Brooks v. Isbell

22 Ark. 488
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 15, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 22 Ark. 488 (Brooks v. Isbell) 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
Brooks v. Isbell, 22 Ark. 488 (Ark. 1861).

Opinion

Hon. Harris Fx.anagin, Special Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court;

Tin's was a bill in chancery, brought by Brooks against Isbell for several tracts of land.

The hill alleges that Isbell sold to Brooks several tracts of land, for which Brooks was to pay two thousand dollars in swamp land scrip, and that a deed was made, executed and delivered by Isbell, when, upon reflection, the deed was returned to Isbell upon his promise to get his wife’s signature, have the deed acknowledged, and return it in the course of a week. The deed was made June 24th, A. D. 1853. The complainant paid three hundred and seventy dollars; has offered to pay the residue, but could not get the deed.

The defendant admits the negotiation and sale, and that a deed was made, executed and acknowledged by himself and wife, but denies that it was delivered; avers that a part of the contract was that Brooks was not to enter any more lands in his neighborhood for settlers, and that the inducement to the trade was future profits, which he expected to make upon the entering of swamp lands. That complainant made all the entries he desired, and prevented him from using the scrip profitably, when defendant determined not to complete the sale. He denies that Brooks ever paid anything on the land.

The testimony on this point is, first: The deposition of Silvey, which is, that Brooks and Isbell were in his office as swamp land agent of Arkansas, at Jacksonport, which was also the law office of William S. Keith, and a conversation in regard to a sale from Isbell to Brooks of certain lands, in which it was stated they were sold for swamp land scrip, the amount of which he cannot say, but about the sum of two thousand dollars. Brooks had six or seven thousand dollars in swamp land scrip deposited in the office, and witness paid Isbell on the trade for Brooks three hundred and seventy dollars. He thinks Keith drew up a deed, it- was in Keith’s hand-writing, for the land— Keith read the deed. He thinks Mr. Isbell signed the deed in his office, and, at the time spoken of, “ Mr. Isbell handed the deed, after he signed it, to Mr. Brooks or Keith; Keith at the time was acting as attorney for Mr. Brooks. I stated to Mr. Brooks privately that the deed was imperfect for the want of the relinquishment of the wife’s dower.” Isbell, afterwards, in talking about it, offered to take the deed home and get his wife’s signature and return it. Thinks Brooks handed the deed to Keith, who wrote out a relinquishment of dower and gave it to Isbell, who promised to bring it back in a few days. Brooks directed witness to pay the balance of the scrip on the return of the deed. Isbell entered a part of the land mentioned, about the time of the sale. Isbell afterwards sent an order for sixty dollars in scrip, which witness refused, because the deed had not been returned.

"William S. Keith deposed, that the parties to the suit came into his office and told him to draw a deed for lands that Isbell had sold to Brooks. He drew a deed in fee simple, and handed it to Isbell, who signed and handed it to Brooks, and then he wrote an agreement for them. Brooks told Isbell he would furnish some scrip to enter land (witness thinks part of the land sold), and Silvey, as Brooks’ agent, let him have it. He let him have three hundred and seventy dollars. Witness attended to Brooks’ land transactions, and knew more about them than Brooks did himself. After this was through, Brooks asked him if it would not be necessary to have Isbell’s wife’s relinquishment of dower; Brooks handed the deed to Isbell, which he said he would carry home and. have his wife’s dower released, and bring it back in a few days; witness wrote out a relinquishment of dower to be executed. Brooks told Silvey, when the deed was brought back, to pay him the balance. Brooks told Isbell that he wonld not enter any more lands for the people living in his, Isbell’s, vicinity after Mr. Joney, his agent, had carried out what contracts he had made to enter lands in that neighborhood. He thinks Brooks wrote to Joney to that effect, and sent the letter by Isbell.

On the part of the defence it is proven:

William H. Swan heard Brooks say, in the presence of Isbell, that he had purchased Isbell’s place in Lawrence county, and that Isbell had the deed, and he was to take it home on the same day and sign and acknowledge it.

Thomas J. Isbell deposes, that defendant brought home from Jacksonport a blank deed from himself to Brooks. Isbell and his wife both signed it, and called upon him to witness the same, which he did.

It appears that a certain paper about a mill, which is also a subject of litigation, was executed on the same day, the twenty-fourth day of June, A.. D. 1853; that a portion of the lands included in the deed -was entered also on the same day, and this furnishes supporting and corroborating testimony to that of Keith. Keith swears positively to the signing and delivery; Silvey, it is true, says he thinks it was signed, but he adds positively that it was delivered, and Isbell afterwards received it back, and he privately suggested the defect. It is impossible to think that the deed was not signed and delivered at Jack-sonport without thinking these witnesses have not sworn the truth; on the other hand, one can well imagine the witnesses swore the truth, and Isbell might have been mistaken in the fact about the signing by Isbell. The testimony, upon our minds, leaves the conclusion that the deed was signed and delivered at Jacltsonport, and afterwards taken by Isbell for a special purpose, and, as a consequence, that the title to the lands vested in Brooks.

It is urged that the evidence is such that it cannot be ascertained what was conveyed by the deed.

The bill alleges that the land conveyed was: S. E. {- 31, N. E. Í- 29, E. £S. E. i 29, S. W. £ S. E. 29, E. £ S. E.£31, S. W. i 28, W. i N. £ 32, S. E. i N. W. ¿ 32, S. W. £ 32, E. £N. E. * 32, N. W. £ 33, Township 17 N., R. 1 E.

The answer, as aided by the appellee’s brief, admits the lands sold to be, S. E. i N. E. i 29, E. * S. E. ¿ 29, S. W. {- S. E. ¿ 29, S. W. 28, N. W. 33, N. E. 32, S. E. N. W. 32, S. W. £ 32, 17, 1; denying that the negotiation extended to the south-east quarter of section twenty-one, to one hundred and twenty acres in the north-east quarter of section twenty-nine, the east half of the south-east quarter of section thirty-one, and one hundred and twenty acres in the north-west quarter of section thirty-two.

It was admitted that the north east quarter of section thirty-two was included in the trade, but it is not so charged in either the original or amended bill as to the west half of the northeast quarter of section thirty-two.

Silvey testifies that the parties were seated around a table, and Isbell presented a diagram, and said that was the way the land lay. The diagram is made an exhibit; thinks it the same one showed by Isbell. Isbell marked the boundaries by d®ts. The witness gives the numbers as he writes them down from the diagram, and they correspond with the answer, except that they include the west half of the south east quarter of section thirty-two, and also included the north-west quarter of 23, but omitted the north-west quarter of 33, the numbers being given in figures. He says that he understood the dotted lines to include the lands sold.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Johnson v. Baldridge (In Re Baldridge)
256 B.R. 284 (E.D. Arkansas, 2000)
Sides v. McDonald
310 S.W.2d 16 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1958)
Good v. Williams
105 P. 433 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1909)
Cribbs v. Walker
85 S.W. 244 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1905)
Clinton v. Shugart
101 N.W. 785 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1904)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 Ark. 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-isbell-ark-1861.