Cooper v. Cook

247 S.W.2d 957, 220 Ark. 344, 1952 Ark. LEXIS 707
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 7, 1952
Docket4-9732
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 247 S.W.2d 957 (Cooper v. Cook) 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
Cooper v. Cook, 247 S.W.2d 957, 220 Ark. 344, 1952 Ark. LEXIS 707 (Ark. 1952).

Opinion

Minor AN. Millwee, Justice.

This is a suit by appellees, as the heirs of Raif Ford, deceased, against appellants, J. E. Cooper and wife, to quiet title to eighty acres of land in Union County, Arkansas.

At the time of his death intestate in 1928, Raif Ford was the owner and in possession of two hundred acres described as the NE Quarter, and the SE Quarter of the NAN Quarter of Section 36, Township 19 South, Range 14 ANest, in Union County. The eighty acres in controversy is the ANest Half of said NE Quarter. Raif Ford’s home was located in the northwest corner of the eighty-acre tract facing east on the El Dorado-Farmerville road which runs north and south through the tract.

Upon the death of Raif Ford in 1928, appellee Spence Ford, one of his six sons, moved in the Raif Ford home where he has since resided. Joe Ford, another son, moved in a house south of the Spence Ford home and on the same side of the road in 1928 where he resided with his family until his death in 1937, and his widow and children continued to live there until 1946. In 1929 appellee Greeley Cook, grandson of Raif Ford, built a house on the east side of the road, south of the Spence Ford home, where he resided with his family until about 1946 when he rented the house to a tenant and moved to El Dorado. This house burned in 1950 while occupied by Cook’s tenant.

On March 7, 1935, O. B. Clark, as administrator of the Raif Ford estate, sold the eighty acres in controversy to pay debts of the estate. Rush Hooten purchased the land at the administrator’s sale and a deed was executed to him on April 18, 1935. The administrator’s report of said sale was approved by the probate court on April 23, 1936, and the deed placed of record May 27, 1936. Hooten and wife executed a’ quitclaim deed to the eighty-acre tract to appellant, J. E. Cooper, on November 19, 1946. Neither Hooten nor Cooper asserted any right of possession or claim of ownership of the lands until 1947. Spence Ford paid taxes on the entire two hundred acres from 1928 until 1947. When he went to pay taxes in 1947 he learned that appellant had already paid the 1946 taxes on the eighty acres in controversy and this was the first knowledge appellees had of the administration proceedings or any claim of title to the lands by Hooten or Cooper.

Although appellees pleaded ladies on the part of Hooten and the invalidity of the administrator’s sale of the lands to him, their proof was confined to their principal claim of title to the eighty-acre tract by adverse possession. The chancellor sustained the plea of adverse possession and this appeal is from the decree quieting appellees’ title to the tract and cancelling the administrator’s deed to Hooten and the latter’s quitclaim deed to appellant J. E. Cooper.

In urging a reversal, appellants apparently concede that appellees fully established their claim of adverse possession to the Eaif Ford house occupied by Spence Ford and several acres of yard, garden and pasture in the immediate vicinity. However, it is insisted that appellees had no color of title to the lands after the administrator’s sale and deed to Hooten in 1935; that the evidence is insufficient to establish pedal possession by appellees for the statutory period of any of the balance of the eighty acres in controversy; and that title to these lands should have been quieted in appellants.

Appellants rely on the case of Sturgis v. Hughes, 206 Ark. 946, 178 S. W. 2d 236, which involved a claim of adverse possession by a grantor against a grantee and ljis successors in title. We held that the record title was in those claiming under the grantee and that since the grantor was without color of title, he acquired title to only that portion of the land which he actually occupied for more than seven years. We agree that this rule is applicable here. Title to the eighty acres in controversy became vested in appellees on the death of Raif Ford in 1928. However, the lands were an asset in the hands of the administrator for the payment of debts of the Raif Ford estate and title of the heirs was divested by the administrator’s sale and deed to Hooten in 1935. One cannot successfully claim possession under color of title where he has been deprived of the color of title relied upon by a judgment, decree or involuntary sale of the land under authority of law. 2 C. J. S., Adverse Possession, § 69; 1 Am. Jur., Adverse Possession, § 204.1. The validity of the administrator’s deed to Hooten has not been challenged here.

It follows that appellees’ continuous possession of the lands after the administrator’s sale was without color of title, which was in Hooten under his deed from the administrator. It is well settled by our decisions that while color of title is not necessary to give title by adverse possession, it is required to extend an actual possession of a part of a tract of land constructively over the rest of it. Bradbury v. Dumond, 80 Ark. 82, 96 S. W. 390, 11 L. R. A., N. S. 772; Culver v. Gillian, 160 Ark. 397, 254 S. W. 681. Thus the adverse possession of appellees in the case at bar is limited to the land they actually occupied.

In Culver v. Gillian, supra, the court held that to constitute adverse possession in one having no color of title, there need not be a fence or building, yet there must be such visible and notorious acts of ownership exercised on the premises continuously for the time limited by law that the owner of the paper title would have knowledge of the fact, or that his knowledge may be presumed as a fact. The rule of actual possession is to be applied reasonably in view of the location and character of the land claimed and it is ordinarily sufficient if the acts of ownership are of such a nature as a claimant would exercise over his own property and would not exercise over another’s, and that the acts amount to such dominion over the land as it is reasonably adapted to. What is adverse possession is one thing in a populous country or a city and another thing in a sparsely settled section of the country. 2 C. J., Adverse Possession, § 7 (b); 2 C. J. S., Adverse Possession, §§ 22 and 181 b.

The lands in question are located in a sparsely settled section of Union County. Although appellees are not well versed in land lines and descriptions, the effect of their testimony is that Spence Ford, Greeley Cook, «Joe Ford and his widow and children continuously resided on the eighty acres in controversy, cultivated parts of it, cut and sold timber from the balance and exercised complete dominion over the lands for more than seven years after the execution of the administrator’s deed to Hooten in 1935. Spence Ford testified that he cultivated lands south of his house in the northeast quarter of section 36 every year following the death of his father until a year before the trial when he developed heart trouble; that he had twelve or fourteen acres in corn and other crops near his house each year in addition to a fenced pasture of about four acres across the road from his house. Joe Ford lived on the same side of the road on the south forty and Greelej^ Cook constructed a house across the road from Joe Ford in 1929.

Greeley Cook testified that in 1929 he cleared and fenced eighteen acres which he cultivated each year until he left the place in 1946 and rented to another; that he made a living on the land and had thirty-six head of cattle when he left; and that he made crossties on the place.

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Bluebook (online)
247 S.W.2d 957, 220 Ark. 344, 1952 Ark. LEXIS 707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-cook-ark-1952.