De Yampert v. Manley

191 S.W. 905, 127 Ark. 153, 1917 Ark. LEXIS 249
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 29, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 191 S.W. 905 (De Yampert v. Manley) 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
De Yampert v. Manley, 191 S.W. 905, 127 Ark. 153, 1917 Ark. LEXIS 249 (Ark. 1917).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

J. B. Gabe owned a tract of land in Ashley county, Arkansas, described as the north fractional half of the northeast quarter of section ten (10), township nineteen (19) south, range five (5) west, and mortgaged the same to the American Freehold Mortgage Company to secure indebtedness evidenced by notes which were assigned by the mortgagee to William Gaines, and the latter instituted proceedings in the chancery court of Ashley county to foreclose the mortgage. A consent decree was entered by the chancery court on December 15, 1906, and said lands were condemned for sale by a commissioner of the court, the sale being ordered for cash. By agreement between the respective parties to the decree, the sale was deferred, and in the year 1907 Aaron Robertson filed his intervention in the cause alleging that he had purchased the south half of said tract from one Moats, who was the owner at the time, and received a title bond and was put in possession. Robertson claimed title to the last mentioned portion of the mortgaged land, but a decree was rendered which in effect adjudicated his title to be superior to that of Gabe but subordinate to the mortgage upon which the original foreclosure decree had been rendered.

The decree of the court was that.“as against the plaintiffs, Benjamin Graham, trustee, and William Gaines, assignee, that under the decree heretofore rendered in their favor v. J. B. Gabe and wife, they shall first have sold the north half of said land, and if same is not sufficient to satisfy said decree that he then have sold the south half. That as between Gabe and Robertson, Robertson has paid for the south half of said land and has held the same for more than twenty years, claiming the sanie absolutely as his own against the world, and has valid title thereto as against said Gabe.” The decree then proceeded to divest the title to the south half of said tract out of Gabe and vest the same in the said Aaron Robertson. The last mentioned decree was rendered November 24, 1908.

Robertson died in December, 1910, in possession of the land and leaving his last will and testament devising the land to appellee Manley. On March 12, 1912, there having been no sale under the decree, the court on motion of the original plaintiff, made an order discharging the commissioner theretofore appointed, on account of removal from the State, and appointed another commissioner in his stead and ordered him to sell the whole of the tract mentioned in the decree “in the manner prescribed'in the decree of this court” rendered in the year 1906. That order was made without revivor of the cause and without the appellee having been brought into the cause in any manner. The commissioner last appointed proceeded at once to sell the land in accordance with the terms of the original decree, that is to say for cash, and sold at public sale to appellant, W. B. de Yampert, and made his report at the November term, 1911, of the court, and the report was confirmed, still without revivor and without the appearance of appellee. The price paid by appellant was $895.00 for the north half of said tract, which was known as the Gabe land, and $300.00 for the south half of the tract, known as the Robertson land. The commissioner executed a deed to appellant pursuant to the order of the court, which deed was duly approved by the court, and appellant has been in possession of the land under the commissioner’s deed since that time.

On May 11, 1915, appellee instituted the present proceeding by filing a complaint which he termed a “bill to review and set aside the former orders of the Ashley chancery court,” and appellant was made defendant. The prayer of the complaint was that “the order of sale, decree of foreclosure, order of revivorship, sale and commissioner’s deed be set aside, cancelled and held for naught as a cloud on plaintiff’s title insofar as same affect the south half of the fractional north half of the northeast quarter of section ten (10) ” etc., and that his title to the land under the last will and. testament of Robertson be quieted as against the defendant, W. B. de Yampert. The former proceedings were set forth in the complaint, and it was alleged that the commissioner’s sale and deed thereunder were void for the reason that there had been no order of revivor after the death of Robertson, that the commissioner made the sale prematurely without awaiting the time prescribed in the original decree, and for the further reason that the sale was made for cash contrary to the terms of the statute. Appellee also alleged that appellant had been in possession of the land and receiving the rents and profits thereof to the amount of $200 per annum, which was more than sufficient to reimburse appellant for the amount he had paid for this portion of the land.

Appellant answered the complaint, denying the allegations with reference to the ownership of the land by appellee, and pleading estoppel and laches on the part of appellant by standing by without objection and permitting appellant to purchase the land at the sale. The eause was heard by the court upon the record of the original proceedings and the depositions of witnesses. The court found that appellee was the owner of the land under the devise from Robertson, that'appellant had purchased the land at the sale for appellee, Manley, and should be treated as .the holder of the legal title in trust for the latter and should account for the rents and profits as a credit against the purchase price. It was decreed that “the defendant be credited with the purchase price of said lands, $300 and interest thereon at ten per cent, per annum from da/te of purchase and be charged with rent from the time he went into possession until January 1, 1917, with interest, said purchase price and interest being-exactly equal to said rentals for said five years and interest,” and that appellee pay to appellant all the taxes previously paid by him, with interest, and that upon the payment of same the title to the south half of said tract be divested out of appellant and vested in appellee. An appeal to this court has been duly-prosecuted.

It is insisted on behalf of appellant that there was. no allegation in the complaint upon the issue decided by the court in favor of appellee, and that there is no proof to sustain the finding of the court to the effect that appellant had agreed to purchase the land for appellee, and that the court erred in treating the pleadings as amended to conform to the proof on which the court based its finding and decree in favor of appellee. We agree with appellant that there is not sufficient proof in the record to justify a finding in. appellee’s favor on that issue. There is no proof at all that appellant agreed before the sale to purchase the land for appellee so as to bring the case within the decision of this court holding that a trust is, under those circumstances, created. Strasner v. Carroll, 125 Ark. 34, 187 S. W. 1057.

(1-3) However, counsel for appellee defend the decree on another ground, - which we will proceed to consider, for if the chancellor reached the correct result the decree should be affirmed, even though the grounds upon which it is based are untenable. The contention is that the sale by the commissioner for cash, instead of on a credit as prescribed by statute, renders the sale void or voidable, and that there has been no valid confirmation for the reason that the cause was not revived after the death of Robertson. We are of the opinion that the ground thus stated is well taken, and that for that reason the decree of the chancellor reached the correct result.

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Bluebook (online)
191 S.W. 905, 127 Ark. 153, 1917 Ark. LEXIS 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-yampert-v-manley-ark-1917.