Dial v. Armstrong

113 S.W.2d 503, 195 Ark. 621, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 51
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 14, 1938
Docket4-4943
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 113 S.W.2d 503 (Dial v. Armstrong) 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
Dial v. Armstrong, 113 S.W.2d 503, 195 Ark. 621, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 51 (Ark. 1938).

Opinion

Donham, J.

Appellants brought suit in the chancery court of Miller county against appellees, claiming to be the owners of forty acres of land described as the northeast quarter of the northwest quarter (NE14 NW^4) of section 9, township 20 south, range 27 west, in Miller county, Arkansas. It was alleged that Alice Wisinger Armstrong, one of-the appellees, was claiming some right, title or interest in said tract; and that she had executed a mineral lease upon it to one R. E. Anderson on the 12th day of July, 1935, which mineral lease had been assigned to the McAlester Fuel Company and Dr. S, W. Boyce, appellees herein. The purpose of the suit was to cancel certain conveyances as clouds upon the title, and to have the title quieted and .confirmed in appellants.

Alice Wisinger Armstrong was the second wife of I. C. Armstrong. I. C. Armstrong died July 15, 1933, leaving surviving him three children by his first marriage, nine children by his second marriage, and his said second wife, one of the appellees herein. It was shown in evidence that the said Alice Wisinger Armstrong had executed a mineral lease upon the forty-acre tract involved in this suit to one R. E. Anderson on the 12th day of July, 193-5, which mineral lease had been assigned to appellees, McAlester Fuel Company and- Dr. S. W. Boyce.

Appellants claim title to said forty-acre tract as heirs of A. C. Dial, deceased, his death having occurred in the year 1932. On October 22, 1897, the said A. C. Dial, father of appellants, acquired title to 320 acres of land in said above-mentioned section 9, having purchased same from E. A. Armstrong by deed of that date. He paid therefor the sum of $600. On August 29, 1900, the said A. C. Dial and wife conveyed the south half of the northeast quarter (SV2 NE14) and the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter (SE14 NW1^) and the northeast quarter of the southeast quarter (NE14 SE14) and the north half of the southwest quarter (N% SW^) of said section 9, being 240 acres in all, to his brother-in-law, the said I. C. Armstrong. This left the said A. C. Dial then owning the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter (NW% SE^) and the northeast quarter of the northwest quarter (NEi/4 NW14) of said section 9.

Later, on the 20th day of October, 1908, the said A. C. Dial and wife executed another deed to the said I. C. Armstrong and conveyed to him the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter (NW‘14 SE14) of said section 9, one of the forty-acre tracts remaining, having by the two conveyances vested title in the said I. C. Armstrong to all of the land in section 9 owned by him, except the northeast quarter of the northwest quarter (NE14 NW14), which is the tract involved in this suit. This forty is known and referred to by the witnesses as the north forty.

According to the testimony introduced on behalf of appellants at the trial in the court below, when the said I. C. Armstrong bought the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter (NW^ SEi/4) of section 9 from Dial in October, 1908, Dial tried to get him to buy the remaining forty acres, being the forty involved in this suit, same being the northeast quarter of the northwest quarter (NEAL NW1/^ of said section; but Armstrong declined to buy said last-mentioned forty because he said he had no use for it, and did not have the money to'pay for it, and that he wanted to buy only the south forty. At the time Armstrong purchased the above-mentioned forty, while saying that he did not want to buy the north forty, he agreed that he would look after it and pay the taxes on it for its use. Nothing more was ever done by Dial about the north forty, so far as giving Armstrong any claim upon same is concerned. Dial never at any time executed a deed of conveyance to anyone for it. So far as the record in, this case reveals, he never at any time acknowledged an outstanding title in anyone.

I. C. Armstrong- held possession of the forty-acre tract involved in this suit from the time he agreed to look after it and pay the taxes on it in 1908 to the date of his' death, July 15, 1933. In fact, he had been in possession of same and had been paying the taxes for some seven or eight years prior to the time he bought the south forty, deed to which was executed and delivered to him October 20, 1908. In fact, he had been paying the taxes on both the north and the south forty, and had been looking after both forties, but was evidently doing so for his brother.-in-law, the said A. C. Dial. The south forty had forfeited for taxes; and Armstrong had bought same at tax sale. However, he asserted no title under the tax deed, and his purchase of same from Dial in October, 1908, was an acknowledgment of Dial’s title.

The wife of I. C. Armstrong, being one of the appel-lees herein, claims an undivided one-fourth interest in the forty-acre tract involved in this suit by reason of a convejmnce by deed from the children of the said I. C. Armstrong by his first wife. She, furthermore, claims a dower interest in said forty-acre tract, and further claims that title to all the remaining part of said forty is in her children, same being the children of herself and the said I. C. Armstrong, and being nine in number. She has continued in possession since the death of the said 1. C. Armstrong, renting same to tenants. She does not show or claim any color of title from A. C. Dial or his privies in estate, and claims no color of title at all, except the deed which was executed b3r the children of the said T. 0. Armstrong by his first wife, this deed, of course, having been executed after the death of the said I. C. Armstrong. As stated, same was executed in the year 1935. The execution and delivery of this deed took place less than two 3rears before the filing of the suit herein.

Appellants contend that the possession of the said I. C. Armstrong and his surviving widow and children, was and is permissive and not adverse. On the other hand, appellees claim that said possession ivas adverse and had ripened into title.

E. A. Armstrong, ivho deeded the 320 acres to the said A. C. Dial, was Dial’s father-in-law, and the father of the said I. C. Armstrong. Between these brothers-in-law there existed close, confidential and cordial, if not affectionate, relations, which continued- until the death of Dial in 1932. The testimony shows that they were engaged together in farming; and, as heretofore stated, I. C. Armstrong looked after the payment of the taxes on Dial’s land in Miller county; that Dial sold Armstrong lands on two different occasions; and that after Dial left and went to Oklahoma, he visited Armstrong in Miller county. One of the witnesses testified: "They always had a heap of dealings with each other.”

This cause was heard by the Miller chancery court on the 8th day of July, 1937, and decree rendered in favor of appellees, quieting and confirming their title in the forty-acre tract involved in this suit. Appeal was duly perfected by appellants to this court.

The main question involved in this appeal is whether the possession of the said I. C. Armstrong of the fortyj acre tract, spoken of in the evidence as the north forty, and being the one involved in the litigation resulting in the appeal herein, was permissive or adverse. If the possession by the said I. C.

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Bluebook (online)
113 S.W.2d 503, 195 Ark. 621, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dial-v-armstrong-ark-1938.