Dresden's v. Walker

21 Ark. 539
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 15, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 21 Ark. 539 (Dresden's v. Walker) 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
Dresden's v. Walker, 21 Ark. 539 (Ark. 1860).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Fairchild

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Under an act of Congress, approved 24th May, 1828, John Ross, by virtue of having had a settlement in the country ceded by the United States to the Cherokees, and of having been obliged to remove therefrom, on account of the cession, was entitled to enter any two quarter sections of land, the sale of which was authorized by law, unless there might be an improvement of an actual settler .upon the lands; in which case, no entry of such lands could be made, without the written consent of the settler, before the lands should be offered for sale.

The entry was to be made without any price paid, the consideration for the lands being the abandonment of the settlement in the ceded country, made necessary by the treaty between the United States and the Cherokee Nation, ratified the 23d of May, 1828.

But with the character of these donation claims, and with the construction put upon them by this court, and with the questions growing out of their proof and assignment, the legal profession of this State must be familiar, from the cases in which such claims have been before the court. See Logan vs. Moulder, 1 Ark. 319; Gaster vs. Ashley, Ib 329; Nicks vs. Rector, 4 Ark. 279; Mays vs. Johnson, Ib. 613; Finley vs. Woodruff, 3 Eng. 339; Johnson vs. Mays, Ib. 386; Barnard vs. Ashley, 18 How. 48; Witherspoon vs. Duncan, 21 Ark.

The claim of Ross was proven and allowed by the land officers, as prescribed in the act of Congress, and was ready for location in his lifetime, but at his death it still remained in his possession unlocated, and no disposition was made of it in his last wall, unless, as contended by the appellants, it passed under the denomination of goods and chattels, to his widow, Rachel Ross. That description of property was given to her by will, to be used as might be necessary for the support of the family and education of the children, of whom there were eight, three older ones, however, being married daughters.

The bill charges, that shortly after the death of Ross, his donation claim was located upon the south-west quarter of section twenty-four, and the north-east fractional quarter of section twenty-three, in township nine, north of range thirty-two west, in Crawford county; that a patent was issued for said lands, which was in the possession of John Drennen, one of the defendants.

The bill is exhibited by David Walker, who claims the interest of Thurza Alexander, a daughter of John Ross, by its purchase from her and her husband, Samuel Alexander, by James Rowland and Eliza his wife, by William Black and Chenee his wife, by Robert Reeves and Mahaly his wife, the said Eliza, Chenee, and Mahaly being daughters of John Ross; by John Couch, the husband surviving Ann Couch, his. wife, another daughter of Ross, and by her seven children, and the husband of one of them; and by Benoni Ross, an infant son of John Ross, against Rachel Ross, the widow of John Ross, Miranda Couch, a daughter of the same and widow of George Couch, Peter Ross, a son of John Ross, John Drennen and others, who are represented as holding parts of the quarter sections of land above described, under Drennen.

And the object of the bill is to have the lands so located with the donation claim of John Ross, and that were patented thereon, decreed to be the lands of the heirs of John Ross, and of those who have succeeded to their rights, and to have them partitioned or sold, and the proceeds divided in accordance therewith.

Aside from the vai’ious defences interposed by Drennen, and those claiming under him, tending to defeat the suit entirely, and to claim the benefit of large expenses made by Drennen, to secure the location upon the located lands, and of improvements put upon the lands by Mussett, Henry and Scott, it appears that before the institution of the suit, he, Drennen, had acquired the right of Perry Ross, a son, and one of the eight heirs of John Ross and a defendant to the bill; and that while the suit was pending, he purchased two of the interests demanded in the bill, those of James Rowland, and of Eliza, his wife, and of William Black and Chenee, his wife.

The court below, therefore, in maintaining the claims set forth in the bill, awarded to Drennen’s representatives, he having died before final decree, three-eighths of the two quarter sections of land, but disallowed his claim to remuneration for expenses incurred in making the location, and the claims of Henry, and Scott and wife, for improvements, by either awarding compensation for them, or by directing Ihe partition to be so made as to set off the land and improvements to Drennen’s representatives, or to them and Henry and Scott and wife.

The court directed partition to be made as follows:

Three-eighths to Drennen’s heirs and widow.

One-eighth to the husband and children of Ann Couch, deceased.

One-eighth to Miranda Couch.

One-eighth to Robert Reeves and Mahaly his wife, in right of the wife.

One-eighth to Benoni Ross.

And one-eighth to David Walker, as succeeding to the right of Thurza Alexander, wife of Samuel Alexander, as by purchase from them; all subject to the dower right of Rachel Ross in the two quarter sections of land.

The defendants, Catharine Drennen, as administratrix of John Drennen, John Henry, and Charles G. Scott, appealed.

Besides the objections that are made to the decree, that affect the interests of all the heirs of John Ross, it is urged specially against Walker’s claim, that it is barred by the statute of limitations, and that it is speculative and champertous. This claim is the interest of Thurza Alexander, the oldest daughter of John Ross. She was the wife of Samuel Alexander at the death of Ross, as shown by the will of Ross, made 18th of May, 1830, in which she is described as Thurza Alexander, as admitted by the answer of John Drennen, as implied by the deposition of Peter Couch, and as found by the court below.

On the 10th of April, 1848, the date of the deed from Samuel Alexander and his wife to Walker, the same Thurza Alexander was living under the disability that had attached to her from the time of her marriage, before the will of her father was made. The statute of limitations then never began to run against her.

It began to run against Walker from the date of his conveyance from Alexander and wife, but from that time until the beginning of this suit, the 28th of November, 1850, it had not been running long enough to bar such demand as the deed to Walker authorized him to make.

The objections made to Walker’s purchase, because it has resulted in a suit promoted by him, because he was a lawyer, and his vendors were not in possession of what they sold, and Drennen was in adverse possession, hardly need to be answered as our statute allows a person to sell and convey his interest in real estate, though it be in the adverse possession of another. And if it were a material fact, which it is not, that Walker expected to gain the benefit of his purchase, only by the compulsion of legal process, there is no evidence of such expectation on the part of Walker.

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Bluebook (online)
21 Ark. 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dresdens-v-walker-ark-1860.