Greer v. Vaughan

132 S.W. 456, 96 Ark. 524, 1910 Ark. LEXIS 87
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 21, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 132 S.W. 456 (Greer v. Vaughan) 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
Greer v. Vaughan, 132 S.W. 456, 96 Ark. 524, 1910 Ark. LEXIS 87 (Ark. 1910).

Opinion

FrauenThae, J.

This was a suit in equity, originally instituted by B. W. Grqer, in August, 1907, to quiet the title in him to a tract of land situated in Prairie County. The land was patented by the United States to Archibald Hutchins in 1845. In the original complaint the plaintiff asserted title to the land through two sources. He claimed title to the land by mesne conveyances which extended back to Joseph R. Ferguson and James Q. Neil, to whom in 1852 said Archibald Hutchins had executed only a bond for title to said land. He also asserted title by virtue of a tax deed básed upon a sale of said land made in 1872 for the nonpayment of the taxes of 1870 and 1871.

The appellee in his answer to this complaint claimed title to the land by virtue of a deed executed to him in 1900 by the sole heir of said original patentee; and he attacked the validity of said tax sale and of said bond for title as a conveyance in the chain of title to said land. In November, 1908, A. C. McComb as plaintiff filed an amended complaint, in which he sought to quiet the title to said land in him. In said amended complaint he set forth the same sources and chain of title as were set forth in the original complaint of B. W. Greer, and further alleged that in 1906 said Greer conveyed said land to him. In this amended complaint he set forth another source of title. He alleged that the land was unimproved and uninclosed, and that he and those under whom he claimed had paid the taxes on the land for the time required by section 5057 of Kirby’s Digest to create an investiture of title by adverse possession. To this amended complaint the defendant filed a demurrer upon the grounds that: (1) it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and (2) because there was a misjoinder of parties plaintiff and of causes of action. This demurrer was made a part of and incorporated in defendant’s answer to the amended complaint, in which he set forth the same claim to title to the land and the same allegations as in his answer to the original complaint; and in the amended answer he asked for all equitable relief to which the facts entitled him. The court overruled the demurrer to the amended complaint, and permitted said McComb to be made a party plaintiff in the suit, and considered the amended answer of defendant as an answer to the amended complaint of said McComb and a cross complaint therto.

Upon a hearing of the cause the court entered a decree dismissing the complaint for the want of equity, and granted to defendant the relief he asked for by quieting in him the title to said land and ordering the issuance to him of a writ of possession therefor. We do not deem it necessary to discuss or determine whether or not the plaintiff has shown a perfect chain of title to the land back to the original patentee from the United States or whether or not the tax sale of 1872 under which he claims is valid; because under the evidence adduced upon the trial of the case we are of the opinion that plaintiff obtained a complete investiture of title to the land by virtue of constructive adverse possession thereof under section 5057 of Kirby’s Digest. By that statute it is provided that: “Unimproved and uninclosed land shall be deemed and held to be in the possession of the person who pays the taxes thereon if he have color of title thereto, but no person shall be entitled to invoke the benefit of this act unless he and those under whom he claims shall have paid such taxes for at least seven years in succession, and not less than three such payments must be made subsequent to the passage of the act.”

A compliance with the provisions of this statute constitutes in such person paying said taxes upon such character of land mentioned therein a constructive possession of the land which like adverse possession ripens into a perfect title and creates in such person a complete investiture of the title thereto. Towson v. Denson, 74 Ark. 302; Updegraff v. Marked Tree Lumber Co, 83 Ark. 154; Taylor v. Leonard, 94 Ark. 122. The uncontroverted evidence in this case shows that the plaintiff and those under whom he claims paid the taxes upon the land involved in this litigation under color of title thereto for more than twenty years continuously prior to the institution of this suit, and certainly that they paid said taxes in the year of 1894 and in each year thereafter up to the institution of this suit. The land was unimproved and uninclosed and in the possession of no one during all of those years up to and until the defendant built a house thereon, and thus by taking actual possession thereof broke the continuity of the constructive possession from that date. There is an uncertainty as to the exact date when defendant built the house upon the land; but this uncertainty only grows out of the testimony of the defendant himself. He testified, doubtingly, that he built the house in the summer of 1901, but more positively that he built it in the summer of 1902; but in any event not prior to the summer of 1901. It is urged by counsel for defendant that under the provisions of the above statute it was necessary that the payment of the taxes on the land should have been made for a full period of three years after the passage of the act and prior to the date when defendant built the house on the land, before there could be constructive possession of the land for the full period under the statute. But this contention is not correct. The constructive possession of the land began with the date of the first payment of the taxes thereon, and it was only necessary to pay the taxes thereon for seven successive years and for a full period of seven years from that date in order to invoke the benefit of that statute, provided only that three of such payments were made after March r8, 1899, the date of the passage of said act. It was not under such circumstances necessary to pay the taxes for a period of three years after the date of the passage of the act, but only to make three successive payments of the taxes thereafter. In the case of Price v. Greer, 89 Ark. 300, in construing this provision of said statute, the court said: “We held in Updegraff v. Marked Tree Lumber Company, 83 Ark. 154, that the full period of seven years must expire from the first of the seven payments required by the statute; but it does not follow from this that three years must elapse from the first payment after the passage of the act. The statute begins to run on the first payment of taxes, and the statute bar is complete at the end of seven years from that date, provided seven payments have been made in succession and three of same were made after the passage of the statute.” The plaintiff and his grantor paid the taxes on this land in 1894, and made seven successive payments of the taxes thereafter and for the full period of seven years from that date and prior to the summer of 1901, the earliest date when under any view of the testimony the defendant built the house on the land; and he made three of these successive payments of taxes after March 18, 1899, the date of the passage of the act, and prior to the summer of 1901, towit: on March 25, 1899, April 4, 1900, and January 7, 1901. It follows therefore that the statute bar became complete prior to the summer of 1901 and prior to .that date the plaintiff by virtue of said statute became completely invested with the title to said land.

It is urged that B. W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 S.W. 456, 96 Ark. 524, 1910 Ark. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greer-v-vaughan-ark-1910.