Graham v. Graham

133 S.W.2d 627, 199 Ark. 165, 1939 Ark. LEXIS 35
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 13, 1939
Docket4-5646
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 133 S.W.2d 627 (Graham v. Graham) 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
Graham v. Graham, 133 S.W.2d 627, 199 Ark. 165, 1939 Ark. LEXIS 35 (Ark. 1939).

Opinion

Mehapey, J.

The appellant, Charlie Graham, and appellee, Mattie Graham, were. divorced in June, 1932, and this action was begun in June, 1938, practically six years after the divorce decree. This suit was brought by Charlie G. Graham against Mattie Graham and others in the Clark chancery court to set aside a deed purporting to have been executed, signed and acknowledged under the directions and orders of a certain decree claimed to have been rendered in the chancery court on June 8, 1932. The divorce suit was brought by Mattie Graham against Charlie G. Graham^ and Charlie G. Graham was granted a divorce on his cross-complaint, and was ordered to pay a certain sum as alimony. It was alleged that the deed was forged and that the decree was obtained by fraud. Plaintiff alleged that in the divorce case he and Mattie Graham agreed that Mattie Graham could use and occupy a certain dwelling house and the real estate owned by Charlie G. Graham -in Gurdon, as long as she chose to use and occupy the same, and that she was to pay the current taxes and keep the property in repair; that Charlie G. Graham, in pursuance of said agreement, turned over said real estate and dwelling house to Mattie Graham, that she might occupy and use the same under said verbal agreement and stipulation as long as she chose to occupy said house; he alleged that Mattie Graham thereafter secretly and without authority, and unknown to 'Charlie G. Graham, fraudulently and unlawfully caused the decree in said case to be prepared and put on record in the Clark chancery court ordering and directing that Charlie G. Graham deed his equity in the house and real estate to Mattie Graham; that said decree was written and placed on record by Mattie Graham without right or authority and in fraud of the order and decree rendered by the chancery court, and without the knowledge of Charlie G. Graham, and in fraud of the verbal stipulation and agreement between the parties in settlement of their property rights; and under which said Mattie Graham was to use and occupy the house and real estate, pay the taxes thereon and keep the same in repair, as long as she resided in the town of Gurdon; that Mattie Graham thereafter conspiring and acting with other persons unknown to Charlie Graham, and without his knowledge, consent or authority, prepared an alleged deed and forged the name of Charlie G. Graham to same, purporting to convey the house and real estate to her for $1 and other good and valuable considerations, and that said false and forged deed was secretly and without the consent or authority of said Charlie G. Graham placed on record; that Mattie Graham thereafter, without the knowledge and consent of Charlie G.* Graham, executed a warranty deed purporting to convey the house and real estate to Katie Newton for a cash consideration of $470; that the deed was not dated, but was acknowledged before ~W. E. Haynie, a notary public, on June 27, 1932, and thereafter recorded; that Katie Newton, on May 11, 1933, executed to Lloyd C. Newton, her son, for a consideration of love and affection, a certain warranty deed purporting to convey the property to him; that on. July 21, 1937, for a consideration of $1 and other considerations, Katie Newton executed a warranty deed to Mrs. Ella Mae Newton, and that this deed is on record; that Lloyd C. Newton died intestate several years since, leaving as his sole and only heirs at law, Ella Mae Newton and Anna Newton, his daughter, nineteen years old, and Billy Estes Newton, a son, six years old, and Lloyd Newton, Jr., a son, eight years old; that Mattie Graham has since moved away from the town of Gurdon and is now a nonresident of the state; that Charlie G. Graham who had not lived in the town of Gurdon for several years, recently found out that the defendants herein were holding the house and real, estate in Gurdon under a claim of title derived under the false and fraudulent deed of Mattie Graham. He prayed that said false and forged deed be set aside and canceled as a cloud on his title, and that the alleged false and fraudulent decree, under which said deed purports to be executed, be canceled, set aside and held for naught; that the deeds from Mattie Graham to Katie Newton, and from Katie Newton to Lloyd C. Newton, and from Katie Newton to Mrs. Ella Mae Newton be canceled and set aside as a cloud on Charlie Graham’s titl,e; that the title to said property be decreed in Charlie G. Graham; and that the court further order and decree that the defendants account to Charlie G. Graham for the rent on said property and costs.

The appellees answered denying each and every allegation contained in the complaint and set up other defenses for the claim, and specifically denied any fraud practiced on the Clark chancery court or on the plaintiff, Charlie G. Graham, and specifically deny that any fraud or forgery was practiced.

Ella Mae Newton filed a cross-complaint against her co-defendants, Mrs. Katie Newton, Anna Newton, Billy Newton, and Lloyd Newton, Jr.; alleging that the deed from Katie Newton to Lloyd C. Newton was the result of a mutual mistake; that the defendants Annie Newton, Billy Estes Newton, and Lloyd Newton, Jr., are the sole and only heirs of Lloyd C. Newton, deceased.

The minor defendants answered denying each and every allegation in plaintiff’s complaint. An amended and substituted answer was filed for the minors.

The lower court found that there was no fraud practiced on the court or on the appellant, and entered a decree in favor of Mattie Graham and others. From this decree Charlie G. Graham prosecutes this appeal.

The parties entered into the following stipulations:

“It is stipulated and agreed by and between counsel for plaintiff and counsel for defendant and the guardian ad litem-, that the records in this case, and including the entries in the judge’s docket, the original decree, the original deeds be considered in evidence and read in evidence before the court and embodied in the record in this case.

“It is further stipulated and agreed by and between counsel for plaintiff and counsel for defendant and the guardian ad litem in this case, that the page from.the judge’s docket containing the original entries in the handwriting of Judge C. E. Johnson,' the chancellor of this district at that time, and ordering that the divorce be granted on the cross-complaint on the grounds of indignities, and further stating that the property rights were settled between the parties according to stipulation and further providing that the plaintiff, Mattie Graham, be awarded $30 a month alimony.

“It is further stipulated and agreed that the subsequent order made in this case reflecting the hearing on the petition to set aside the previous order for alimony appears in the handwriting of Judge P. P. Bacon, the then chancellor of this district, and that the same was heard and handed down on April 4, 1933, as shown by the original entry in said docket.”

The final decree and deeds above mentioned were introduced in evidence. The decree showed that a divorce was granted to Charlie G. Graham on his cross-complaint because of indignities offered him by Mattie Graham that rendered his condition in life intolerable. It reduced the alimony which the court order required Charlie G. Graham to pay to her from $50 a month to $30 a month, and the court further found that the home owned by Charlie G. Graham, or his .equity in it, should be deeded to Mattie Graham.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 S.W.2d 627, 199 Ark. 165, 1939 Ark. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-graham-ark-1939.