Clark v. Friend

295 S.W. 392, 174 Ark. 26, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 379
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 16, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 295 S.W. 392 (Clark v. Friend) 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
Clark v. Friend, 295 S.W. 392, 174 Ark. 26, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 379 (Ark. 1927).

Opinion

Smith, J.

In September, 1923, W. S. Biles, trustee, instituted suit in the Union Chancery Court against A. W. Friend and his lessee, the Pure Oil Company, to establish title to the southwest quarter of the southeast quarter of section 6, township 16 south, range 15 west, claiming title by sundry conveyances from the alleged collateral heirs of one Charlie Wilson, deceased. Defendants claimed title under an alleged deed from Charlie Wilson to J. M. Young, or under a foreclosure of a mortgage from Wilson to Young, who conveyed to Friend, the lessor of the Pure Oil Company. Defendants also claimed title by adverse possession and under a sale for the nonpayment of the taxes for the year 1917, and that plaintiff’s cause of action is barred by lachés. Various-parties intervened claiming as and under alleged collateraUheirs of Charlie Wilson and his widow, Lizzie Wilson.

O. W. Clark, trustee, intervened and claimed title under a warranty deed from Fannie Watt,’who, it is alleged, is the granddaughter and sole heir at law of Charlie Wilsori, who is the common source of title of all claimants.

The decree of the court below was in favor of Friend and his lessee upon the finding that the cause of action was barred by limitations and laches, and from this decree Clark, trustee, has appealed. It will be unnecessary to set out the claims of the other parties, as this appeal concerns only the respective claims of 'Friend and his lessee and Clark, trustee.

Charlie Wilson owned, at the time of his death, an adjoining forty-acre tract of land, described as the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section 6, township 16 south, range 15 west, which the witnesses refer to as the west forty in contradistinction to the forty acres involved in this litigation, which is called the east forty. We will employ the same designations. Both tracts are now very valuable, as there are .a number of producing oil wells on each. The west forty was the subject of the litigation in the case of Wilson v. Biles, 171 Ark. 912. Much of the history of Charlie Wilson and his heirs is set out in the former opinion, but the decision in that case has no bearing on the decision in the present appeal.

In taking testimony in the present case the fact was developed that Charlie Wilson had a granddaughter, who, if alive and found, would inherit to the exclusion of the collateral heirs. After an extended search Fannie Watt, the alleged heir, was found, and Clark, as trustee, procured a deed from her, and, by an intervention which he filed, the title thus acquired was set up. in opposition to that of all other claimants.

Fannie Watt is not a party to this litigation, but during its progress an attorney representing, her filed a pleading, which 'was denominated “suggestion to the court, ’ ’ -in which she alleged that she had brought suit in the Federal court against her grantee, alleging that the deed from her was void as having been obtained by fraud. The court found that Fannie Watt had declined to become a party to the litigation, and had not been made a party and had filed no pleading whatever making her a party, and the cause was disposed of without attempting to adjudge the merits of her “suggestion” that the deed from her had been fraudulently obtained.

It is claimed by appellant that Fannie Watt is the grandchild of Charlie Wilson, and many -witnesses testified as to her identity and her relationship to Charlie Wilson. We do not set out this testimony, because we have concluded .that, even though it he conceded that the testimony has established her identity as the granddaughter and sole heir at law of Charlie Wilson, and that her deed is valid, her grantee is not entitled to recover in this action.

The testimony establishes the fact that Charlie Wilson lived on the east forty and cultivated portions of both tracts, and continued to reside on the east forty until his death, which occurred in 1910. Neither forty possessed any great value at that time, and the east forty sold for $10 per acre as late as 1920.

It is very clearly established that Charlie Wilson and his wife executed a deed of trust to Young & Anderson, who were merchants doing a farm-furnishing business, to secure an indebtedness incurred for advances. It is not clear whether the deed of trust covered both forties, but it is certain that the east forty was embraced in the deed of trust. It is also clearly established that Young, who appears to be the surviving member of the firm of Young & Anderson, took possession of the east forty as early as 1909, -which is the year preceding the death of Charlie Wilson. It is not clear under what authority this possession was taken. The answer alleged that possession was taken under a deed from Wilson to Young, but the testimony makes it much more probable that the possession is referable to a foreclosure of the deed of trust, or a satisfaction thereof, whereby the east forty was conveyed to Young.

The execution of the deed of trust is established by the testimony of the justice of the peace who took the acknowledgments, and the proof of statements made by both Wilson and his wife in regard thereto. It was shown that the land was advertised for sale by the trustee in the deed of trust, but it was not shown that the land was ever ap.praised or that the trustee ever sold it. The parties Avho could have cleared up these uncertainties died before the institution of this litigation. Wilson and his wife are dead, and so also are Young, the surviving member of the firm of Young & Anderson, and the trustee who advertised the land for sale.. Young kept his papers in his store, and these were all lost when the store was destroyed by fire. The deed of trust had never been recorded.

A number of persons who lived near the land and who knew .Charlie Wilson and his wife testified that both Wilson and his wife had told them that they had satisfied the deed of trust by letting Young have the east forty, and that this tract had become known as the Young land in Wilson’s lifetime, and that Young was in possession thereof by tenant for at least a year before Wilson died, although Wilson did not move from the house in which he lived, which was on the east forty. It does not appear by. Avhat arrangement Wilson retained possession of this house until his death, but it does appear that, after Wilson’s death, his widow changed her residence to the west forty and resided there until her death, which occurred in 1922, and that she said to a number of persons that Young owned the east forty, having taken title thereto in satisfaction of the deed of trust. But, whether under a deed from Wilson and his wife or under a foreclosure sale and a trustee’s deed, or a parol settlement and satisfaction of the deed of trust, the fact is established that, in some manner, Young took actual possession of the east forty during Wilson’s lifetime and remained in possession of it by tenant until 1920, Avhen he sold it to Friend, trustee, for $400. It Avas also shown that Young’s possession was not that of a mortgagee in possession, but that of an OAvner claiming title thereto, and that this title was recognized”by both Wilson and his wife.

As Ave have said, the court found that the cause of action was barred both by the adverse possession of Young for a period of more than seven years and by laches in bringing the suit.

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Bluebook (online)
295 S.W. 392, 174 Ark. 26, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-friend-ark-1927.