Bailey v. Martin

237 S.W.2d 16, 218 Ark. 513, 1951 Ark. LEXIS 373
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 12, 1951
Docket4-9411
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 237 S.W.2d 16 (Bailey v. Martin) 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
Bailey v. Martin, 237 S.W.2d 16, 218 Ark. 513, 1951 Ark. LEXIS 373 (Ark. 1951).

Opinion

Minor W. Millwee, Justice.

This is a suit by Robert Bailey, as trustee for his two sons, to restrain appellee, Tom Martin, from trespassing on certain lands, to cancel a deed under which appellee claims title, and to quiet appellants’ title to the property. Under the pleadings and testimony, both parties claimed record title to the disputed tract as well as title by adverse possession and appellee also asked that his title he quieted. The case was tried by the chancellor on exchange upon depositions resulting in a decree dismissing appellants’ complaint and dissolving an injunction, issued against appellee at the beginning of the suit temporarily restraining him from trespassing on said lands.

The area in dispute is the north half of a trapezoid tract containing 28.39 acres. J. B. Campbell, formerly owned a fractional 40-acre tract in Pope County described as, “The fractional NW14 of SW14 of Section 6, Township 7 N, Range 20 "West, containing 53.89 acres more or less.” On January 17, 1917, Campbell and wife executed separate warranty deeds to Ben Woods and James Edwards. Each of the deeds described by metes and bounds the south half of a tract located within the aforesaid fractional 40-acre tract, as follows: “Beginning at a point 34 rods East of the Northwest (NW) corner of said NW Fr. SW% and running thence East 73.72 rods to the Northeast (NE) corner of said NW Fr. SW%; thence South 80 rods to the Southeast (SE) corner of said NW Fr. SW]4; thence West 39.84 rods; thence Northwest (NW) along the top of the Mountain to Point of Beginning containing 15 acres, more or less.” On the same date Ben Woods and wife conveyed by warranty deed to Pope County Real Estate Co. describing the property as in the two previous deeds except that it conveyed the north half of the tract. The deed to Ben Woods was recorded December 1, 1917, and the deed from Woods to the real estate company was recorded December 23, 1918. The deed to James Edwards was recorded March 12, 1919.

On February 28, 1920, the sheriff of Pope County, as the result of an execution sale against James Edwards, executed a sheriff’s deed to Tom Henry of the land deeded to Edwards. On July 18, 1921, Tom Henry and wife conveyed by quitclaim deed to Robert Bailey, as trustee, the sou,th half of a tract described by metes and bounds as follows: “Beginning 34 rods East of the Northwest (NW) corner of the said NW]4 of SW% and running thence East 73.72 rods to the Northeast (NE) corner of said NWFRSW]4; thence East 39.84 rods; thence Northwest (NW) along the Mountain to Point of Beginning and containing 15 acres, more or less.” This deed further recites an intention to convey all interest in “the land that formerly belonged to Perk Edwards, and sold by the sheriff under execution and bought in by Tom Henry.” This deed was recorded October 26, 1921.

Robert Bailey sold the property to W. N. Lucy in December, 1921, under an unrecorded conveyance. Lucy and wife executed a mortgage to Bailey, as trustee, on December 29, 1921, describing the land as in the original deed from J. H. Campbell and wife to James Edwards, the description beginning, ‘ ‘ The south half ’ ’ and ending “containing 15 acres more or less.” Appellants also introduced a warranty deed from W. N. Lucy and wife to Robert Bailey, trustee, dated May 24, 1922. In this deed the south half of the tract is described as containing 28.39 acres for the first time. In this connection Mr. Bailey testified that' he only bought back from Lucy what he had sold him. This deed was not placed of record until October 21, 1948. On November 14, 1925, appellants entered into a sale contract of the property to Dell Goddard describing the property as the south half of the described tract, containing 15 acres more or less.

After appellants obtained the deed from Tom Henry in 1921 the property was carried on the tax records in appellants’ name as “Pt. NWSW, 15 acres” from 1922 to 1947. The Pope County Real Estate Company assessed and paid taxes on “Pt. NWSW, 15.34 acres” from 1919 to 1947.

The Pope County Real Estate Co. was a corporation formerly owned by J. F. Hogins and W. O. Bonds. Hogins died in 1927 and Bonds in 1944. In September, 1948, the heirs of Hogins and Bonds executed a quitclaim deed to appellee to the north half of the tract as described in the deed from Ben Woods and wife to the Pope County Real Estate Co. This deed was recorded on November 20, 1948. Appellants filed this suit on February 26, 1949, after appellee began cutting timber on the north half of the 28.39-acre tract.

As to possession of the north half of the 28.39-acre tract the evidence is in sharp dispute. Appellee offered testimony showing that after the real estate company acquired its deed from Ben Woods in 1917, Leslie Hogins, son of J. F. Hogins, entered into possession of the disputed tract in the early 1920s and constructed a chicken ranch on the property which he abandoned about a year later. After execution of the sales contract to Dell Goddard in 1925, the latter testified that he constructed or repaired a house on the north half of the 28.39-acre tract, but the preponderance of the evidence discloses that this house was located on the south half. Goddard did not move on the property until about 1928 or 1929 and abandoned it about a year later when he decided that he could not make the payments under the contract.

Walter Dennis moved on the north part of the tract in 1931 as the tenant of Mrs. J. F. Hogins, representing the real estate company. He remained on the property until 1933.

In 1933 or 1934 Tom Simpson, Jr. moved on the north half of the tract where he remained until 1941. The evidence is in sharp dispute as to whether he was a tenant of appellants, a tenant of the real estate company, or merely a squatter. Mrs. Hogins testified that the Simpsons moved on the property with her permission under an agreement with Mrs. Tom Simpson, Jr. She recalled that Mrs. Simpson brought her some black berries to apply on the rent when the Simpsons first moved on the property. Although Tom Simpson, Jr. testified that he was the tenant of appellants, he did not deny that they moved on the property under the arrangements made by his wife. He paid no rent to appellants, but stated that he was to remain on the premises on the condition that he keep fire out of the timber on the place. After Tom Simpson, Jr. moved in 1941 or 1942, Mrs. Oliver Simpson moved on the place for a short time and moved off when Robert Bailey approached her about paying house rent. Ernest Standridge moved in the house on the north part of the tract in March or April, 1945, and remained there about a year as a tenant of appellants.

Walter Dennis testified that there was a wire fence dividing the north and south parts of the 28.39-acre tract while he lived on the north part. Although Tom Simpson, Jr. testified that there was “no fence to amount to anything”, between the two properties, he further testified that he built a fence while living on the property, but that this fence was not on the line. Lloyd Jolley testified that he removed about 15,000 feet of timber from the north part of the tract sometime between 1920 and 1925 under a purchase from Hogins and Bonds.

It is undisputed that Tom Simpson, Sr. has lived on the south half of the 28.39-acre tract since 1933 as the tenant of appellants and appellee does not question appellants’ title to the south half.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
237 S.W.2d 16, 218 Ark. 513, 1951 Ark. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-martin-ark-1951.