King v. Campbell

116 S.W. 899, 89 Ark. 450, 1909 Ark. LEXIS 96
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 1, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 116 S.W. 899 (King v. Campbell) 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
King v. Campbell, 116 S.W. 899, 89 Ark. 450, 1909 Ark. LEXIS 96 (Ark. 1909).

Opinion

Eraurnti-iar, J.

Appellants originally instituted this suit on January 30, 1905, to quiet their -title to certain lands, and in the lower court a final decree was rendered dismissing their complaint for the want of equity; and from that decree they prosecuted an appeal to this court; and said cause on appeal was decided by this court on February 25, 1907, and the opinion thereof is reported under the style of Gaither v. Gage, 82 Ark. 51. The decree was by this court reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to permit either party to amend his pleadings and take further proof; and for further proceedings not inconsistent with that opinion. Upon this second appeal the only land involved in the suit is the forty-acre tract claimed by the appellee, Robert Campbell. He asserts title to that tract of land under mesne conveyances from parties back to one who had obtained deed to the land in 1895 from the commissioner of the chancery court, who made sale thereof under a decree of that court; and he alleges that he and those under whom he claims title had been in actual, adverse and notorious possession of said land continuously for more than seven years next before the commencement of this suit; and he also alleges that he and his grantors had paid the taxes on said land continuously for more than seven years, three payments having been made since March 18, 1899, and pleads the seven-year statute of limitation by payment of taxes for that period upon uninclosed and unimproved lands, under the act of March 18, 1899.

Upon the second trial in the lower court of this cause, the proof or evidence was made by the agreed stipulation of the parties, which is as follows:

“1st. That the late W. A. King was the holder of the original title to the land involved in this suit, and that Mary J. King was the wife of W. A. King, and is now his widow, and that J. H. King, W. H. King and Marian Gaither are the children and sole heirs at law of said W. A. King, and that W. A. King died in June, 1892.
“2d. That Marian Gaither married James B. Gaither December 20, 1887; and she is now, and has been continuously since said marriage, the wife of said James B. Gaither.
“3d. That on the 26th day of March, 1891, the land in controversy, to-wit, N. E. %. $. E. sec. 20, township 12 north, range 10 east, 40 acres, was mortgaged by one Felix R. Earner to the Real Estate Mortgage Company, incorporated, of the State of Maine.
“That suit was brought to the chancery court of the county of Mississippi, Arkansas, to foreclose said mortgage; a decree of foreclosure rendered and entered of record at the May, 1894, term of said court, ordering said land, among other lands, sold by H. D. Tomlinson, as commissioner of the court. That, pursuant to said decree, the said Tomlinson, commissioner, sold said land to the Union Mortgage Banking & Trust Co., to whom a commissioner’s deed was executed and delivered December 6, 1895, which sale and deed was confirmed at the December, 1895, term of said court. That a deed was executed and delivered to Mary E. Hale for said land by the said Union Mortgage Banking & Trust Company, of date March 3, 1898. That on the 26th of January, 1902, the said Mary E. Hale executed and delivered to C. C. Ermin a deed for said land. And that on the 2d day of December, 1902, the said C. C. Ermin executed and delivered a deed to the defendant and cross-complainant, Robert Campbell, for said land. That there is nothing of record to show that the said Eelix R. L'anier ever had any title to said land. And that neither the petitioners nor their ancestors, nor his nor their privies, were made, or became, parties to the foreclosure proceedings under which said land was sold by the said H. D. Tomlinson, commissioner, to the said Union Mortgage Banking & Trust Company.
“4th. That, under a verbal agreement of sale with said Union Mortgage Banking & Trust Company, the said Mary E. Hale went upon said land in August, 1897, built a house upon it, and had fenced in about one acre of the land when she obtained her deed in March, 1898, from said Union Mortgage in the actual, adverse, notorious, uninterrupted and exclusive occupancy and possession of said land from the date of said deed up' to the present time.
“5th. That prior to the entry of said Mary E. Hale upon said land in August, 1897, all of said land was and always had been unimproved and unenclosed land, in a wild state and in the occupancy of no one. And that said .Robert Campbell, and those under whom he claims, have regularly kept paid up all taxes, State, county and levee, assessed against and levied upon said land for each and every year from and including the year 1891, down to the present time. And that during this period petitioners have paid no taxes upon said land.”

The appellee first bases his plea of the statute of limitations upon the ground that he and his grantors have been in actual, adverse, and open possession of the land continuously for seven years next before the institution of this suit. This suit was instituted on January 30, 1905. The above evidence shows that prior to August, 1897, the land was in a wild state and in the occupancy of no one; that in August, 1897, Mary E. Hale, under a verbal agreement of purchase, built a house upon it and fenced in about one acre of the land, which was the extent of her actual possession, and that she did not obtain a deed for the land until in March, 1898. So that when she took possession of the one acre in August, 1897, she had no deed or written instrument of any kind granting to her the land or any portion thereof, and therefore had no color of title thereto. Teaver v. Akin, 47 Ark. 528; White v. Stokes, 67 Ark. 184.

Now, when one takes -possession without color of title, his possession is confined to the limits of -his inclosure. Mooney v. Cooledge, 30 Ark. 640; Ferguson v. Peden, 33 Ark. 150. So that up to and until March, 1898, when she obtained a deed for the land, Mary E. Hale had no possession, in fact or in law, of any portion of said land except the one acre. The statute of limitations, therefore, as to all said land except said one acre, began to run in March, 1898; and, this suit having been -commenced on January 30, 1905, it did not run for seven -years. Therefore the plea, of the statute of limitations by appellee, by actual, adverse and notorious possession for seven years, is not sustained by the evidence except as to said one acre of land which Mary E. Hale occupied and inclosed in August, 1897,

It is contended by appellee that the right and title of appellants to the land had been barred by the statute of limitations, by payment by appellee and his grantors of the taxes upon the land continuously for seven years, under the act of March 18, 1899. Appellee contends that for a number of years prior to August, 1897, the lands were uninclosed and unimproved, and in the occupancy of no one, and during those years the Union Mortgage Banking & -Trust Company, holding under deed and color of title, continuously paid the taxes thereon, and that by verbal agreement of, sale -to Mary E. Hale, made in August, 1897, she went into actual possession of a part of the land, and, though she did not obtain a deed until March, 1898, yet the taxes were -continuously paid upon the land thereafter and for more than seven years, three of which payments were made after March 18, 1899.

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Related

Dierks Lumber & Coal Co. v. Vaughn
131 F. Supp. 219 (E.D. Arkansas, 1954)
Hubble v. Grimes
199 S.W.2d 313 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1947)
Davis v. Grobmyer
199 S.W. 917 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1917)
Fenton v. Collum
150 S.W. 140 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1912)
Gaither v. Campbell
126 S.W. 1061 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 S.W. 899, 89 Ark. 450, 1909 Ark. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-campbell-ark-1909.