Corder v. Norsworthy

109 S.W.2d 136, 194 Ark. 564, 1937 Ark. LEXIS 389
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 4, 1937
Docket4-4724
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 109 S.W.2d 136 (Corder v. Norsworthy) 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
Corder v. Norsworthy, 109 S.W.2d 136, 194 Ark. 564, 1937 Ark. LEXIS 389 (Ark. 1937).

Opinion

GrieeiN Smith, C. J.

S. E. Corder and his wife, Willie Corder, have appealed from a finding of the chancery court for Arkansas county that the indebtedness of S. E. Corder to appellee was $559.43, for which judgment was rendered.

In 1926 or 1927, appellee entered into a verbal contract to sell 4.25 acres of land in the town of St. Charles. Mrs. Corder testified that she bought the property, agreeing with appellee that the principal price of $1,500, without interest, should be paid by permitting appellee to take the rents from 'certain rice lands she and her husband owned, it having been estimated that more than six years would be required to complete the payments. Her husband was not present when she made the agreement with appellee, but she went home and told of the transaction. The deal was consummated in December, 1926. Mrs. Corder ■ further testified that the rice laud “was turned over to Mr. Norsworthy to rent and collect rents like it was his own.” She says that no papers were executed; that appellee claimed to he too busy. “He told me to come back, and I went back different times, and he always made excuses and did not have the papers ready. I don’t know why he did not fix the papers.” Witness also claimed there was an agreement that Nors-'worthy might collect certain dry land rents [as distinguished from irrigated rice farming] and in consideration of this arrangement Norsworthy would waive interest charges. When the contract for purchase of the town property was closed, no other indebtedness was due Norsworthy. Witness testified that, at the time the town property was bought, she and her husband had a substantial balance coming to them from the 1926 rice crop, they having been told by Norsworthy that this credit was sufficient to take care of a $500 payment. It was admitted by witness that in 1932 she and her husband owed appellee a supply account which showed a balance of $43.16, the obligation having been secured by chattel mortgage. This amount was paid to appellee by a Mrs. Whitmore, who had collected it on a rental charge. Witness says she directed Mrs. Whitmore not to make this payment to appellee, but that the instruction was disregarded.

S. E. Corder testified that his wife purchased the town property; that appellee promised to take the rice land and rent it and apply the proceeds on the debt; that T. L. Crabtree farmed the rice land in 1926, and appel-lee agreed to take the 1926 crop as the first payment, stating that the crop would be worth $500; that no interest was to he charged, and appellee was to pay taxes until the deed was made. Witness stated that the town property was occupied the latter part of February, 1927. He also testified that he later checked the rice mill records to ascertain the value of the 1926 crop, and it amounted to $495. No cash was paid on the purchase price of the town property, the rice check having stood for such. Witness testified there were no settlements or discussions between the parties “until I got after him in 1929. I figured we were about even and lie gave me this statement in 1929; it was $900 something. It was the only statement I ever got. Rents collected by Nors-worthy in 1932 were against my will.” The witness confirmed Mrs. Corder’s statement that Mrs. Whitmore was directed not to pay Norsworthy the item of $43.16 heretofore referred to.

The record shows that in the fall of 1927 appellee sold 'to G. B. Dean approximately one acre of the' town property, receiving $50 therefor. In 1930’ he sold an' acre to C. L. Whitmore, the consideration being $150. Appellants testified that they did not know of these sales, and did not approve them. Appellee just as positively testified that in each instance Mr. Corder was consulted, and that he readily agreed to the transactions. Appellants contend that the value of the land sold to Dean was $150, and that the Whitmore tract was worth $300, and demand credit for the aggregate of $450.

The full amount appellants testified appellee had collected, or should have collected, was $3,021.99, as follows: 1926 rice rent, $495 ; 1927, 750 bushels of sweet potatoes, $750; 1927, Jim Barker dry land rent, $150; 1927, Crabtree rice rent, $217.13; 1928, Jim Barker dry land rent, $95; by error in gasoline charge, $21.70; 1929, rice rent, $43.16; 1928, rice rent, prevented from farming by Norsworthy, $150; 1929, rice rent, not farmed, prevented by Norsworthy, $150; 1931, rice rent, not farmed, prevented by Norsworthy, $150; 1933, rice rent, not farmed, prevented by Norsworthy, $150; 1934, rice rent, not farmed, prevented by Norsworthy, $150; one acre sold to Whitmore, $300; one acre sold to Dean, $150.

Appellee testified that he sold the town property to S. E. Corder, and not to Willie Corder; that on October 20, 1926, he credited 8. E. Corder with $330 on the Crab-tree rice; that on November 29 he received four ba]es of cotton from Corder amounting to $234.65; that Corder owed an account for supplies, and after extending these credits of $564.65 against’ the Corder account, a credit of $77.29 was due, and this was paid by check. From 1927 to 1933, the Corders were indebted to appellee on open account, in addition to the land transaction. Instead of receiving 750 bushels of sweet potatoes from appellants in 1927, be actually received six bushels. He did not agree to buy a crop of sweet potatoes from appellants at $1 a bushel. An item of $43.02 appellants claimed to have paid in 1932 to discharge a chattel mortgage was not paid for that purpose, but was paid to apply on the town property contract. The records show the chattel mortgage was satisfied December 1, 1933. Ap-pellee further testified that he did not, at any time, have charge of the renting of the farm lands. “The agreement between us was that these rents were to come to me until the property was paid for. That is about as short as I can make it. Appellants did not agree to turn the lands over to me to be managed or rented out for them, and I did not receive all of the rents collected by appellants. I did not at any time prevent them from renting any of their lands.”

Following purchase by "Whitmore of one acre of the town property under deed executed by appellee, Whit-more erected thereon a modern gin costing more than $8,000. On December 19, 1933, Willie Corder filed a circuit court action against Whitmore, seeking recovery of the one acre. The allegations were that she had purchased the property from Norsworthy; that she' had not consented to the sale by Norsworthy, and that she had received no consideration. Norsworthy was made a party defendant in the suit.. Judgment was rendered in favor of Whitmore.

The suit from which this appeal comes was filed December 13, 1935, by Norsworthy against S. E. Corder and Willie Corder. The plaintiff alleged (and testified) that the verbal contract of sale and purchase was made in February, 1927. The complaint alleged that no deed was to be executed until all of the installments had been met; that the last payment on the contract was $122, made on Augnst 29, 1935, and that a balance of $1,124.67 was due. The prayer was for judgment in this sum, with foreclosure of the vendor’s lien, sale, etc. An itemized statement, duly verified, was attached to the complaint.

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Related

Davis v. Perryman
286 S.W.2d 844 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1956)
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109 S.W.2d 139 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
109 S.W.2d 136, 194 Ark. 564, 1937 Ark. LEXIS 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corder-v-norsworthy-ark-1937.