v-wooldridge-ark-1969.