Zunamon v. Brown

287 F. Supp. 426, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11717
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Arkansas
DecidedJuly 25, 1968
DocketNo. PB 66 C-34
StatusPublished

This text of 287 F. Supp. 426 (Zunamon v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zunamon v. Brown, 287 F. Supp. 426, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11717 (E.D. Ark. 1968).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

OREN HARRIS, Chief Judge.

In this diversity action plaintiff seeks to establish title to certain lands in Chi-cot County, Arkansas, and to have the title quieted as against all claims of the defendants and damages against the defendants pursuant to Arkansas Statute 50-105 for treble the value of timber cut by defendants from the involved lands in the sum of $12,488.79, together with an additional sum of $3,700.00 as damage to the lands, or a total sum of $16,188.-79.

The plaintiff, Simon Zunamon, is a citizen and resident of Chicago, Illinois. The defendants are citizens and residents of Chicot County, Arkansas. Since this action was commenced by the plaintiff against defendant W. G. Brown the property involved was conveyed by W. G. Brown to J. P. Brown, Sr., and J. E. (Doc) Brown by warranty deed duly recorded. Defendants J. P. Brown, Sr., and J. E. (Doc) Brown have entered their appearance and have adopted the pleadings and briefs filed on behalf of the defendant W. G. Brown.

The amount in controversy having been determined to exceed the sum of $10,000.00, exclusive of interest and costs, jurisdiction of the court is established. 28 U.S.C.A. § 1332.

The plaintiff claims to be the immediate successor in title to Chicago Mill and Lumber Company to certain lands lying east of Chute, Northeast Quarter of Section 7, Township 14 South, Range 1 West. The lands involved in this litigation consists of 37 acres.

The defendant, W. G. Brown, claims to be the owner of the riparian lands in Section Seven (7), Township Fourteen (14) South, Range One (1) West, on the right descending bank of the Mississippi River in Chicot County, Arkansas. Each party claims title to the lands by unbroken chains of title, tax payments over a long period of time and possession.

Prior to August 27, 1965, the defendant, W. G. Brown (also known as Gordon Brown), entered into possession of the land in Section 7, lying east of Boggy Bayou, comprising 37 acres, and fenced same. On August 27 plaintiff’s attorney addressed a letter to the defendant warning him against trespassing and advising that penalties under the Arkansas Statutes would be invoked in the event of future trespass.

The defendant ignored the warning and proceeded to cut and sell the timber thereon and cleared the 37 acres for farming. Plaintiff immediately filed this suit for trespass, damages and to quiet its title.

Defendant filed an answer and claimed ownership of the 37 acres contending that the area in controversy was “West of Chute” in Section 7.

From government survey shown in the General Land Office Plats there are two Islands, No. 80 and No. 81, formed from the Mississippi River immediately off shore from the right descending bank which includes Section 7. The chains of title referred to by both parties include a reference to “chute”. The plaintiff claims the identification of “chute” has long been established as “Sluice or Island Chute”, and sometimes referred to as “Boggy Bayou”, which runs in a north and south direction close to the riparian shore and West of Island 80. The defendant claims that the “chute” referred to in the chain of title and tax assessments was the chute between the two Islands, 80 and 81, running in a southwest and northeast direction. Therefore, the title issue in the case is the identity of the “chute” running through the Northeast Quarter of Section 7, Township 14 South, Range 1 West.

It is established and agreed that the 37 acres involved in this litigation is the southernmost tip of Island 80, described as Frl. NE % of Section 7, Township 14 South, Range 1 West, East of Island Chute. Island Chute and Boggy Bayou [428]*428are known and identified as one and the same applicable to this controversy.

From the pleadings in the case, ora tenus testimony, enumerable exhibits, including chains of title, assessment and payment of taxes on the lands since 1912, and briefs filed on behalf of the parties, the Court finds, as follows:

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. The 37 acres in controversy is the southern tip of Island 80 as originally surveyed and is also properly described as Frl. NE *4 Sec. 7, T14S, R1W, East of Island Chute.

2. There is an unbroken chain of title of the Fractional East of Chute NE % of Section 7 commencing with 30.19 acres, Township 14 South, Range 1 West, from the issuance of patent by the United States in 1835 through mesne conveyances vesting title of land in Katie K. Connerly.

3. By warranty deed dated October 5, 1900, Katie K. Connerly conveyed to William McCoy all of the East part NE Section 7 lying East of Island Chute, etc. (it being the intention to grant, bargain, sell and convey to William McCoy all of Islands 80 and 81 and accretions thereto south of township line between Townships 13 and 14).

4. There is an unbroken chain of title by mesne conveyances to all the Northeast Quarter of Section 7 lying east of Island Chute together with other lands to Chicago Mill and Lumber Company on May 1, 1926. In the various deeds above described, the “Chute” is alternatively referred to as “Boggy Bayou”; particularly the deed from W. R. Satterfield and wife to Mississippi Valley Timber Company contains the following recital, “The stream designated above as ‘Island Chute’ is sometimes called or designated as Boggy Bayou, and when thus referred to means Island Chute”.

5. This identical title was litigated in the case of Bryant v. Chicago Mill and Lumber Company, opinion by Judge Lemley reported in 120 F.Supp. 463 and affirmed by Judge Van Oosterhout speaking for the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals, reported in 216 F.2d 727 and the judgment and opinions definitely fix Boggy Bayou “as shown on Mississippi River Chart 38 dated 1879-80” the westernmost chute in the area as being the Island Chute referred to in the deeds and tax records.

6. The Chicago Mill and Lumber Company conveyed Fractional All East of Chute and accretions of Section 7 with other lands to the plaintiff, Simon Zunamon, on June 29, 1965, but the Chicago Mill and Lumber Company manages, operates and controls all the property of plaintiff in Arkansas.

7. By affidavit, August, 1953, J. B. Gillison, an attorney and abstracter of Chicot County, Arkansas, certified that the records of Chicot County, revealed that since the execution of the deed from Katie Connerly to William McCoy, October 5, 1900, all instruments affecting the title to the area have used the same description which is sufficient to notify the public as to what lands are conveyed and that the area has been popularly known and assessed for taxes as “All that Part of the Northeast Quarter of Section 7, East of Island Chute, etc.”

8. By affidavit August, 1953, Carneal Warfield, an attorney and abstracter at Lake Village, Arkansas, certified that he was familiar with the area involved and knew that since the deed from Katie K. Connerly to William McCoy, October 5, 1900, the lands involved “All of the East Part of the Northeast Quarter of Section 7 lying East of Island Chute, etc.” ; that the lands lying immediately east of the West Half of the Southeast Quarter of Section 7, etc., have been popularly known and assessed for taxes and described in Deeds of conveyances as “All that Part of the Northeast Quarter of Section 7, East of Island Chute, etc.”

9. By affidavit August 31, 1953, Hal B.

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287 F. Supp. 426, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zunamon-v-brown-ared-1968.