Johnson v. Daniels

254 S.W.2d 946, 221 Ark. 276, 1952 Ark. LEXIS 891
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 1, 1952
Docket4-9883—4-9884
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 254 S.W.2d 946 (Johnson v. Daniels) 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
Johnson v. Daniels, 254 S.W.2d 946, 221 Ark. 276, 1952 Ark. LEXIS 891 (Ark. 1952).

Opinion

Minor W. Millwee, Justice.

The instant appeals,

one in chancery the other in probate, are an aftermath of Daniels v. Johnson, 216 Ark. 374, 226 S. W. 2d 571, 15 A. L. R. 2d 1401,. decided January 9, 1950. That was a proceeding in the Probate Court under § 21 of Act 297 of 1945 (Ark. Stats., § 62-1301) for determination of heir-ship of one-half the estate of J. W. (Jim) Edwards, deceased, it being conceded that his widow took the other half interest.

J. W. (Jim) Edwards was the son of “Old Joe” and' Aveline Edwards, former slaves. On the former appeal we held that two lines of collateral heirs were entitled to inherit: (1) the descendants of five children of the slave marriage of “Old Joe” Edwards and Patsy Gant, referred to as the “Patsy line,” who are the appellees here; (2) the descendants of five children of another slave marriage of “Old Joe” Edwards and Susan Wroten, referred to as the “Susan line,” who are the appellants here.

The probate judgment involved on the former appeal was rendered December 10, 1948, the trial court finding that the “Susan line” represented by the present appellants constituted the sole collateral heirs of the estate.

On December 15, 1948, appellants filed suit in the Chancery Court to quiet their title to the real estate alleging that the claims of appellees and others constituted a cloud on their title. Appellees and other defendants either answered or intervened and some of the parties asked for the cancellation of certain deeds and mineral contracts issued on the lands.

On September 5, 1950, the Probate Court entered judgment on the mandate issued by the Supreme Court on the former appeal reversing the judgment of December 10, 1948, to the extent that the “Patsy line” should be permitted to inherit on the same basis as the “Susan line. ’ ’

Trial of the chancery suit to quiet title was begun on November 6, 1951, and concluded on November 8, 1951. It was there stipulated that the record in the original probate proceeding might be used in the chancery trial and any appeal to this court. The record on the former appeal disclosed that all the legal descendants were not in the case and on remand notice of subsequent proceedings to identify all the heirs was given. As a result, 55 persons intervened as descendants of the “Patsy line” who, in addition to the original 22, are the appellees here. No other heirs of the “Susan line” intervened and the present 15 appellants are the same persons involved in all previous proceedings.

A “Pinal Judgment Determining Heirship,” dated November 6, 1951, was entered by the Probate Court determining that .appellants and appellees constituted all the legal collateral heirs of the estate and directing a division of said estate between them in accordance with the mandate of this court on the first appeal. That trial was begun on November 5,1951, and the judgment recites that an appeal was prayed by and granted to appellants.

A decree was entered in the chancery suit to quiet title on November 8, 1951, containing the same findings as to determination of heirship as did the final probate judgment. Under this decree the intervention of other adverse claimants was dismissed and certain instruments were cancelled as clouds on the title to the real estate.

On November 20, 1951, the appellants filed in the Probate Court a motion to set aside all findings and judgments previously entered therein and for a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence. This motion was heard and overruled on April 21, 1952. Appellants have appealed from the order overruling this motion and from the decree of the chancery court of November 8, 1951. The two appeals have been consolidated for presentation here.

In holding on the former appeal that appellees, as representatives of the “Patsy line,” were entitled to inherit we said: “The evidence introduced at the trial in the Probate Court for the purpose of establishing the relationships of the various claimants to ‘Old Joe’ Edwards and his son the decedent Jim consisted largely, as already stated, of family hearsay passed down from parent to child concerning relationships within the family groups, plus statements which older members of the families said they had heard made by Patsy and Susan themselves concerning their marital relations with ‘Old Joe’ Edwards. About two score of witnesses gave testimony of this character. In addition there were some witnesses who had lived their lives in the same community with the families involved and knew the community reputation as to their relationships. Notable among these was Mrs. Nancy Britt, child of the Gant family which owned ‘Old Joe’ and Patsy, born in 1853 and therefore nearly 96 years old at the date of trial yet with a memory clear even in small details concerning the slaves with whom she played in her childhood. Patsy Grant was the ‘black mammy’ who cared for Mrs. Nancy Britt until the end of the war terminated their relationship when Nancy was about 12 years old. Mrs. Britt’s acquaintance with her family’s former slaves and their relatives and descendants continued down through the years to the present. Mrs. Britt testified to many facts as of her own knowledge, but she also testified as to general reputation in the community concerning other facts.”

We further held that the evidence that “Old Joe” and Patsy cohabited for eight years as husband and wife was perhaps stronger than evidence of similar cohabitation of “Old Joe” and Susan, saying: “The evidence is absolutely uncontradicted that five children were born to ‘Old Joe’ and Patsy in the Grant’s back yard, and that these children were recognized by ‘Old'Joe’ as his own. The hearsay testimony in the record to the effect that Patsy told younger members of her family that she had ‘jumped the broom’ with ‘Old Joe’ is larger in quantity than the similar testimony concerning his ‘jumping the broom’ with Susan, and both batches of testimony are about equally credible. Mrs. Nancy Britt testified: ‘Everyone in the community said that when a slave man and woman were having children they were considered married. They generally lived in the same house or near each other. . . .Q. When he took up with Patsy, he called that marrying her? A. I suppose so. That is the way they did in those days. . . . Q. And you say Joe and Patsy were living on the same place and were living there and had children as man and wife? A. Tes. ’ It is true that Mrs. Britt in her testimony insisted that ‘Old Joe’ and Patsy were not married, but this only establishes that they were not married in the legal sense that was impossible in any event for slaves.”

In holding the family hearsay testimony admissible we said: “The modern rule, which we accept, is that declarations concerning the whole range of pedigree facts are admissible in evidence when made by members of the family or by any other persons closely associated with members of the family as servants, masters and mistresses (like Mrs. Nancy Britt), neighbors, business partners, or the like, the association being such as to give them access to family facts on a basis similar to that afforded family members.

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Related

Vaughn v. State
478 S.W.2d 759 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1972)
Johnson v. Spencer
262 S.W.2d 290 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1953)

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Bluebook (online)
254 S.W.2d 946, 221 Ark. 276, 1952 Ark. LEXIS 891, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-daniels-ark-1952.