Carpenter v. Eason

248 S.W.2d 364, 220 Ark. 452, 1952 Ark. LEXIS 728
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 28, 1952
Docket4-9773
StatusPublished

This text of 248 S.W.2d 364 (Carpenter v. Eason) 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
Carpenter v. Eason, 248 S.W.2d 364, 220 Ark. 452, 1952 Ark. LEXIS 728 (Ark. 1952).

Opinion

Ward, J.

The principal issues involved in this litigation are the validity of a tax deed executed by the gtate, and an attempt to cancel the' deed on the ground that the tax sale supporting the gtate’s title was void. Involved in this suit are lots 5, 6, 7 and 8 in block 1 of Branstetter’s Addition to DeWitt.

On November 1, 1941, Robert Eason, appellee, obtained a deed from the gtate conveying to him said property. The deed, which was introduced in evidence, shows that the land was deeded to the gtate as a result of a forfeiture for the nonpayment of the 1933 taxes. Within two or three days after receiving the gtate deed appellee entered into possession of the land, placed a building on it, and he and his family have lived on it and paid the taxes ever since. It appears from the testimony that when appellee moved on the property it was unoccupied; that it was more or less grown up in briers and bushes and littered with old automobile wrecks; that it had an old wire fence on three sides; and that he did not have to remove any fence or gate when he moved on. It appears that the property had very little value in 1941. It was situated at the extreme edge of .the corporate limits, was more or less swamp land, had a creek running through it, and there were no streets. Since moving on the land appellee has added improvements valued in excess of $3,000.

Appellant in her effort to defeat appellee’s State deed relies upon the matters set forth below.

Some time prior to March 24, 1941, the State instituted suit,' designated as No. 3806, to confirm title in many parcels of land in Arkansas County among which were the lots here involved. On the day above mentioned appellant filed in court her exceptions to the confirmation of the involved lots, and on the same day the court [evidently] announced its decree confirming all the lands except the said lots. We used the above word in brackets because no decree was filed as of that day, but the court, on February 9, 1942, entered an order nunc pro tunc as of March 24, 1941. Among other provisions this order contained this' paragraph with reference to the lots here involved: “It appearing that interventions have been filed and that upon the hearing of the same that certain lands were erroneously forfeited, the within cause is hereby dismissed as to said lands, to-wit: [here the lots involved are described].” It should be noted that cause No. 3806 was also designated “1936 suit.”

On December 26, 1941, appellant, designated herself as ‘ ‘ Exceptor, ’ ’ filed a cross-complaint in which she asserted title to the lots, re-asserted the same grounds for excepting, and prayed for cancellation of the State deed and for costs and damages against appellee, who was for the first time joined as cross-defendant. Appellant’s exceptions set forth, as grounds for voiding the tax forfeiture and sale, that: (1) The lands were sold on a day not authorized by law; (2) The lands were not advertised for the time and in the manner described by law; (3) The lands were not assessed, and the list was not verified, all as required by law; (4) The list was not recorded before the day of sale, the school tax for said year was not lawfully levied, and the assessor failed to authenticate the assessment record and list and failed to file the same as required by law; (5) The tax book for the year 1936 does not contain a warrant authorizing a collection of taxes; and (6) The clerk failed to record the delinquent list for the 1936 property and failed to properly certify the same.

Following the above and on January 24, 1942, appellee filed a demurrer to the cross-complaint on the ground that a cause of action had not been stated and that the court had no jurisdiction.

On February 9, 1942, appellant filed an amendment to her cross-complaint in which she deraigns her title through her mother and further alleged that appellee received his deed while this suit was pending and that he went into possession; and that “said deed and conveyance being based solely upon the Collector’s sale for nonpayment of the alleged 1936 taxes” was void. It is noticeable that the 1936 tax forfeiture is mentioned eight or ten times in appellant’s amended pleading. The prayer asked, that her land be not confirmed in the State, that the deed based on the “aforesaid illegal and void tax sale be cancelled,” that “the aforesaid pretended tax sale held on November 1, 1937, be held void,” and that she be allowed to redeem and have her title quieted. In answer to the above pleading appellee, on March 19,1941, entered a general denial, alleged he had been in possession under said deed since October, 1941, and exhibited his deed from the State which was referred to above. At the same time appellee filed a demurrer on the ground that since he was in possession the chancery court had no jurisdiction.

With nothing in the record to explain the delay, no steps were taken in the matter for approximately nine years when appellee, on May 13, 1950, filed an answer to appellant’s cross-complaint and amendment thereto. Appellee also filed two amended answers in June of the same year and on March 26, 1951, he filed still another. In all these latter pleadings appellee insisted on his demurrer, relied on his State deed, claimed adverse possession, pleaded the seven-year statute, and also the two-year statute set forth in Ark. Stats., § 34-1419. Appellant filed a reply on March 26, 1951, denying all allegations made by appellee and specifically pleaded that the original confirmation decree mentioned before was res judicata of appellee’s claim herein.

It should also be noted here that all the original papers and exhibits in the original confirmation suit were lost, as was found by an order of the lower court made September 24, 1951. In this order the court found that the original suit was for the purpose of confirming the tax sale for the taxes for the years 1933, 1934, 1935, and 1936 on the lands in question and other lands.

Several questions were raised by the pleadings on which testimony was introduced and excellent briefs presented here — such as appellee’s right to improvements and the amount thereof, the sufficiency of appellant’s chain of title, the right of appellee to introduce evidence to show that the lands in question had sold to an improvement district prior to 1940, and the merits of appellee’s demurrer to the court’s jurisdiction — but in view of the conclusion we have reached i't becomes unnecessary to discuss them.

Appellant first insists that the original confirmation decree is res judicata of appellee’s claim. Her position is that the effect of the confirmation decree [in failing to confirm as to the lands in question] was to declare void the tax forfeiture and/or sale on which the State deed rested, and that, therefore, the State deed to appellee must fail. There are several reasons why we cannot agree with appellant on this point. The State deed shows on its face that it is based on a 1933 forfeiture, but there is nothing in the record from which the lower court or this court can be sure that this was the forfeiture which the original decree found erroneous and upon which it refused to allow confirmation. Apparently, judging from appellant’s objections, the court found that the 1936 [not the 1933] forfeiture and/or sale was void. Appellant herself evidently did not believe what she here contends for, because her later pleadings recognized the issue to be a live one and specifically prayed that title be not confirmed in the State.

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Bluebook (online)
248 S.W.2d 364, 220 Ark. 452, 1952 Ark. LEXIS 728, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carpenter-v-eason-ark-1952.