Dawson v. Parham

18 S.W. 48, 55 Ark. 286, 1892 Ark. LEXIS 2
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 9, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 18 S.W. 48 (Dawson v. Parham) 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
Dawson v. Parham, 18 S.W. 48, 55 Ark. 286, 1892 Ark. LEXIS 2 (Ark. 1892).

Opinion

Cockrill, C. J.

The object of this suit in equity by the appellants was to establish title to three tracts of land and to divest the appellees of the legal title which it was alleged was improperly vested in them.

The court dismissed the complaint as to two tracts and decreed in favor of the appellants as to the other. They appealed, and subsequently the defendants prosecuted a. cross-appeal by leave of this court.

As to the northwest quarter northwest quarter section 20,. township 5 north, range 3 east, the court found the facts in effect to be that G. V. C. Johnson became the purchaser in 1853 by certificate of entry from a swamp land agent; that Johnson executed his title bond to Pool and John Dawson,, binding himself to convey the tract to them upon the payment of the price agreed upon; that the price had been paid; that Pool and Dawson made partition of the lands that this tract fell to Dawson ; that plaintiffs who are appellants had succeeded to the interest of Dawson, who is-dead, by conveyance from his heirs; that the title so held was equitable; and that they were entitled to a conveyance from the defendants who had succeeded to the rights of Johnson by conveyance from his heirs. Without recounting the evidence, it is sufficient to say that we have carefully reviewed it, and find that it preponderates in favor of the court’s conclusions. The same state of facts was before the court in Dawson v. Parham, 47 Ark., 215.

There is one fact, however, which the chancellor overlooked. J. H. Dawson was one of the seven heirs of John Dawson. The appellee, Anna Parham, became the purchaser of his interest in all the lands in suit, at execution sale in 1879. That interest was an undivided seventh of the whole. The title thus acquired has not been controverted by the appellants. The conveyance by J. H. Dawson to the appellants was subsequent to the sale under execution of his interest. His conveyance for that reason carried nothing. The court erred therefore in decreeing that interest to the plaintiffs in the tract above described, and the decree to that extent should be reversed on the cross-appeal of Anna Parham.

As to the north half of the southeast quarter of section 19, township S north, range 3 east.

1. Presumption as to swamp land patents, This also was swamp land. It was patented to Robert C. . Brinkley by the State in 1859, anc* through him the appellees deraign their title. The appellants insist that their grantors had the prior right to the patent by virtue of an entry made in the proper land office and certificate of purchase issued by an authorized swamp land agent in December, 1853, and that this gives them an equity to be invested with the legal title conveyed by the State’s patent to Brinkley. But upon the record before us the appellants’ contention cannot prevail. The patent to Brinkley was issued in pursuance of the authority granted by the swamp land acts. It recites that the land agent had previously issued his patent certificate to Brinkley, by virtue of the act of January 20, 1855, as the original purchaser of said land. These recitals show the authority upon which the governor assumed to act in issuing the patent. There is a presumption therefore that they are true. Heeler v. Gist, 27 Ark., 200; Chrisman v. Jones, 31 id., 609; Hendry v. Willis, 33 id., 836; Holland v. Moon, 39 id., 120.

2. Presumption as to swamp land patent tificates. We must take it then that Brinkley was the original puruntil the contrary is .proved. The reason for that ' u presumption is made more apparent by a consideration of the act of January 20, 1855, under which the certificate was issued. One of the objects of the act was to afford the swamp land agents the opportunity to adjust conflicting entries. Hempstead v. Underhill, 20 Ark., 337. To that end provision was made to the effect that certificates previously issued by the swamp land commissioners.should be presented for examination to the officers then known as the swamp land agents of the proper district. If the holder was ascertained to be the original purchaser, he received from the agent what the act terms a patent certificate. The deed affords evidence, as we have seen, of the fact that Brinkley was the holder of such a certificate, issued in pursuance of this act; and as the officer who issued that certificate is presumed to have acted in conformity to law in issuing it (Rice v. Harrell, 24 Ark., 402), we must presume that Brinkley surrendered a valid certificate of purchase upon the issue of the patent certificate. In order for the appellants to show a prior right, and a consequent superior equity, it was incumbent upon them to establish that their certificate of purchase was issued prior to that which Brinkley surrendered. Holland v. Moon, 39 Ark., 120.

■-$. certified land records”s evidence. But we are not forced to rely upon these presumptions to establish the priority of the conflicting entries. The originaj recor¿[s 0f the swamp land office, now in the custody of the land commissioner, show that Brinkley’s entry was in fact prior in date to the appellants’. A certified copy of the record was introduced upon the trial to prove the fact of Brinkley’s priority. The original was competent to prove, that fact, because the entry was made in pursuance of an official duty which required the record to be kept, and the officer is presumed to have recorded the truth until the contrary is made to appear. The statute makes a certified copy of such records of equal dignity as evidence as the originals. Mansf. Dig., sec. 2833.

As to the tract of land last described, the decree dismissing the appellants’ complaint is right.

4. When judgment in ejectment no estoppel to set up equitable title. The appellants’ deraign title to the south half of the southwest quarter of section 20, township 5 north, range 3 east through the swamp land certificate of December, 1853, above mentioned, and the appellees show no title except to an undivided one-seventh interest, being the interest of J. H. Dawson purchased at execution sale. The appellants had, however, been previously defeated in an action of ejectment against the appellees for the possession of that tract, and the court below ruled that the judgment in that case was a bar to the relief sought in this.

In the action of ejectment the plaintiffs’ complaint contained allegations of title similar to those made in their present complaint, except that it was alleged that, after the .death of G. V. C. Johnson, his administrator executed a deed conveying the land to the obligees in his title bond, and that the deed was executed by the administrator in pursuance of an order of a court having jurisdiction in the premises. That is, they alleged a legal title in themselves upon which alone an action of ejectment can be maintained.

In the present complaint the plaintiffs allege only an equitable title—that is, the swamp land entry by Johnson, the bond for title executed by him to Pool and Dawson, and their succession to the rights of Pool and Dawson, the allegation as to a conveyance of the legal title by the administrator being omitted.

The argument is that, inasmuch as equitable rights under our system of procedure may be enforced at law if the parties acquiesce (Harris v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 S.W. 48, 55 Ark. 286, 1892 Ark. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dawson-v-parham-ark-1892.