Brookfield v. Beamon

282 S.W. 364, 170 Ark. 996, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 276
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 19, 1926
StatusPublished

This text of 282 S.W. 364 (Brookfield v. Beamon) 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
Brookfield v. Beamon, 282 S.W. 364, 170 Ark. 996, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 276 (Ark. 1926).

Opinion

Wood, J.

On November 15, 1886, Nannie E. Brook-field, by warranty deed for a consideration of $1, conveyed to B. B. Merryman, J. W. Frazier, G. N. Sparks, John Graham and-A. J. Harrell, trustees, “for securing and holding a lot for religious purposes, the west end of block 20, beginning forty feet east of the southeast corner of block 3, east 185 feet, thence north 65 feet, thence west 185 feet, thence south 94 feet to point of beginning, the said lot being situated in the Brookfield Division of the town of Wynne, now on file in the office of recorder of Cross County, Arkansas.” The habendum, clause recites as follows: “To have and to hold the same unto the said trustees or their successors, for evangelical purposes forever, with all appurtenances thereunto belonging. And I hereby covenant-with the said trustees that I will forever warrant and defend the title to said lands to the said trustees'so long as used for church purposes, and, when no longer so used, to revert to original owner.”

On February 22, 1890, Nannie E. Brookfield, for the consideration of $1, conveyed by warranty deed to A. J. English, E. J. Newsom and John King, as trustees for the Wynne Baptist Church and unto the deacons of said church as their successors forever “lot No. 20 in Brook-field’s Addition to the town of Wynne, and block 5 in Brookfield’s Second Addition to the town of Wynne, all in S% section 16, T. 7, R. 3 E., lot No. 20, to be nsed as a building site for a house of worship, and block 5 in Brookfield’s Second Addition to the town of Wynne, to be used as a site for a parsonage, and, when ceasing to be so used, the title to revert to me or my heirs ’ and assigns.” The habendum clause is as follows: “To have and to hold the same unto the said A. J. English, E. J. Newsom and John King, as such trustees, and unto their successors in office forever, with all appurtenances thereunto belonging. And I hereby covenant with the said trustees and their successors in office that I will forever warrant and defend the title to said lands against all lawful claims whatever.”

This action was instituted by J. C. Brookfield on October 22, 1922, in the Cross Chancery Court, against O. C. Beamon et al. ■ The complaint alleged, in substance, that J. C. Brookfield was the owner of a certain lot, being a part of block 20, and that the defendants, acting under a contract with the First Baptist Church, were trespassing upon his lot; that they were piling material thereon and were proposing to erect a building thereon; that plaintiff has,no adequate remedy at law; that the lot in controversy had been conveyed by Nannie E. Brookfield to the plaintiff by warranty deed; that Nannie E. Brook-field, under whom plaintiff claimed, had executed a deed on November 15, 1886, and also an additional deed in 1890, to the lot, the conditions being that, when the land leased or conveyed by the additional deed ceased to be used as church property, it should revert and belong to Nannie E. Brookfield; that thereafter the church that had been erected upon said lot was sold and removed therefrom and the lot had been abandoned by the church and used as a cow pasture; that, because of such fact, the title conveyed by Nannie E. Brookfield in the deeds above mentioned to the lot in controversy reverted to Nannie E. Brookfield, plaintiff’s grantor. Plaintiff alleged that, unless the defendants were restrained, they would proceed to erect a building regardless of the rights of plaintiff, and that plaintiff had no adequate remedy at law. He alleged that the deeds above mentioned were void for want of equity, and that the title, by reason of the abandonment of the property for the purposes mentioned in the deeds, had reverted to Nannie E. Brook-field, plaintiff’s grantor, and that plaintiff now had the title to same.

Plaintiff prayed that the defendants be enjoined from proceeding with the erection of the building and that the conveyances above mentioned be removed as a cloud upon plaintiff’s title.

While the record does not show that there was any formal answer filed in the action, the recitals of the court’-s decree show that the cause was heard as if there had been an answer filed denying all the material allegations of the complaint. The judgment recites that “the cause was heard upon the pleadings, the depositions of the plaintiff and the testimony of J. E. Harris, J. W. Williams, Hr. R. Longest and J. C. Brookfield, taken in open court, by order of the court, and transcribed and made a part of the record herein, [and] the court being fully advised in the premises, doth find for the defendants, and doth dismiss plaintiff’s cause of action for want of equity.” Then follows the formal decree dismissing the complaint for want of equity, and in favor of the defendants against the plaintiff for costs, from which decree is this appeal.

To sustain his cause of action, the plaintiff introduced the deed above mentioned, and also a quitclaim deed from Nannie E. Brookfield, dated Jariuary 27, 1906, to J. E. Harris, J. W. Williams and R. H. Mitchell, as trustees for the Wynne Baptist Church, in which she granted, sold and quitclaimed unto the parties named as trustees and unto their successors forever “all of her interest, remainder, or equity of redemption in and to the west 100 feet of block 20 in Brookfield’s original'survey of the city of Wynne.” The habendum clause to this deed recites as follows: “To have and to hold the same unto the said J. E. Harris, J. W. Williams and T. H. Mitchell, as said trustees, and unto their successors and -assigns forever, with all appurtenances thereunto belonging. ’ ’

In June, 1907, the Baptist Church at Wynne, through its trustees, executed an instrument in the nature of a mortgage to the Home Mission board of the Southern Baptist -Convention to secure it in the sum of $1,000, which the board advanced for the purpose of enabling the church to erect a house of worship on the lot described in the quitclaim deed above mentioned from Nannie E. Brookfield to the trustees of the Baptist Church.

On the 17th day of June, 1924, Mrs. Nannie Brook-field executed a deed to J. C. Brookfield by which she conveyed “all my right, title and interest and reversionary interest in and to the land laid out and platted by me as streets and alleys of the city of Wynne, whether so.used or not * * *. This deed is for the purpose and in lieu of a deed between the same parties, conveying the same land, and for the same consideration and purposes, dated about January 27, 1906, and said to have been lost or mislaid. To have and to hold the same unto the said J. C. Brook-field and unto his heirs and assigns forever, with all appurtenances thereunto belonging. And I hereby covenant with said J. C. Brookfield-that I will forever warrant and defend the title to the said lands against all claims whatever.”

J. -C. Brookfield testified, among other things, that these new deeds were copies of deeds that were executed by his mother, which he had lost. He filed and identified a plat showing the location of the -church which had been built on the west end of block 20, extending back about 85 feet from the front or extreme- west end of the block. The defendants were proposing to build an annex which would extend some 25 feet further, and six feet over the street line on the north, or 100 feet from the west end of the block.

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Bluebook (online)
282 S.W. 364, 170 Ark. 996, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brookfield-v-beamon-ark-1926.