Casteel v. Casteel

171 S.W.2d 1004, 205 Ark. 837, 1943 Ark. LEXIS 264
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 10, 1943
Docket4-7073
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 171 S.W.2d 1004 (Casteel v. Casteel) 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
Casteel v. Casteel, 171 S.W.2d 1004, 205 Ark. 837, 1943 Ark. LEXIS 264 (Ark. 1943).

Opinion

Knox, J.

At, and for several years prior to, her death, which occurred in November, 1927, Mrs. Emerline Bullard, was the owner of two small tracts of land in Cross county, Arkansas, her homeplace north of Wynne, and a tract located west of Wymie, acquired from A. M. Taylor in 1889, the deed from Taylor reciting that the tract contained 44 acres of land.

Mrs. Bullard left surviving her, as her only heirs, three sons, to-wit: William Walter Casteel, the appellant, Samuel Luther Casteel (now deceased), husband and father of appellees, and James K. Polk Bullard.

On April 14th, 1928, Bullard conveyed to the two Casteel brothers his interest in the forty-four-acre Taylor tract, and they in turn conveyed to him their interest in the home tract.

On May 24th, 1928, appellant and his wife executed a deed of trust to T. M. Ellis, conveying appellants undivided one-half interest in the Taylor tract to secure an indebtedness of six hundred ($600) dollars due from appellant to Mrs. W. B. J. Perry.

On May 11, 1933, there being then due in principal and interest on said indebtedness the sum of eight hundred ($800) dollars appellant and Ms brother, and their wives, in satisfaction and discharge of snch indebtedness, made, executed and delivered to Mrs. Perry a warranty deed conveying to her a strip of land seven (7) chains and seventy-five (75) links wide running north and south off the west side of the Taylor tract. The number of acres conveyed to Mrs. Perry cannot be calculated solely from the description contained in the Perry deed, and the amount of acreage covered thereby is not set out therein. Appellant testified that the part conveyed to Mrs. Perry comprised twenty acres, wMle appellee, Mrs. Mollie Casteel, testified that it covered one-half of the entire tract. It is undisputed that the conveyance to Mrs. Perry was made for the sole benefit of appellant and in satisfaction of his individual indebtedness.

Prior to her death, Mrs. Bullard had a strip of land, consisting of some four or five acres, on the east side of this tract surveyed off. Appellant testified that he did not know for what purpose this survey was made, but Mollie Casteel testified that it was the intention of Mrs. Bullard that her sons, Walter and Luther; should each erect homes on this tract of land, Walter to build on and occupy the north part, and Luther the south part thereof. No deeds or other instruments of conveyance were executed, and neither son was put in possession during the mother’s lifetime.

Luther Casteel died in 1934, leaving his widow, Mollie Casteel, and one son, Charlie L. Casteel, the appellee here.

After the death of Mrs. Bullard, and prior to the conveyance to Mrs. Perry, Luther Cásteel had charge of the entire forty-four acre tract, and after the conveyance to Mrs. Perry he had charge of the remaining part thereof, and since his death his widow has been in possession thereof.

On August 27th, 1936, appellant filed this suit praying that that part of the land in the’Taylor tract not previously conveyed to Mrs. Perry “be partitioned in kind, that his one-half interest be set off to him after having been charged with the value of the tract heretofore conveyed to the said Perry . . .”

In his testimony, however, he stated that the relief he is “seeking in this suit is a division'of the five acre tract, and adjustment of the difference between the east twenty and the west twenty of the other forty acres.”

Evidently- the five acres which he referred to was the strip of land on the east side which Mrs. Bullard had caused to be surveyed in her lifetime, intending that her sons should erect their homes thereon.

A witness for appellant testified that the land was all of the same fertility and character, but .that on account of its closer proximity to the city of -Wynne he was of the opinion that the east half of the tract was worth five dollars per acre more than the west half. - The evidence is undisputed, however, that at the time' of the conveyance to Mrs. Perry there was an old house situated on the tract conveyed to her, and no improvements on the remaining part of the land.

In the case of Seawall v. Young, 77 Ark. 309, 91 S. W. 544, it was held that where cotenants orally divide land between themselves, and each takes possession of his allotted share, and one executes a deed to the other in accordance with the agreed division, the latter is bound by the division so made without the execution of any deed by him.

Other jurisdictions have held that a cotenant who conveys to a third party land which has been allotted to him in an oral partition thereby ratifies such partition and estops himself to deny the validity thereof. Corbett v. Norcross, 35 N. H. 99; Mount v. Morton, et al., 20 Barb. (N. Y.) 123; Blackwell v. Harrelson, 99 S. C. 264, 84 S. E. 233; Ann. Cas. 1916E, 1263.

In the case at bar appellant’s cotenant did not make a deed directly to him as was the case in Seawall v. Young, supra, nor did appellant alone execute a conveyance to his grantee as was done by the persons to whom the lands were allotted in the other cases cited, but this is a matter of form rather than substance. Here, for his sole benefit, appellant induced his cotenant to join with him in the execution of a deed to Mrs, Perry, conveying a portion of the land held by them in common. If the land so conveyed constituted the portion of the entire tract allotted appellant under an oral agreement of partition made between him and ,his cotenant, then he is bound thereby.

As was said by Mr. Justice Wood in the case of Seawall v. Young, supra, “a voluntary partition or division of land by cotenants may be established by any competent evidence.”

By his prayer for owelty, based upon the alleged difference in the value of the portion conveyed for his benefit to Mrs. Perry, and all of the remaining portion of the tract, except the four- or five-acre strip on the east side, which the mother in her lifetime had'caused to be-surveyed, appellant impliedly admits that there was in fact an agreement of partition between himself and his brother at the time of the conveyance to-Mrs. Perry, which agreement effected a partial division, at least, of the tract. In other words, a prayer for owelty presupposes a division or partition in kind of' lands between the parties.

Other facts and circumstances appearing in the record strongly justify the inference that at or about the time of the conveyance to Mrs. Perry there was an agreement reached between the brothers respecting the division between themselves of a part, if not all, of this tract of land.

The question, therefore,' is presented as to what were the terms of this agreement, and what lands were affected thereby.

We find that the solution of this question is somewhat simplified by the determination first of the question as to who has the burden of proof in respect to it.

In 40 American Jurisprudence, p.

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Bluebook (online)
171 S.W.2d 1004, 205 Ark. 837, 1943 Ark. LEXIS 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/casteel-v-casteel-ark-1943.