Jones, McDowell & Co. v. Fletcher

42 Ark. 422
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 42 Ark. 422 (Jones, McDowell & Co. v. Fletcher) 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
Jones, McDowell & Co. v. Fletcher, 42 Ark. 422 (Ark. 1883).

Opinions

OPINION.

By the third section of an act of the Legislature entitled J ® “an act to define the boundaries of Pulaski and other . , counties, approved December 7,1875, the lands embraced in this controversy were detached from Pulaski and added to the territory of Saline County. It will be seen from the date of the filing of the complaint that these lands were notin Pulaski County when the suit was commenced. It is again urged by the counsel for appellants, after the overruling of the motion to dismiss for want of jurisdiction, that the Pulaski Chancery Court could not entertain jurisdiction on the facts stated in the complaint. The argument on the jurisdictional ground is pressed upon us with so much zeal and ability that we feel constrained to go somewhat at length into a further consideration of this question. The facts material and important to a proper determination of the question are : The defendants were served with process in Pulaski County. The mortgagees, under the power contained in the mortgage, were about to sell the lands in this county. The principal object of the plaintiff’s suit, as disclosed by his original complaint, was to have an account stated of the balance, if anything, due on the mortgage, and to redeem in part, or the whole, as might be directed by the Chancellor; to enjoin the sale as to the half interest, and to-set aside certain deeds made to hinder and delay him in the collection of his debt, and the recovery of the lands in his action at law.

Looking at the pleadings as a whole, on the part of the plaintiff, it is argued, that the chief or principal object of this suit was the recovery of real property, or of an estate or interest therein within the meaning of section 4532 Gantt’s Digest, which is as follow's:

“Actions for the following causes must be brought in the county in which the subject of the action, or some part thereof, is situated:
“I. Por the recovery of real property, or of an estate or interest therein.
“II. Por the partition of real property.
“III. Por the sale of real property under a mortgage, lien, or other incumbrance or charge.
“IV. Por an injury to real property.”

'When the suit was commenced the Circuit Court of Saline County was the proper and only forum in which these lands or of an estate or an interest therein could have been recovered. But the first and most important question to be determined, is, was the main or leading object of the plaintiff’s suit, as indicated by the scope 'and purposes of his original complaint, the recovery of these lands, or of an ■estate or an interest therein ? It is certainly true that the claim of the plaintiff was and is, that he is legally and equitably entitled to an undivided half interest in these lands, and it is conceded that no part of them are in Pulaski County. It is very clear that the Legislature intended, in the adoption of section 4532 Gantt’s Digest as apart of our code procedure, to make all actions, whether at law or in equity, where the judgment or decree is to operate directly upon the estate or title, local, and to restrict the remedy to the proper tribunal of the county where the subject of the action, or some part’ of it, is situated. All such actions, whether by name foreclosure, partition, ejectment, or without any special designation as to title, whether expressly mentioned in the statute or not, are local, within the meaning of this section. The courts will look to the effect of such judgments and decrees, and endeavor to give full force to the statute, and carry out the defined policy of the legislative department in limiting the remedy to the proper courts of the county where the land lies.

The chief question is, and must be, in its ultimate form and effect: Does the decree appealed from operate directly and primarily upon the estate or title, or does it operate alone upon the persons of the appellants, and only indirectly and incidentally upon the estate or title? To determine this question it is important to ascertain when, how, and for what purposes the court acquired jurisdiction, if at all. It will be seen that until the coming in of the amendment to the complaint, no direct effort was made by any allegations in the original complaint or prayer for judgment in which a recovery of the lands, or of an estate or an interest therein, was sought. The plaintiff alleged that he had succeeded, through a judicial sale, to all the rights of O. R. Vaughan, one of the mortgagors, in a mortgage which was about to be carried into effect by a sale in Pulaski County. That the mortgage had been paid oft; or, if not fully paid, he would redeem as to the balance found due-upon an accounting. He sought to have certain conveyances set aside and canceled on account of their having-been made to hinder and delay creditors, and especially himself. He prayed that the sale be enjoined, as to an undivided half interest in the lands, until his equities could be inquired into. The defendants were served with process in Pulaski county, and answered the complaint on the merits, reserving exceptions by way of demurrer to the jurisdiction of the court. But it is suggested by counsel for appellants, that the plaintiff elected to amend his complaint, and to enlarge the scope of his remedy, so that the suit as a whole was an action to recover real property, or of an estate or an interest therein, brought in a county where no part of the subject of the action was situated.

It is also urged that the jurisdiction of the court over the subject of the action, if acquired at all, must have been in consequence of the primary and principal object of plaintiffs suit, not as a mere incident to an asserted jurisdiction in personam„ but as an original jurisdiction in revi. It would seem to be clear, if we consider the entire pleadings as stating plaintiff’s whole case, that the principal or chief" object of his suit was the recovery of an estate in lands lying in Saline County. But appellee contends that the court having properly acquired jurisdiction over the persons of the defendants and the cause of action for a personal judgment or decree, that jurisdiction over the lands attached as incident to the principal or primary objects of his suit.

We are referred, by appellant’s counsel, to the case of Jacks v. Moore, 33 Ark., 31, as authoritatively settling'the question of jurisdiction raised here. That was an action of trespass brought in the Circuit Court of Phillips County for a trespass committed on lands lying in Lee County, in “cutting timber growing thereon, and otherwise injuring the land.” The court says : “ The action ought to have been brought in Lee County where the land is situated. The language of the code is unequivocal. The injury and the action is local, and was so at common law, and the code simply follows the common law.” That case fell directly and palpably within the very terms of the statute, and no question is made but that it was correctly decided. We are, however, unable to perceive any analogy between this case and that. Nor are we disposed to follow counsel in his speculations and possible deductions flowing from it. This suit is not founded upon any claim even remotely connected with an injury to real property. If any argument or reason as applied to this, can be deduced from that, it is against rather than favoring the position of appellants.

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42 Ark. 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-mcdowell-co-v-fletcher-ark-1883.