Jones v. Green

41 Ark. 363
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 41 Ark. 363 (Jones v. Green) 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 v. Green, 41 Ark. 363 (Ark. 1883).

Opinion

Eakin, J.

This is an action of ejectment, begun by theadministratrix of W. W. Andrews against William Norman to recover the N. E. quarter of section eight, in town•ship twelve, south of range twenty-three west; a tract of land which was included in the grant of lands from the United States, made to the state of Arkansas on the ninth of February, 1853, to aid in the construction of a railroad from the Mississippi river, opposite the mouth of the Ohio, .by way of Little Rock to the Texas boundary near Fulton. The conditions of said grant were not complied with, and the lands by the terms of it would have reverted to the United States, but for an additional act of July 28th, 1866, by which the former act was revived and extended for a period of ten years in which the road was completed.

For detailed provisions of these acts, gee acts of congress of the respective years andpp. 142 and 143, Gantt’s Digest. The lands were to be applied solely to .the construction of the road and “tono other purpose whatsoever.” They were to be sold only as the work progressed, in quantities not to exceed one hundred and twenty sections of land in the beginning, contiguous to some continuous section of twenty miles of road, and so on for each continuous twenty-mile section until all be completed. It was .provided that the lands granted should be subject to the disposal of the State legislature for the purposes aforesaid and no other.

By acts of sixteenth of January, 1855, and twenty-sixth November, 1856, these lands were granted by the State to the Cairo & Fulton Railroad Company, which had been chartered by the State and had established its line along •the route indicated by congress, subject to al. the limitations and provisions of the original donating act.

On the first day of November, 1859, said company, contemplating the issue of five million dollars in bonds, conveyed all the said lands in trust to Brayman, Moore and Wilson. The provisions of the deed were long and minute in detail. It is sufficient to say that the general purpose of it was to authorize a sale of the lands to take up the bonds, or provide a fund for their redemption. No regard was* paid to the congressional restriction as to the twenty mile sections. The bonds, in blank, it seems were put in the-hands of Brayman for negotiation.

Before any action was taken under the trust deed, the civil war became flagrant. The executive committee'of the railroad, at Little Rock, on the twenty-sixth of July, 1861, determined that the bonds in the hands of Brayman ought not to be issued, and should not be, under any pretence, until further orders of the directory; and it was made the duty of the president of the road to reclaim them from Brayman. It was further determined that said trustees were no longer competent to act as such, being citizens of Illinois, a foreign government at war with this; and that their offices-had become vacant. Three other trustees, Ashley, Wait and Woodruff, were appointed in their stead to hold and-protect the property with all the authorities, powers and rights conferred upon the original ones. They were further empowered, for the purpose of paying expenses of the trust, and the just debts and liabilities incurred by the company to sell lands to a limited extent, not to exceed one hundred thousand dollars, without further order of the directory ; and to execute deeds to the purchasers. 0

This action of the executive committee was approved and confirmed by the directory on the eleventh of November, 1861. Neither the trust deed, nor this action of the directory substituting new trustees, was ever recorded in Hemp-stead county, where the particular tract now in controversy lies.

On the sixteenth of December, 1861, the new trustees,. Ashley, Wait and Woodruff, sold and conveyed the particular tract in controversy, with other lands,, to Wm. W.. Andrews for the sum of nine hundred dollars. They recite-that it was done “by virtue of a deed of trust executed by the said Cairo & Fulton Railroad Company in Arkansas, on the first day of November, 1859 ; and the resolution and order of the executive committee of said company on the twenty-sixth day of July, 1861.” They undertake to convey only such rights as were granted to, and vested in, the company. This deed was duly recorded, and upon it the plaintiff below rests.

On the tenth day of December, 1870, the Cairo and Fulton Railroad Company entered into indentures with the Union Trust Company of New York. The instrument refers to the different acts and resolutions of congress by which the land grant had been made and extended, and recites that the railroad company intended to issue bonds to> the extent of $8,000,000, which the instrument was intended, to secure. In trust for that purpose, the railroad company conveyed to the Union Trust Company all the lands so granted by congress, including the tract in question, and, also the railroad itself to be constructed, with all of its-houses and rolling-stock, rights-of-way, franchises, etc. It was agreed that the railroad company should make sales, of the lands in accordance with certain regulations for the purpose, not necessary to specify, and that the Trust Company should make title to the purchasers “to hold in fee-simple by full and sufficient deeds.” There were many elaborate provisions in the deed of trust to effectuate the-principal object, but they have no bearing on this case.

On the eleventh day of January, 1876, J. J. Vickers purchased through Essex, its attorney in fact, from the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railroad Company, with which the Cairo&Fulton Co. had then become consolidated* a portion of the land in controversy, to-wit: The west half of the northeast quarter, section eight, township twelve south, of range twenty-three west. He paid in cash to the Union Trust Company thirty dollars and executed four notes to the order of said Trust Company for $112.50 each, payable with interest respectively on the first days of Janu- ■ ary 1877, ’78, ’79, and ’80. The railroad company executed to him a bond for title to be made by execution of a deed upon the payment of the notes. The Trust Company -also, on its part, acknowledged the receipt of the cash and notes, and covenanted on payment to execute a release of the land. Vickers, by written assignment, endorsed and acknowledged on the instrument, conveyed all his interest to ■defendant Norman on the twenty-fourth of April, 1876, for the expressed consideration of one hundred dollars, and directed the Trust Company to convey to Norman on pay-ment of the notes.

Norman, in his answer, denied the title of Andrews’ estate in the whole quarter section, and set up, in defense, -the title thus derived from the Cairo & Fulton E. E. through ■the Trust Company and Vickers. Pending the suit Norman died and it was revived.

The case was submitted to the court upon the pleadings ■and agreed statement of facts, by which it was admitted : that the deed of trust to Brayman et al, was duly executed; the order of the executive committee was made and approved by the directory ; and that the substituted trustees •conveyed to Andrews by deed duly recorded, and that Andrews went into possession under the deed.

Admitting also the execution of the deed of trust to the Union Trust Company: That the lands were a part of the -congressional grant and embraced in both trusts ; the consolidation of the railroad companies, and that the St.

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Bluebook (online)
41 Ark. 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-green-ark-1883.