Nattee v. Huff
Nattee v. Huff
Opinion of the Court
These eases involve the same defendants and a construction of the same statutes, so one opinion will suffice in the two eases.
In No. 5080, appellant, Algia Flowers, brought suit against appellees in the Little Rock municipal court for a horse owned-by him which had been found in Fencing District No. 3, Pulaski County, and impounded by appellees.
The cause was tried in the municipal court and judgment was rendered in favor of appellees, from which an appeal was prosecuted to the circuit court of Pulaski County. The cause was there tried by the court sitting as a jury upon an agreed statement of facts and judgment again rendered in favor of appellees. Proper steps were taken and the cause is here on appeal.
The agreed -statement of facts, upon which the cause was submitted, is as follows:
“It is agreed that on the 10th day of January, 1917, the horse in question was found within Fencing District No. 3, Pulaski County, Arkansas, a duly organized fencing district.
“ It is further agreed that the agents and employees of the defendant, Dan Rauch, who was a land owner in said fencing district, -took possession of said horse and delivered it to Dan Rauch, defendant, and while in the possession of the defendant, Dan Rauch, the plaintiff stated that he would pay one dollar for the redelivery of the horse; such offer was refused and the horse was delivered into the possession of the defendant, Dan Rauch, by his agents and employees, and within a few days after this action was instituted said horse died; that such offer was made within two hours after possession was taken of the horse by the agents and employees of the defendant, Dan Rauch, and the defendant demanded five dollars for his fee for the delivery of said horse.
“It is further agreed that there was no application made to the secretary of the board of the said fencing district for appraisers to assess and fix the fee and damages by either the plaintiff or the defendant.
‘ ‘ The sum of one dollar was tendered by the plaintiff to the defendant in open court, which tender was refused. ’ ’
In No. 5160, appellant, John Nattee, brought suit against appellees in replevin in the Little Rock municipal court for a mare owned by him, which had also been found in Fencing District No. 3, Pulaski County, and impounded by appellees. This cause took the same course and with like result as the Algia Flowers case, and is here on appeal. The latter case was heard upon oral evidence instead of an agreed statement of facts.
The undisputed facts disclosed that the mare was found in appellees’ oat stubble field and was impounded with little effort by appellees, on the 10th day of January, 1917, within Fencing District No. 3, Pulaski County, 'which was duly organized under the general law, and both appellant and appellees owned land in said district at the time; that appellant made demand for the animal within fifteen or twenty minutes after she had been impounded; chat the animal had done no damage whatever; that appellant first offered appellees fifty cents, then $2 and then $2.50 for their trouble in impounding the animal, but appellees refused to take said sum and demanded $5 for a release of the animal; that neither 'appellant nor appellees applied to the secretary of the fencing board for appraisers to fix the fee for impounding -the animal before the institution of the replevin suit.
The evidence in behalf of appellant tended to show that the animal had slipped her halter and was feeding-near his mules on his own place; that she was young and frisky and that he concluded it was best to leave her alone until noon and let her follow his mules home; that it was then about 11 o’clock and he took some tools he had been using to the house, á distance of two hundred yards, and, during his absence, the mare was seized by appellees.
The evidence on the part of appellees tended to show that the mare was seen in appellees’ field the day before she was seized.
It is insisted by appellants that they had a right to maintain replevin upon tender of a reasonable fee for impounding the stock and that a tender of $1 in the Flowers case was a reasonable fee, and the tender- of $2.50 in the Nattee case.was in excess of a reasonable fee, and that the court erred in holding to the contrary.
It is the contention of appellees that the charges were in dispute and appellants could not maintain replevin until they exhausted their remedy under section 1409, copied above.
In another ease, the rule announced by this court is, “that the owner of property improperly impounded may recover the possession thereof from the person in whose possession it is found.” City of Fort Smith v. Dodson, 51 Ark. 447; White v. Clarksville, 75 Ark. 340; Gregg v. Hatcher, 94 Ark. 54.
In the Flowers case, there is no affirmative showing that $5 was an arbitrary exaction by appellees. The appellees may have been to a greater expense than $1 in catching the animal, and, it may be, that their crops were injured to the amount of $5, or more, by the horse; therefore, the judgment in that case is affirmed.
In the Nattee case, it appears by the undisputed evidence that two men impounded the animal in a short time, and it affirmatively appears that no damage resulted to crops by reason of the trespass. It follows that the exaction of $5 by appellees for seizing the animal and holding her for fifteen or twenty minutes was manifestly unjust, unreasonable and arbitrary. No bona fide dispute existed between the parties as to a reasonable charge for seizing the animal. Appellant offered appellees more than they were entitled to under the undisputed evidence, and their retention of the animal thereafter was unlawful, and, for that reason, the replevin was the proper remedy.
The judgment in the Nattee case is, therefore, reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.