Blakeney v. Ferguson

20 Ark. 547
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 15, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 20 Ark. 547 (Blakeney v. Ferguson) 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
Blakeney v. Ferguson, 20 Ark. 547 (Ark. 1859).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice English

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The subject of controversy in this suit (the south-west quarter of section 17, township 4 north, range 9 west,) has been in litigation, in one form and another, between the parties, and the ancestors of some of them, since the year 1845, and has heretofore been several times before this Court. See Blakeney vs. Ferguson et al., 14 Ark. 641, where the character and history of the previous litigation are fully stated. After the dismissal of that case, without prejudice, in obedience to the mandate of this Court, Mary Ferguson, the widow, and the heirs at law of Joseph Ferguson, filed the present bill in the Prairie Circuit Court, against the heirs of Benjamin Blakeney, and the widow and her present husband (Hamilton Reynolds), and the heirs at law of Sampson Gray, deceased.

The objects of the bill were to obtain dower in the land above described for Mary Ferguson, and partition of the remainder between the other complainants, as heirs at law of Benj. Blakeney, and to establish title, etc., as against the widow, etc., and heirs of Sampson Gray.

The representatives of Sampson Gray filed an answer, disclaiming title to the land. The • cause was heard upon the pleadings and evidence between the other parties, a decree in favor of the complainants in accordance with the prayer of the bill, and an appeal by Blakeney’s heirs.

It Was satisfactorily proved upon the hearing, that the appellees were the widow and heirs at law of Joseph Ferguson, under whom they claimed the land in question, and for want of which proof they were defeated in a previous suit (see case in 14 Ark. 641).

It appears that Joseph Ferguson, by a verbal contract, purchased the land of Sampson Gray, obtained possession of, and made valuable improvements upon it, under and by virtue of the contract. This was sufficient part performance to take the contract out of the statute of frauds, and to entitle the appellees to a decree against the widow and heirs of Gray, if they had not disclaimed — as held in Blakeney vs. Ferguson et al., 3 Eng. R. 272.

It remains but to determine: 1st, whether Mrs. Ferguson was properly decreed dower in the land; and, 2d, whether partition of the land was correctly decreed, as between the other appellees and the appellants.

1. The case made for Mrs. Ferguson, by the bill, is, that Sampson Gray purchased the land at tax sale, on the 5th of November, 1827, and obtained the collector’s certificate of purchase. That sometime in the year 1828, Gray sold the land to Joseph Ferguson, the husband of Mrs. Ferguson, transferred the certificate of purchase to him, by delivery, and agreed that the collector should execute to him the tax deed upon the expiration of the time allowed by law to the former owner of the land to redeem. But the deed was never executed on account of the neglect, etc., of the parties. That at the time said Joseph purchased the land of Gray, he took possession of it, afterwards made improvements upon it, and that he, and his son Moses, as his tenant, held possession thereof until he departed this life in April, 183G. The proof read upon the hearing conduces to establish the truth of these allegations.

The dower statute in force at the time Joseph Ferguson died, provides that: “If the intestate leaves a widow, and lawful issue, the widow shall be entitled, as her dower, to one-third part of such lands and tenements of which the husband was seized and possessed during coverture, either by virtue of a deed, patent, entry, warrant or survey, and to which she has not relinquished her right of dower, except lands sold on execution, or where lands have been mortgaged and sold in pursuance of a decree of a court of justice.”

The bill affirmatively shows, upon its face, that Joseph Ferguson was not, at any time before his death, seized and possessed of the land in question by virtue of any of the modes of acquiring title named in the statute.

Nor does the common law afford his widow any support in her claim to dower; for, by it, the husband must have a legal title to the land to entitle the wife to dower. She has no dower in an estate to which the husband has but an equitable title, as in the case now before us. 1 Cruise 182; Crabb vs. Pratt & Wife, 15 Ala. 847; Davenport vs. Farrar, 1 Scam. 315; Hopkins vs. Frey, 2 Gill 364.

But it is insisted, by the solicitor of Mrs. Ferguson, that her husband acquired legal title to the land by lapse of time, under the Territorial statute of limitations.

That statute declares that: “ it shall not be lawful for any claimant to bring or maintain suit for the recovery of land; Provided, said claimant shall have been out of possession of the land sued for seven years, against any person or persons, who'may have enjoyed, for seven years, the uninterrupted possession of said land; and, provided also, that said defendant shall have paid the taxes on said land" during the period aforesaid; saving, however, the right of infants,” etc. Steel McCamp. Dig., p. 382.

Passing over the question whether this was not merely a statute of limitations, and not of title, uninterrupted possession of the land for seven years, and the payment of the taxes charged upon it during that period, were both necessary to entitle Joseph Ferguson to the benefit of the statute. Irving vs. Brownwell, 11 Ill. R. 402.

There is no satisfactory evidence in the record that Joseph Ferguson was in possession of the land for seven years previous to his death. The proof shows that he and his son went upon the land, and commenced making improvements, in the winter of 1832. There is no proof that he was in possession of the land prior to that time. He died in April, 1836, less than seven years after his possession is shown to have commenced.

The bill does not allege that he paid any taxes upon the land at all, and, in the answer of appellants, there is a demurrer to the bill for want of equity. If a material matter, not alleged, could be proven, the evidence fails to prove that Joseph Ferguson paid the taxes upon the land, for the seven years preceding his death.

It appears that the land was assessed to him for the years 1829, 1830, 1831, 1832 and 1833. The collector’s receipts to him for his Territorial and county taxes for the last four years referred to, were produced upon the hearing, but no receipt or other evidence of payment for the year 1829. For the year 1834, it seems that the land was assessed to his son Moses, but there was no proof that the taxes were paid by any one. It does not appear that the land was assessed to any person for the year, 1835. The receipt of the collector to Joseph Ferguson for his taxes for that year was produced, but there is no land or other property described in it.

Joseph Ferguson having no legal title to the land in question, at the time of his death, but an equitable title only, in which his wife was not entitled to dower, if his heirs’ at law have, since bis death, by lapse of time or otherwise, acquired a perfect legal title, this does not enure to her benefit in her claim to dower.

It follows that so much of the decree of the Court below as gave her dower in the land was erroneous.

2.

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20 Ark. 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blakeney-v-ferguson-ark-1859.