Denton v. Roddy

34 Ark. 642
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 34 Ark. 642 (Denton v. Roddy) 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
Denton v. Roddy, 34 Ark. 642 (Ark. 1879).

Opinion

Eakin, J.

On the thirteenth of May, 1844, a tract of land in Jackson (now in Woodruff) county, owned and occupied by Elias B. Roddy, a married man, was sold under execution against him from the circuit court, in favor of Bennett, Morrill & Co., and purchased, at said sale, by William E. Denton, at a price much below its actual value, or the amount of the execution. The sheriff’s deed was duly executed.

The plaintiffs in that case, charging that said Denton was their attorney, and had taken the lands to secure the full payment of their judgment, and had died, filed a bill in the Jackson circuit court, on the tenth of July, 1849, against said Roddy, and the widow, executors and heirs of Denton, to subject the lands to the payment of their debt, in accordance with, the trust. Roddy filed a cross-bill in that case and died. The suit ivas revived against his administrator, widow and heirs, who came in and adopted the cross-bill of Roddy. His widow (the appellee in this cause, and a party in that) also filed her separate cross-bill against all the other parties, claiming dower.

At the May term, 1860, of said court, a decree was made sustaining the lien of complainants to the full amount of their judgment at law, and dismissing the cross-bill of the representatives and heirs of Roddy for want of equity. The dower of the widow was allowed upon her separate cross-bill, and commissioners were appointed to assign it. They reported at the December term, 1860, but their report met with exceptions from the Denton heirs, which were sustained. The cause was afterwards continued, from term to term, without further action upon the matter of dower, until the April term? 1869.

Meanwhile, Roddy, and his wife after his death, remained in the possession of the lands, enjoying the full use thereof, until about the first of January, 1867, after which, until the occurrences hereinafter set forth, she occupied by tenants. In March, 1868, the lands were sold for the taxes of 1867, and bought by R. W. Martin, who obtained a certificate of purchase, and on the twenty-third day of March, 1869, assigned it, for valuable consideration, to the heirs of William E. Denton.

This had been procured by Franklin D. Denton, the executor, and one of the heirs of William F., who had come from-Batesville to Augusta upon affairs of the estate of his father. He found said doweress, Martha Roddy, preparing to go, with a married- daughter, to live in Texas, and selling off her personal property to obtain money for the purpose. He demanded of her rents, for two-thirds of the place since her husband’s death, claiming that to be due, and estimating the amount, together with some taxes he had paid, at $1,500. She expressed herself utterly unable to pay that amount. He insisted that she should do so, or release any further interest in the lands, which he would take in satisfaction of the debt. She declined, and he became angry, and threatened if she did not comply by a certain hour of the day, at which he meant to start on his-return to Batesville, he would sue her, and attach her personal property, and her interest in the dower, as well. She became alarmed and distressed. She was satisfied that he would execute the threat. Her heart was set upon going” to live in Texas with her daughter, and the course threatened would render it impossible. She yielded, and executed the release.

At the succeeding term of the Jackson circuit court, this release was brought in; and, it being shown further that the heirs of Denton had paid the whole judgment of Bennett, Morrill & Co., and the parties to the original and cross-bills appearing by their solicitors, a final decree was made, reciting that said Martha had, in due form of law, since the last continuance, conveyed all her interest to the heirs of William F. Denton, and qrúeting their title and possession. And so the matter rested.

More than six years afterwards, on the seventh of July, 1875, Martha Roddy filed this bill in Woodruff county (to which the territory including the lands had been transferred) against the Denton heirs, renewing the claim of dower, and basing her equity upon her ignorance of her rights at the time she executed the release, and the conduct of the executor, F. D. Denton, in obtaining it. The charge-amounts, in effect, to this, that his manner was harsh, overbearing and unkind ; that her happiness and comfort depended on going with her daughter; that she executed the instrument under a sort of moral duress ; and that she had only recently discovered her rights in the matter, with regard to lier liability for rents. She makes no allusion to the former suit or decree, aud prays that her release be canceled, that her dower be assigned, and that she have mesne profits.

Defendants deny fraud or oppression in obtaining the release: set up the decree in the former ease as res judicata; and rely, also, upon the tax title and the statute of limitations.

Upon the hearing, complainant sought to avoid the effect of the decree of the Jackson circuit court, on the ground of fraud in obtaining it, and want of jurisdiction.

The chancellor gave the relief asked as to dower, and ordered an account of rents and profits since the possession of the Denton heirs — giving complainant a decree for one-third, after deducting taxes and improvements. Defendants appealed.

The first question presented by the record, regards the jurisdiction of the Jackson circuit court to render the decree of April, 1869, quieting the title of the*Denton heirs, against the creditors and widow of Elias B. Roddy.

Enough appears from the pleadings, evidence and exhibits, to show that the parties to this bill were all parties to that suit.

The certified copy of the decree alone was sufficient evidence that such a decree had been made; and by its recitals and direct effect, it .showed conclusively that all her right of dower, the object of this suit, had been vested in the Denton heirs, in a manner to bind her, whilst it remained in force. There were, also, certified copies of all the original papers in the case, showiug the pleadings and subject-matter in controversy.

Although, in her testimony, the complainant, Mrs. Roddy, says her attorney had no authority to appear for her, and consent to the decree, yet, if that were true, it would only make it voidable for fraud, and it could not be attacked collaterally. Her bill did not allude to it at all, nor, when pleaded by defendants, did she seek to amend her bill by proper averments to attack it for fraud. If the court had no jurisdiction, the decree is absolutely nothing, and no-proceedings are necessary to avoid it. It binds nobody. Was it void, or valid, until reversed or annulled?

The county of Woodruff, composed of portions of Jackson and St. Erancis counties, was established by a valid act of the legislature of Arkansas, approved November 28, 1862. The lands in controversy, upon which Mrs. Roddy and her children, the heirs of said Elias, then resided, were-in the portion of Jackson transferred to Woodruff.

The act, which is not in print, provided, in section two, “ That it shall be the duty of plaintiffs in all civil cases, and of the clerk of the circuit court of the county hereby established, in all criminal cases, to procure from the clerks of the circuit courts of the counties of St.

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Bluebook (online)
34 Ark. 642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/denton-v-roddy-ark-1879.