Coulter v. Clemons

372 S.W.2d 396, 237 Ark. 227, 1963 Ark. LEXIS 521
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 18, 1963
Docket5-3024
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 372 S.W.2d 396 (Coulter v. Clemons) 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
Coulter v. Clemons, 372 S.W.2d 396, 237 Ark. 227, 1963 Ark. LEXIS 521 (Ark. 1963).

Opinion

Ed. F. McFaddin, Associate Justice.

This is a suit to quiet title brought by the appellants, Murray Whitfield Coulter and George Prothro Coulter, against the appellees, Julia Clemons et al. Other parties were added by cross complaint and third party procedures. The appellants claimed title to the real estate here involved by mesne conveyances from those who owned the lands prior to the 1932 tax sale for the 1931 taxes. The appellees claimed by statutory possession acquired under the deed issued because of such tax sale. The decree of the Chancery Court in favor of the appellees was reached largely because of the finding that the appellants were claiming under a forged deed; and that issue of forgery becomes the most important point on this appeal.

Before discussing the forgery matter, however, we give other background information. The appellants, in seeking to quiet their title, claimed: (a) that the lands here involved were originally owned by Harris Brothers, who became bankrupt in 1931; (b) that the 1932 tax sale was void for failure of the Clerk to affix his certificate before the date of sale; (c) that there was no valid statute curing such defect;1 (d) that the trustee in bankruptcy conveyed the lands to E. W. Prothro in 1933; (e) that E. W. Prothro conveyed the lands to the appellants in 1933; and (f) that the appellants were minors in 1933 and within proper time brought this suit—not to redeem the lands from taxes but—to quiet their title to the lands under the claim that their predecessors in title were the owners of the lands.

The appellees claim under a deed from the State Land Commissioner in 1935, the lands having forfeited to the State in 1932 for the delinquent taxes of 1931; and appellees claim: (a) that, regardless of the validity of the tax sale, the appellees under the tax deed have paid taxes on the lands (admitted to be wild and unimproved) for more than fifteen years; (b) that such payments make good title; (c) that, the deed from E. W. Prothro to the appellants is a forgery; and (d) that the appellants have no title to the lands and therefore cannot maintain this suit.

The alleged deed from E. W. Prothro to appellants was dated August 28, 1933, and recorded August 3, 1940 —A lapse of almost seven years between date of execution and date of recordation. At the time of the date of the deed the appellants were children, aged one and three years respectively, and were nephews of E. W. Prothro. The appellants brought this suit within the permissible time after arriving at full age. The suit was filed on April 16, 1952, and remained untried until 1962 because of other litigation later to be mentioned. Trial in the Chancery Court in 1962 resulted in a holding that the deed from E. W. Prothro to the appellants was a forgery; and this appeal challenges the correctness of that holding. The appellants raise three points:

“1. The Court erred in holding that the deed of E. W. Prothro, dated August 28, 1933, conveying the lands to appellants, was a forgery and that by reason thereof appellants had no title to the lands involved.

“2. The testimony of E. W. Prothro in the form of a deposition introduced as evidence by appellees is binding upon them, and the court erred in not so holding.

“3. The Court erred in holding that appellants had not shown title in themselves and in dismissing appellants’ complaint for want of equity.”

1. Forgery. It was established that the Trustee in Bankruptcy of Harris Brothers executed a deed dated August 17, 1933, conveying the land here involved to E. W. Prothro; that the deed was actually delivered on August 23,1933 to E. H. Coulter, Sr., a brother-in-law of E. TV. Prothro, and the deed was recorded the same day delivered; that E. H. Coulter, Sr. is the father of the appellants, Murray "Whitfield Coulter and George Prothro Coulter; that E. H. Coulter, Sr. was an attorney and had represented E. W. Prothro previously; that the challenged deed here involved was dated August 28, 1933 but was not recorded until August 3, 1940, a lapse of almost seven years; and that the challenged deed here involved purported to have been acknowledged by E. W. Prothro before T. P. Oliver, a Notary Public.

T. P. Oliver testified that he never signed the said acknowledgment on the deed and that his signature thereon was a forgery. Furthermore, Mrs. T. P. Oliver, the wife of T. P. Oliver, testified that she was the chief operator for the Southwestern Bell Telephone Company in El Dorado; that she and T. P. Oliver had been married 32 years; that she was well familiar with the signature of T. P. Oliver; and that the signature of T. P. Oliver on the acknowledgment of the questioned deed was not the signature of T. P. Oliver. The Olivers were entirely disinterested witnesses.

Other instruments admittedly signed by E. TV". Prothro were introduced in evidence in order to establish his genuine signature. Some of these were: (a) a deed from E. TV". Prothro to O. E. McGugan, dated January 1, 1934; and (b) a deed from E. TV. Prothro to Lionel Robertson, dated January 23, 1934. Thus, contemporaneous instruments were in evidence containing the admittedly genuine signature of E. W. Prothro. Then C. TV. Talbot, President 'of the First National Bank of Fordyce, and with 43 years experience in handwriting, testified that the purported signature of E. TV. Prothro on the questioned deed (that is, from E. TV. Prothro to Murray Whitfield Coulter and George Prothro Coulter) was not written by the same person who had signed the McGugan and the Robertson deeds, as previously set forth. Here is Mr. Talbot’s positive testimony on the point as abstracted by the appellants :

<£I am now handed a photostatic copy of a deed purporting to have been executed by E. W. Prothro to George Prothro Coulter and Murray Whitfield Coulter, dated August 28, 1933, and filed for record in Calhoun County on August 3, 1940, which deed I have examined previously and it is my opinion, based upon my experience since 1920, and from a careful examination of these deeds that the signature of E. W. Prothro on the deed to George Prothro Coulter and Murray Whitfield Coulter is not the same handwriting as the signature of E. W. Prothro on the McGugan and Robertson deeds.”

Other admittedly genuine signatures of E. W. Prothro were in evidence: one was his signature on a deed from Prothro to Johnson Brothers in August 1933; and the other was a signature of Prothro on an indemnity bond executed at the same time, 17111011 indemnity bond was signed by E. W. Prothro as principal, and E. H. Coulter as surety. The Chancery Court compared Prothro ’s signature on the deed here in question, as against the admitted signatures in the Johnson transaction. The only evidence against the forgery was that of E. W. Prothro,2 which came into the record in the manner discussed in Topic II, infra. E. W. Prothro testified that he signed the deed to the appellants on the date shown and delivered the deed to his sister, who ivas the mother of the appellants; that the appellants were small children at the time; and the deed was a gift to them.

The appellees had the burden of proving the forgery by a preponderance of the evidence. Thompson v. Kinard, 168 Ark. 1057, 272 S. W. 668; Hildebrand v. Graves, 169 Ark. 210, 275 S. W. 524; Ledbetter v. Smith, 202 Ark. 144, 149 S. W. 2d 564. Did the testimony of E. T\T. Prothro outweigh the testimony of Mr. and Mrs. Oliver and C. L.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
372 S.W.2d 396, 237 Ark. 227, 1963 Ark. LEXIS 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coulter-v-clemons-ark-1963.