Corn v. Arkansas Warehouse Corporation

419 S.W.2d 316, 243 Ark. 130, 1967 Ark. LEXIS 1079
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 2, 1967
Docket5-4265
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 419 S.W.2d 316 (Corn v. Arkansas Warehouse Corporation) 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
Corn v. Arkansas Warehouse Corporation, 419 S.W.2d 316, 243 Ark. 130, 1967 Ark. LEXIS 1079 (Ark. 1967).

Opinion

John A. Fogleman, Justice.

Appellant brought this action to quiet his title to a tract of land in the SW¼ NW¼ of Section 14, Township 1 North, Range 12 West in Pulaski 'County described by a metes and bounds description. He claimed title by a quitclaim deed dated February 26, 1962, from the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad Company, alleging a claim of title from T. P. Blunt and wife, M. J. (or M. A.) Blunt. Blunt was admittedly a source of title common to the parties. Appellant also claimed title by payment of taxes for seven years under color of title and fifteen years on vacant, wild and unimproved lands. He sought to cancel as clouds on his title any and all documents under which appellees claim to have owned, purchased or redeemed all or any part of the lands.

Appellees filed a. general denial of the allegations of appellant’s complaint and prayed dismissal thereof. The chancellor held that appellant failed to meet the burden of proof imposed upon him and dismissed his complaint for want of equity. This appeal is from that decree.

The lands involved were part of a tract known as the Blunt Five-Acre Tract, being a square in the Southwest Corner of the NW¼ of Section 14, Township 1 North, Range 12 West. The entire tract was purportedly conveyed to W. P. Brady, as trustee, by T. P. and M. J. Blunt, his wife, by quitclaim deed on July 31, 1906, and in turn by Warranty deed executed by Brady and wife to the railroad company on June 6, 1907. The railroad company purported to convey to appellant the lands described in his complaint by quitclaim deed dated February 26, 1962. At that time appellant was admittedly the owner of a one-acre square in the northwest corner of the Blunt tract. The tract described in the deed from the railroad company to appellant contained approximately three-fourths of an acre and lay immediately east of the one-acre tract already owned by appellant. It was bounded on the east by the right-of-way of the Little Rock expressway and on the south by the right-of-way of the railroad company.

It was shown that a one-acre square lying, immediately east of appellant’s one acre in the northwest corner of the Blunt tract had been conveyed by Thomas P. Blunt and M. A. Blunt, his wife, to Belle Anderson by warranty deed on June 26,1884. This deed was recorded in the deed records of Pulaski County on June 29, 1885. On March 6, 1963, one Maria ¡Scott executed a warranty deed conveying a tract which would include all of the tract claimed by appellant under the deed from the railroad. 1 Appellees offered the testimony of one Elisha Jackson, a minister, to establish that Maria Scott was the daughter and sole surviving heir of Belle Anderson. If his testimony be given full credit, the appellees have record title by virtue of the earlier deed from the Blunts for all of the tract claimed by appellant except for a small triangle on the east not included in the one-acre tract conveyed to Belle Anderson.

Appellant attacks the credibility of Jackson and says that no weight should be given to his testimony. He says that the witness’s answer showed confusion and that if he is correct as to the date of death of Belle Anderson, she would have been 100 years old, as indicated by a Pulaski County certificate of marriage of an Isabella Spears to Creen Anderson. 2 It appeared from other conveyances introduced that Green Anderson was the husband of the grantee in the deed from the Blunts. Although at one point on cross-examination, Jackson said that Belle Anderson died three or four years before Green Anderson, he positively testified both on direct and cross-examination that she married after Green’s death and gave other testimony indicating that she survived him. He did not know Green Anderson as -well as he did Belle because the former did not attend church but she did. The witness said he lived within three blocks of them. He did not know whether Maria Scott was Green’s daughter or not. Appellant introduced a deed dated December 11, 1918, from a Bell Anderson, widow of Green Anderson, conveying other lands in the vicinity to one Lula Bowers, recited in the deed to have been the only known blood relative of Green Anderson. The deed also contained a recitation that it was made in fulfillment of a request made by Green Anderson during his last illness. An affidavit by the grantor recorded as a part of this document states he died April 22, 1918. If Maria Scott was not the daughter of Green Anderson, but was the daughter of his wife, legitimate or not, this deed would not necessarily be contradictory to Jackson’s testimony. We cannot say that the trial judge, who saw and heard the witness, should have given this testimony no weight, nor should we entirely discard it here, since the trial court had the opportunity to observe the witness, notice his demeanor in answering questions and his interest or lack of interest in the case. Little v. Holt, 229 Ark. 627, 318 S. W. 2d 157. Appellant was unsuccessful in showing record title in himself to the tract in dispute because of the earlier deed to Belle Anderson, regardless of the weight to be given to the Jackson testimony.

The major thrust of appellant’s argument seems, however, to be based upon the contention that his title should be confirmed because the railroad company had paid taxes on the land for more than fifteen years. He relies on Ark. Stat. Ann. § 37-102 (Repl. 1962) providing that payment of taxes for seven years on unimproved and unenclosed land shall be deemed to be possession if the taxpayer has color of title. He also relies on § 37-103 providing that payment of taxes on such lands for a period of fifteen years creates a presumption that the taxpayer or its predecessor in title held color of title to said land prior to the first payment and that all sue! payments were under color of title.

In this respect he relies on the testimony of one W. A. Nickerson, am abstractor sine© 1962 and prior to that time, Land and Tax Agent for the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad Company for 34 years. He was in charge of right-of-way, payment of taxes and other matters pertaining to real estate. Through him various plats were introduced to support Ms testimony that the tract in question was witMm the boundaries of the property in the right-of-way of the railroad, even though he stated that the only purpose for wMch this tract was used was for a borrow pit when they needed dirt in 1944 and again in 1953. He stated that during all the years he was with the railroad the taxes on its right-of-way were always paid by paying each county tax collector the amount of taxes due on railroad properties. These payments were based on. total assessment of miles of trackage, side tracks, buildings and right-of-way real estate as certified by the Arkansas Tax Commission (now Tax Division of the Public Service Commission). The tax receipt for 1935 was introduced as typical. It shows payment of taxes of Choctaw, Oklahoma and Gulf Railroad Company. 3 No description of any property of any Mnd appears on this receipt. TMs witness handled the sale of the property to appellant and saw that the property was taken off the right-of-way description on the tax books. He identified a tax assessor’s description change covering this change.

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Bluebook (online)
419 S.W.2d 316, 243 Ark. 130, 1967 Ark. LEXIS 1079, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corn-v-arkansas-warehouse-corporation-ark-1967.