Bride v. Walker

176 S.W.2d 148, 206 Ark. 498, 1943 Ark. LEXIS 177
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 13, 1943
Docket4-7189
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 176 S.W.2d 148 (Bride v. Walker) 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
Bride v. Walker, 176 S.W.2d 148, 206 Ark. 498, 1943 Ark. LEXIS 177 (Ark. 1943).

Opinion

Robins, J.

This is a contest, involving ownership of a one-acre tract situated at Grady, Lincoln county, Arkansas, between appellants, collateral heirs of William Johnson, deceased, and appellees, collateral heirs of Virginia Johnson, deceased. The land in controversy was conveyed to William Johnson, the husband of Virginia Johnson, and he never conveyed it to anyone, but it is the contention of appellees that Virginia Johnson, who obtained a divorce from William Johnson, became the owner thereof by virtue of the provisions of the divorce decree and also by adverse possession. The lower court rendered judgment in favor of appellees, to reverse which this appeal is prosecuted.

The case was tried before the lower court sitting as a jury upon the following agreed statement of facts :

“William Johnson and Virginia Johnson were lawfully married prior to 1905 in Lincoln county, Arkansas; on December 22, 1905, William Johnson acquired title from Mrs. Eugenia Wood to the lands described in complaint and being the lands involved in this suit and that he and his wife, Virginia Johnson, occupied it on December 22, 1905, and occupied as homestead.
“That thereafter and prior to December 0, 1916, William Johnson left Lincoln county, Arkansas, and moved to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; that he abandoned and deserted his wife, Virginia Johnson, and Virginia Johnson remained in possession of the property; that on December 9, 191G, in a cause of action in the Lincoln chancery court wherein Virginia Johnson was plaintiff and William Jolmson was defendant the court rendered a decree, copy of which is attached and made a part hereof. . . . (By this decree it is provided that title to the tract in question is divested out of William Johnson and “vested absolutely” in Virginia Johnson.)
“That William Johnson, after he first left the county prior to 1916, never returned except on one visit to Grady, Arkansas, and after 1916 continued to live in Pittsburgh, died and was buried in Pittsburgh in 1938; he visited Grady, Arkansas, in 1921 subsequent to December, 1916. He knew Virginia Johnson had a divorce.
“William Johnson died intestate in Pittsburgh in 1938 and left no children or descendants and the plaintiffs so far as the issues herein involved' are his collateral heirs.
“That Virginia Johnson died intestate in Lincoln county, Arkansas, in 1941 and left no children or descendants and defendants, so far as the issues herein are concerned, are her collateral heirs. Virginia Johnson occupied, held and paid taxes on the lands herein involved as her separate property from the date of the decree, December 9, 1916, until her death in 1941; that defendants are in possession of the property. ’ ’

It is urged on behalf of appellants that the decree of divorce was void because it was rendered “in chambers” on constructive service and contained a-recital to the effect that the defendant “appeared” by attorney ad litem appointed by the court to notify him of the filing of the suit against him; and that the possession of Virginia Johnson, not being hostile dr adverse to AVilliam Johnson in its inception, did not thereafter become adverse.

The lower court held that the presumption of the validity of the divorce decree, to which the judgment of any court of superior jurisdiction is entitled, was not overcome and that it followed that title was vested thereby in Virginia Johnson.

But, regardless of whether the divorce decree was valid or void, it was stipulated in this case that William Johnson visited Grady, Arkansas, in 1921, five years after the date of the decree, and that “he knew Virginia Johnson had a divorce.” Thus it'appears'that William Johnson, for more than seven years before his death, knew that his wife had by her divorce proceeding renounced their marital relation and knew that after doing so she continued to live on the land. He must have known that she was not occupying this land as his wife, and that, since she had obtained a divorce from him, her possession was adverse to him.

It was also stipulated that she occupied and paid taxes on the land “as her separate property” from the date of the divorce until her death.

The term ‘‘ separate property, ’ ’ when used with reference to lands owned by a wife, has a well-defined meaning. It' means property that the wife owns in her individual right, as distinguished from lands in which she has some right or title growing out of the marital relation. A wife’s separate property is “all property tlie legal title to which is vested in her individually for her-own use and benefit.” Seedhouse v. Broward, 16 So. 425, 34 Fla. 509. “By the common law, the idea attached to separate property in the wife, and which forms a portion of its definition, is, that it is an estate, held as well in its use as in its title, for the exclusive benefit and advantage of the wife.” George v. Ransom, 15 Cal. 322, 76 Am. Dec. 490. “A wife’s separate estate is that from which the dominion and control of the husband is excluded, . . .” 30 C. J. 795. So the necessary effect of this stipulation is that Virginia Johnson, for twenty-five years, held and occupied the land as her own individual property and that she was not holding it under any right arising from her marriage to William Johnson. Such occupancy by her was in our opinion adverse to the right of William Johnson and, since it continued for more than seven years, was sufficient to vest title in her.

In the case of Dail v. Etchison, et al., 173 Ark. 1180, 291 S. W. 998, it was said: “It is a well-established doctrine of this court that title to lands may be acquired by adverse possession, which title may be asserted as effectively as title acquired by deed. As early as Jacks v. Chaffin, 34 Ark. 534, we held (quoting syllabus): 'Possession of land during the full period of limitations, under such circumstances as would make a valid defense, amounts to an investiture of title, which may be actively asserted in all respects, as effectively as if acquired by deed.’ See, also, Logan v. Jelks, 34 Ark. 547; Wilson v. Spring, 38 Ark. 181; Crease v. Lawrence, 48 Ark. 312, 3 S. W. 196; Stricklin v. Moore, 98 Ark. 30, 135 S. W. 360; Hinton v. Martin, 151 Ark. 343, 236 S. W. 267.”

A somewhat similar fact situation was presented in the case of Jones v. Thomas, 124 Mo. 586, 28 S. W. 76, in which was involved a controversy over certain land owned at one time by Nathan Thomas. In that case the plaintiff claimed under an attachment deed obtained in a suit against Nathan Thomas, and the defendants claimed under Obedience Thomas, wife of Nathan Thomas. It was shown that more than ten years before the institution of the suit over the land Obedience Thomas had obtained a divorce from Nathan Thomas and a judgment of sequestration by which title to the land in question was vested in her. It was conceded that the judgment of sequestration was void. In that case the court held that the possession of the wife under this admittedly void judgment'was nevertheless adverse to the title of her husband and awarded the land to the defendants, who obtained their title through the wife.

In the case of Warr v. Honeck, 8 Utah 61, 29 P.

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Bluebook (online)
176 S.W.2d 148, 206 Ark. 498, 1943 Ark. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bride-v-walker-ark-1943.