Hanks v. Harris

29 Ark. 323
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 29 Ark. 323 (Hanks v. Harris) 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
Hanks v. Harris, 29 Ark. 323 (Ark. 1874).

Opinion

Williams, Sp. J.

This was an action of covenant brought in accordance with the common law forms prevalent before the adoption of the Code, on the 10th of July, 1867, upon the following agreement, to wit: This article of agreement and transfer, made and entered into this fourteenth (14) day of November, A. D. 1861, by and between James M. Hanks and Martha J. Harris, both of the county of Phillips and state of Arkansas, witnesseth, that for and in consideration that the said Martha J. Harris has sold, and by her deed of this date, conveyed unto the said James M. Hanks the following described lots, lying and being situated in the city of Helena, county of Phillips, and state of Arkansas [here follows a description of the lots], and has also sold and delivered to said Hanks divers articles of household and kitchen furniture, and delivered to him the possession of said lots and premises for the sum and price of three thousand, nine hundred dollars, the said James M. Hanks doth hereby most fully, amply, and entirely-assign, transfer and make over unto the said Martha J. Harris, and to her heirs and legal representatives, three thousand, nine hundred dollars of his interest in a certain decree recovered by Charles W. Adams and the said James M. Hanks, partners as attorneys at law, in the circuit court of Chicot county, in the state of Arkansas, on the chancery side thereof, on the sixteenth day of October, A. D. 1861, in a certain cause then in said court pending, in which said Adams and Hanks, as . partners as aforesaid, were complainants, and the mayor and oouncil of the city of Helena, and John Anderson Craig, and Joshua M. Craig were defendants, and which decree in said court was recovered and obtained by said Adams and Hanks against the said John Anderson Craig and Joshua M. Craig, two of said defendants, for the sum of twelve thousand, seven hundred and sixty-one dollars and seventeen cents, and interest thereon, from the rendition of said decree until paid, at the rate of six per centum per annum; and this assignment and transfer shall, as to every particular, have and be construed to have full effect as if made and executed upon the day of the rendition of said decree, and the interest upon said portion of, or interest in said decree shall also carry with it the proper proportion of the interest as aforesaid, from the rendition of said decree until paid, and the said James M. Hanks doth hereby covenant, promise and agree to and with the said Martha J. Harris, her heirs and legal representatives; that he is justly and legally entitled to the one full third part of said decree, by virtue of the partnership aforesaid, and doth guaranty the payment to her out of the same, the said sum of three thousand, nine hundred dollars, and interest as aforesaid; and the said James M. Hanks doth further hereby promise, covenant and agree to and with the said Martha J. Harris and her heirs, that he has in no wise incumbered or assigned or transferred his said interest in said decree, and that his heirs nor legal representatives shall, and that he will not, at any future time, in any wise incumber, assign or tranfer (or seek to do so) his said interest in said decree, or to the said sum of three thousand, nine hundred dollars and interest as aforesaid ; and neither he or his legal representatives will or shall, at any time, seek to defeat, or in any way delay the payment to her or her legal representatives of the same, or any part thereof. And that all proper and legal proceedings may be used for the collection and payment to her of the same, free from any let or hindrance from him or his legal representatives, subject only to the right and interests of the said Charles "W. Adams, as partner as aforesaid, whose interest in said decree is two-thii’ds thereof, and when necessary make and execute any further or proper transfer or assurance which may be legally or equitably sufficient fully to secure to the said Martha J. Harris and her legal representatives, the full and unimpaired right to collect and receive, out of the said decree, the said sum of three thousand, nine hundred dollars and interest as aforesaid. In testimony, etc.

This covenant was signed and sealed by Hanks, and was dated November 14, 1861.

It thus seems that this transfer occurred in November, after the decree was rendered in October.

It has been contended here for Mrs. Harris, that the decree, having been rendered during the war, was void. On the other hand, the attorneys of Hanks contend that the recital in the agreement evidently should have been 1860, and not 1861, because the decree is not in the record, and the evidence shows that the original compromise decree in the Junius Oraig Will Case was rendered in April, 1860; and the testimony of Pike, as well as the final decree on the review of this compromise decree, shows that the bill to annul and recall the decree was filed in 1860, therefore, this must be a misrecital.

In the first place, the carefully drawn agreement, prepared two days short of one month after the decree was stated to have been rendered, is too near the time of execution to have reasonably escaped attention.

There is enough in the record to show, that in a litigation in Chicot county, the will and estate of Junius W. Craig was involved; that in April, 1860, there was had a compromise, in which, what was called the compromise decree was rendered, by which the Craigs became bound to pay the city of Helena $150,000; that this decree of Adams and Hanks was rendered, as recited in the covenant, in a suit against Helena and the Craigs; and it otherwise appears that the suit was to enforce Adams and Hanks’ lien against the fund due Helena, as attorneys of Helena in the Craig Will Case. It would take a little time, after the compromise decree was rendered in 1860, to get up a lawsuit and ripen it into a decree in chancery. We therefore find nothing in the record to sustain the assertion that the recital of the agreement, that the decree was rendered on the 16th of October, 1861, is false; on the •contrary, we find much in the record tending to the inference that it is true for what it is worth. He who would contradict his own solemn recitals should bring more than an argument in a brief of counsel in this court to contradict it, ■especially, when he has testified in the cause and failed to ■correct it.

We had as well here construe the significance of this covenant, and the scope of the duties, liabilities, rights and responsibilities of the parties, as far as material to the decision of the question involved. Adams and Hanks were partners and joint owners of this decree, Adams having two-thirds, Hanks one-third. Hanks, by this covenant, acknowledges himself Mrs. Harris’ debtor for value. He attempts to carve out, and transfer to her, as a mode of payment, $3,900; thus leaving the legal title to the whole decree as it stood, in Hanks and Adams, for the transfer only gave Mrs. Harris an equitable right. Adams thus had in this decree about $8,280 and some cents, Mrs. Harris an equitable right to $3,900, and Hanks still retained about $380. The transfer did not make Mrs. Harris a partner with Adams and Hanks in the decree, or change the legal right to the control of it, jointly or severally, for their own interest; and while Mrs.

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29 Ark. 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanks-v-harris-ark-1874.