Cartier v. Hengstler

266 S.W. 304, 166 Ark. 303, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 76
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 24, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 266 S.W. 304 (Cartier v. Hengstler) 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
Cartier v. Hengstler, 266 S.W. 304, 166 Ark. 303, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 76 (Ark. 1924).

Opinion

Woon, J.

On the 24th.of .February, 1921, the plaintiff below (appellee here) instituted this action in the chancery court of Ouachita County against the defendants below (appellants here). The appellee alleged that all parties to the action were residents of Ludington, Mason County, Michigan. The appellee seeks to recover a one-third interest in about four thousand acres of land situated in Ouachita County, Arkansas, about three thousand of which he alleged in his complaint were purchased by himself, Warren A. Cartier and William Eath, all of the city of Ludington, Michigan, under parol partnership agreement entered into between them in January, 1902, for the purpose of purchasing the lands, and that about one thousand acres were purchased by Cartier and Eath in their own names. The lands are described in the complaint. The appellee alleged that on the 5th .of June, 1912, Cartier and Eath, with the intent to defraud the appellee, negotiated a sale of the timber on the .lands with one T. S. Grayson of Magnolia, Arkansas, for the sum of $95,000. Cartier represented to the appellee that, on the 12th of June, 1912, he had received an offer of $67,500 for the lands; that Cartier and Eath made representations to the effect that the partnership would receive a good profit by accepting the offer, and that, if they failed to accept it, it would result in a great loss, because the price of the timber would go down, and it was subject to be destroyed by fire, which representations Cartier and Rath, knew to be false, and that they were made for the purpose of misleading the appellee; that the appellee had no special knowledge of the timber and lands, and relied upon these representations of Cartier and Rath, and joined with them in the execution of a deed to T. J. Gaughan for the express consideration of $67,500, which deed bore date of June 12, 1912, and was duly recorded June 17, 1912; that on June 12, 1921, Gaughan reconveyed the lands to Cartier for an alleged consideration of $95,000, which deed was also recorded on June 17, 1912; that on June 24,1912, Cartier conveyed to Rath an undivided half interest in all the lands for the consideration of $47,500, which deed was recorded July 3, 1912; that the sale of the timber by Cartier to Grayson, negotiated on June 5, was finally consummated and'the deed executed for the same on June 26, 1912, which deed, at' the request of Cartier and Rath, Grayson did not- have recorded; that,'after these transactions, Rath died, September 13, 1916, and appellant Ostendorf was named as executor of his will; that the will devised Ratli’s interest in the lands to the German Lutheran Synod of certain States, subject to a life estate in his wife; that these lands were- conveyed by the synod and his wife to Cartier on July 18, 1918, and Cartier, on the 8th of August, 1918, conveyed an undivided half interest to Lucy Rath for the alleged consideration of $5,000, all of which deeds were duly recorded in Ouachita County; that Cartier deliberately misled the appellee by representing that all the lands described in the complaint were to be included in the deed to Gaughan, whereas some 1,000 acres which had been purchased in the name of Cartier and Rath were not included in the deed, but were conveyed in a separate deed to Gaughan for an alleged consideration of $27,500 on June 12, 1912, which deed was also recorded on June 17, 1912; The appellee further alleged that he had no knowledge of the circumstances surrounding- the conveyances to Gaughan and the negotiations for sale of the timber to Grayson until these circumstances were brought to his knowledge by the reprcsentatives of a certain oil company, during the latter days of September, 1919. The appellee further alleged that the title to the lands appeared in Cartier and Lucy Rath, and that they were about to sell the same, and would do so unless restrained; that they were indebted to the appellee in the sum of $5,000, balance due him from the partnership on account of the sale of the timber. Appellee prayed for an accounting of the partnership dealings and transactions,' that he have his proportion of the proceeds of the sale of timber found to be partnership funds, that Cartier and Mrs. Rath be required to convey their interest in the lands, and that the lands be partitioned according to the interests of the respective parties, and that they be enjoined from con.veying or incumbering the lands .in any manner, and for such other and further relief as in a court of equity he was entitled to.

The appellants denied that there was any partnership between Cartier, Rath, and the appellee. They admitted the purchase of a large body of the lands in controversy by them with the appellee, but alleged that these lands were not purchased by them as partners, but were held and purchased by them as tenants in common. They alleged that the certain other lands described in the complaint were afterwards purchased by Cartier and Rath as tenants in common, in which the appellee was not interested. They denied specifically all of the' allegations of the complaint as to fraud and as- to the partnership. They alleged that on the 25th of May," 1912, the appellee executed an option to Cartier agreeing to convey to him an undivided one-third interest in the lands within sixty days for the price of $23,333.33, less a commission of five per cent; that, before the expiration of the option, appellee agreed to, and did, accept the sum of $22,500 for an. undivided one-third ■ interest in the lands, and agreed to pay a commission of five per cent, on the sale;-that, on the 24th of June, appellee executed his receipt to Cartier-in full for the sale of the lands and-commission, in- the sum of $21,37-5. Appellants alleged that appellee had knowledge of all the circumstances and facts concerning the conveyance of the. lands to Gaughan.- They admitted the purchase of the lands by Cartier from Gaughan, and the sale of the timber by him to Grayson, and stated that said lands, after the removal of the timber, could not have been disposed of on the market for $1 per acre; that the present value is speculative, depending on- the prospects for the discovery of gas and oil thereon. They denied that appellee had any interest in the lands, and denied that he was entitled to any accounting as of a partnership between appellee, Cartier and Rath. Appellants set up that plaintiff, in the year 1912, or soon- thereafter, had full knowledge of the matters' and things complained of in his complaint, or, by the exercise of reasonable diligence, could have had knowledge of all matters and things set forth in his complaint; and that his suit herein was not brought within three years after the discovery by him of the acts and things complained of, or. within three years of the time within which, by reasonable diligence, he might have had knowledge of the matters and things complained of.” There was a reply by the appellee to the answer which he asked to be taken as an amendment to his original complaint, hut the allegations of which we deem it unnecessary to set forth, as the issues are sufficiently stated in the complaint and answer.

The court, after hearing the evidence, which consisted of testimony taken in open court, and which was afterwards reduced to writing, duly authenticated and brought into the record, together with various documents, which were introduced in evidence, found that the.appellee was the owner of an undivided one-third interest in all the lands purchased in the names of Warren A.

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Bluebook (online)
266 S.W. 304, 166 Ark. 303, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cartier-v-hengstler-ark-1924.