Young v. Gurdon

275 S.W. 890, 169 Ark. 399, 1925 Ark. LEXIS 489
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 22, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 275 S.W. 890 (Young v. Gurdon) 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
Young v. Gurdon, 275 S.W. 890, 169 Ark. 399, 1925 Ark. LEXIS 489 (Ark. 1925).

Opinion

Wood, J.

In October, 1923, W. A. Young and his wife, L. E. Young, hereafter called appellants, instituted an action in the Clark Chancery Court against B. B. Young and the town of Gurdon et ad., alleging that they were the owners in fee simple of three lots in the town of Gurdon and seeking to enjoin the town and the -others named in the complaint from permitting trespasses upon such lots by -creating and -maintaining thereon public and private nuisances. A temporary injunction was issued in • accordance with the prayer of the complaint.

At the time of the institution of the action the town ' of Gurdon was an incorporated town. It afterwards became a city of the second class, and as such, in January, 1924, it instituted an action in the 'Clark Circuit Court against the appellants, in which it set up among other things that it was seeking to establish a drainage system in the city, and that in order to do so it needed for that purpose lots Nos. 17,18 and 19, belonging to the appellants, which' were the same lots involved in the prior action. The city prayed that the lots be condemned for the use of the city. The city of Gurdon will hereafter for convenience be referred to as the appellee.

The appellants answered the action in the circuit court, alleging substantially the same facts as they had alleged in their complaint in the chancery court, and prayed that the cause be transferred to the chancery court and consolidated with the action instituted by them against the appellee in that court. The circuit court granted appellants motion to transfer the cause to the chancery court, and the causes were there consolidated.

On the first of January, .1924, the appellee passed a resolution “that, for the purposes of opening, constructing, and keeping in order and repair sewers and drains from Joslyn Street, Corn’s Addition to the city of Gurdon, to East First Street on Crescent Heights Addition to the city of Gurdon, Arkansas, lots'17,.18 and 19, block 7, Crescent Heights Addition to Gurdon, being the property of L. E. Young and W. A. Young, be entered upon and taken possession of by the said city for the purposes above mentioned, and that the same be condemned as required by law for the use of said city. ’ ’ The resolution was adopted, as shown by the record of the council, by a unanimous vote, each of the members being recorded as voting “Aye.” The resolution was not read on three different days, nor did two-thirds of the members of the council expressly vote to dispense with such reading.

Without setting out the testimony of the witnesses for the city in detail, it suffices to say that such testimony tended to show that there was a drain or branch which entered the city of Gurdon in the southeast corner and flowed in a sinuous course through the city in a northwesterly direction. It passed under the Missouri Pacific Railroad just north of the business district of the town. Between the railroad and the branch all the banks, principal hotels, the only depot, and the principal business houses of the city, together with a large residence section, were situated. In some places the bottom, or base, of the drain is 500 feet wide. There are no improvements in the swale or drain itself.. Bridges are maintained where the streets cross the swale for travel from east to west. The Missouri Pacific trestle over the swale is about 75 feet wide and ten or twelve feet high from the bottom of the drain to the cap sill of the bridge. The lots in controversy are triangular in shape. The branch is the principal means of drainage for that part of Gurdon east of the railroad. The branch also furnishes drainage for a territory about a mile in length and width before it enters the city. In times of heavy rainfall the basin of this branch in the southeast part of the- city is full from hill to hill. The water during these times is about 500 feet wide and seven to eight feet deep over the lots in controversy. The opening of the railroad for the water to flow through is sixty or eighty feet wide and about ten or twelve feet high. At such times it is necessary for the people living on the east side to-come to the railroad trestle in order to cross the business section, the streets being impassable. The water brings down a deposit on the lots in controversy — logs, automobile tires and debris of every kind. During the dry season the bed of the 'branch above the lots in controversy is dry except there are occasional holes of stagnant water. The city has a bridge over the drain parallel to the railroad which is about twenty feet wide and seven or eight feet high over the drain. To handle the water during floods there is no other way except by the use of the lots in controversy as an outlet. There is at all times water flowing across the lots. To handle the water in flood times in any other way than by appropriation of these lots, it would be necessary to cross high ground through other property about 900 feet in length with a drain or canal twenty feet deep and thirty feet wide.

One of the physicians living in the city of Gordon testified that from his observation it was necessary for the proper taking care of the waters for the city to take practically all of the lots in controversy. • It would take all of the south part of same. That, if a structure were built in the drain on these lots, it would have to be fully four or five feet high to be above overflow. A building lower than that would stop the water in the ditch. A building could possibly be built on the west part of the lots close up to the sidewalk, there being high ground there which holds the water off of the street to some extent. There was testimony tending to show that the drift, waste and stagnant pools made the entire basin unsanitary, but such condition was more pronounced on the lots in controversy because there most o.f the drift and waste accumulated.

The mayor of the city testified that the drain where it crossed the lots in controversy was close enough to the resident and business section of the city to be a menace to the health of the inhabitants if the water were permitted to stagnate along the drain. To keep it in a sanitary condition, the city should have control of the drain, and, if the lots remained in private ownership, the owners could build across the drain buildings which would inter- > fere with the keeping of the same in a sanitary condition, and that it wa's impracticable to divert the water of the drain so that it would not cross the lots in controversy.

In October the town council passed a resolution directing the property owners along the branch to clean up their premises and a voluntary contribution was taken to enable the citizens to carry out the orders of the city council and to cooperate with the authorities in cleaning out and draining the branch and basin. Notice was servpd on the appellants to clean up the lots in controversy, but they refused to do so and also to subscribe to the community fund for that purpose. When the work of cleaning up the waste and letting out -the stagnant water from -the pools on the lots in controversy was begun, the appellants instituted this action, and the city thereafter instituted the action in the circuit court to condemn the property.

The testimony of the appellants was to- the effect that they were the owners of the lots in controversy. At the time they acquired the same the drain or wet weather branch ran through them.

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Bluebook (online)
275 S.W. 890, 169 Ark. 399, 1925 Ark. LEXIS 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-gurdon-ark-1925.