DuVal v. School District of Ft. Smith

53 S.W. 562, 67 Ark. 67, 1899 Ark. LEXIS 7
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 28, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 53 S.W. 562 (DuVal v. School District of Ft. Smith) 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
DuVal v. School District of Ft. Smith, 53 S.W. 562, 67 Ark. 67, 1899 Ark. LEXIS 7 (Ark. 1899).

Opinion

Battle, J.

On the 10th day of July, 1896, the School District of Fort Smith filed its complaint in equity against Ben T. DuVal and his wife, alleging the following facts:

“On the 6th day of December, 1892, the defendant, Ben T. DuVal, executed to the plaintiff several notes, of $5,000 each, payable in five, six, seven, eight and ten years, amounting in the aggregate to $25,000. On the same day the defendant, Ben T. DuVal, executed his mortgage to the plaintiff for $25,000 on a certain piece of land lying in Fort Smith, known as the ‘Grand Opera House Property’; the mortgage providing that if any of these notes should not be paid at maturity, then the land might be sold for payment thereof. That there was then due on the notes, and for taxes and insurance paid by the plaintiff, the sum of $31,385.62. That DuVal’s wife had joined in the mortgage for the purpose of relinquishing her dower.” The prayer of the complaint was that the mortgage be foreclosed, and for all other proper relief.

The defendants answered, and made their answer a cross-complaint, in which they alleged that the notes sued on were given for the purchase money of certain real estate sold to Ben T. DuVal by the plaintiff, and that the notes were without consideration, because the sale was not in conformity with the statutes in such cases made and provided. In order to make the answer and cross-complaint more intelligible, we state that by an act of April 1, 1891, it was provided that the board of the School District of Fort Smith might buy at any sale of lands donated to the city of Fort Smith by congress, and become the purchaser of any property situated in the school district, on or in which it might, at the time of such purchase, have any lien or any interest, whenever in the opinion of the school board it should be necessary in order to protect the interest of the school district. The act then proceeds as follows:

“Provided, that no sale of real estate, or lease thereof, shall be made by said school board except at public auction, to the highest bidder, after an advertisement of twenty days in some newspaper, or an advertisement of four weeks in a weekly newspaper published in said city, if there be no daily newspaper in said city, giving the time, place and terms of sale, and a description of the property to be sold. Provided, also, that all sales shall be for not less than one-third cash, and balance of purchase price shall be secured by a mortgage upon the property sold; which mortgage shall not run longer than five years, at not less than 8 per cent interest, payable semiannually in advance, on the first days of January and July of each year. Provided, further, that in case of lease the lessee shall give bond, to be approved by said school board, for the prompt payment of the rental, or the amount for which said property was leased, in advance, on the first days of January and July of each year. Provided, also, that no sale or lease of property by said school board shall be effectual to pass the title to said property, or leasehold therein, until said sale or lease has been reported to and approved by the circuit court of Sebastian county for the Fort Smith district in the manner hereinafter provided.”

“See. 2. When said school board shall have made a sale or lease of real estate as hereinbefore provided, the president and secretary of the board shall make full report thereof to said circuit court, verified by affidavit; said report shall remain on file in said court for a period of ten days before action is taken thereon by said court-, during which time any citizen of Fort Smith, or said school district, may file his objections or exceptions to said sale, and the same shall be heard by the court; and if it shall appear that said sale or lease was not fairly or properly conducted, or that said land was sold or leased for an inadequate price, or it was not for the best interest of said school district to sell or lease the same, then said court shall set aside said sale.”

The defendants alleged in their answer and cross-complaint, as follows:

“That the notes and mortgage sued upon were executed to the plaintiff for a part of the purchase money of the property mentioned, which the plaintiff agreed and undertook to sell to the defendant for $33,788.85 at private sale. That the plaintiff also pretended to execute to said DuVal its deed of conveyance, dated December 6, 1892, signed by the president and secretary of the school board; for the sum last named, of which defendant paid in cash $8,788.85.

“That the plaintiff, in undertaking to sell said lot to the defendant, neither offered it at public auction to the highest bidder, nor did it advertise it twenty days in a newspaper or otherwise, giving the time, place and terms of sale, and description of the property to be sold, nor for one-third cash; and the mortgage taken for the deferred payments was for more than two-thirds of the purchase money, and ran longer than five years. Neither did the president and .secretary of the board of directors of the school district make report of said sale to the circuit court, as required by the statutes in such cases made and provided. Wherefore they say that by said attempted sale to the defendant, and deed made by the plaintiff, no title was passed; and the notes sued upon, and the mortgage given to secure them, are without consideration and void. Wherefore the said attempted sale should be rescinded and can - celed, and the money paid by defendant to the plaintiff should be refunded.”

The plaintiff answered the cross-complaint, alleging as follows:

“It is not true that the notes were executed for the opera house property, but they were executed for money lent by the plaintiff to the defendant, as is recited in said notes and in the face of the mortgage. The facts regarding the execution of the notes are as follows:

“In 1887 defendant DuVal, Wm. M. Cravens and John S. Park organized a business corporation styled the Grand Opera House Company, of which defendant was a large stockholder and president. The board of directors of the opera house company secured two loans from plaintiff, one on March 16, 1887, for $15,000, and one on September 26, 1887, for $15,000, both of which were secured by mortages made by the Grand Opera House Company, the first executed by defendant as president, and the second by Cravens, as vice-president, said loans bearing interest at the rate of eight per cent, per annum. Payments on the notes and mortgage being greatly in arrears, on December 4th the school board directed its secretary to call on DuVal for a written proposition as to what the opera house company proposed to do in regard to said loans. On the 8th of February, 1892, the plaintiff adopted a resolution extending the loan upon certain conditions; and on ¡February 12, 1892, the board resolved to take no action looking to the foreclosure of said mortgage, provided interest was paid by a certain time; but that, as the Opera House Company did not comply with the terms of this resolution, the plaintiff was about to foreclose, when, on February 26, 1892, DuVal appeared before the board, and the matter was discussed, when it was resolved by the school board not to proceed with foreclosure on certain conditions. DuVal and the Opera House Company failing to comply with these conditions, the school board instituted proceedings for the foreclosure of said mortgage, in which a judgment and decree of foreclosure was rendered in the Sebastian circuit court on the 20th day of April, 1892.

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Bluebook (online)
53 S.W. 562, 67 Ark. 67, 1899 Ark. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duval-v-school-district-of-ft-smith-ark-1899.