Langston v. Hughes

280 S.W. 374, 170 Ark. 272, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 372
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 25, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 280 S.W. 374 (Langston v. Hughes) 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
Langston v. Hughes, 280 S.W. 374, 170 Ark. 272, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 372 (Ark. 1926).

Opinion

Wood, J.

This lawsuit, in the last analysis, involves the title to the fractional SE % of the SE14 of section"21, township 15 south, range 16 west, in Ouachita County, Arkansas. The appellants claim title as the heirs and lineal descendants of William G. Johnson, who died about the year 1862, seized and possessed of all the lands in controversy. The appellees claim title to the lands by adverse possession through James W. Hughes and his grantors for more than seven years prior to the filing of the complaint in this action. The appellees also claim that the appellants are barred by laches from maintaining the action. As a basis for their claim of title by limitation, the appellees alleged that James W. Hughes acquired title to the laqds from Martha J. Cramer, who acquired title 'by deed from Lavinia Johnson, and that Lavinia Johnson acquired title by deed from Sherman C. Wakefield, the patentee of the Government. They alleged that all of these deeds had been lost or misplaced, that same had never been recorded, and that the appellees were unable to present copies thereof; that Hughes and his predecessors in title took possession of the land, and had been in possession under their respective deeds, for more than seven years prior to the institution of this action.

On the issue of title by limitation, Mrs. Janet Hughes testified that her husband, J. W. Hughes, took possession of the land about 1902. He held possession of same until he died in 1918. After his death witness and her children held possession until the time of the oil boom. Witness was sure that her husband had a deed to the lands in controversy. He spoke to her about it several times. Witness was sure that she saw the deed. Witness had searched for the deed everywhere she could think of, but thought it was lost when her husband carried his deeds to Camden to have the first abstract made. Since the controversy arose her youngest son had also searched for the deed. The deeds were kept in a box in a trunk, and witness had looked among all the old papers, but was unable to find the deed, and she was sure that it was lost. Witness ’ mother, Mrs. Martha J. Cramer, was the grantor in the deed. The date of the deed from witness’ mother to her husband to the SE14 of SE]4 of section 21, township 15 south, range 16 west, was a few days before witness and her husband conveyed to C. E. Cramer a square containing four acres in the northeast corner of the tract. Witness ’ husband could not write a deed to C. E. (CoRincil) Cramer until witness’ mother made witness’ husband a deed. Witness lived on the land twenty-one years until she moved to Camden the year before giving her testimony. None of the appellants have made any claim to the land within the last ten or twelve years before this action was brought.

■On cross-examination witness testified that her husband bought from her mother two forties that lay north and northwest of the tract in controversy. Witness could not remember the numbers. The deed to those two forties and the deed to the tract in controversy were the only two deeds to witness’ husband that witness remembered her mother signed. Witness thought the deed from witness’ mother to witness’s husband to the land in controversy was executed in January, 1905, but she didn’t remember the day of the month and didn’t remember the character of the deed, but she was sure that she had seen it. Witness knew that she would not have signed the deed to Council without seeing the other deed. She also knew that she would not have signed the deed to Council Cramer from other circumstances. Witness was asked: ‘ ‘Can you tell me what land was described in that deed? ’ ’ (referring to the land in controversy), and answered: “The SE% of the SE% of section 21, township 15 south, range 16 west.” She was'asked whether the land was south or north of the fifth principal meridian, and did not answer. She was asked, “How did the description read in the deed, Mrs. Hughes?” and answered, “Well, I don’t know.” Question: “Did it read section 21, township 15 north, range 16 west?” and answered, “Yes.” Witness didn’t know whether it was a warranty deed or a quitclaim deed, and knew that it was a conveyance of a fee simple estate. She didn’t know what language was used in making the conveyance. She was not in the least interested in deeds in those days, and didn’t remember or pay any attention. Her husband did all that. Witness read the deed from her mother to her husband before she and her husband signed Council’s deed. Witness didn’t remember that she read it then, and didn’t remember that she heard her husband speak of it then, but did hear him speak of it afterwards. Witness finally stated that she heard her husband speak of the deed at the time he made the deed to Council Cramer. Witness knew that Mr. Cook took the acknowledgment of the deed in controversy ¡because he acknowledged all their papers. She supposed that is the only reason she knew it. Witness was sure she put the deed in the box in the trunk because that was where she kept all the deeds. • Witness thought her husband got the deed out of the box to have the abstract made in 1916 or 1917-—in December, 1916, the best witness could remember. The deeds at that time had not been recorded. T. I. Thornton made the abstract. Her husband had the abstract in his possession something like a year before he died. Witness and her husband looked over the abstract, and they talked about it. They didn’t know that the land in controversy was not included in the abstract, and didn’t know, when her husband died, that the deed was lost. Witness didn’t know that the abstract did not show the deed in controversy until she was told by her attorney. Witness further stated that she couldn’t say whether the deed was a lifetime deed or any other kind of a deed, and also stated that, if the deed was lost, it was the only deed conveying land to her husband that had been lost. Other deeds conveying lands to her husband were found after her husband’s death up in Rumph & Tyson’s safe, merchants with whom her husband did business. Before leaving these deeds with Rumph & Tyson for safekeeping, they were placed on record. Witness didn’t know the date they were recorded. Witness’ mother died in January, 1913, and her husband died in 1918. Witness was fifty-three years old at the time she testified. During her husband’s life witness never paid any attention to laud numbers or anything of the sort, and such knowledge as she had she had obtained since his death, and since the discovery of oil in the locality of these lands. Before her husband’s death witness only knew that part of the land was in section 21 and part in section 28. She didn’t know what land her husband owned. In regard to the search for the alleged lost deed, Rumph & Tyson told witness that all of her papers were in one envelope, and they gave that envelope to witness. Rumph knew that the deed was lost, but witness, after discovering that same was lost, did not go back and ask for a further search for it to see if it could be found in their safe.

In addition to the above, and bearing on the issue as to whether or not the appellants are barred by laches from maintaining this action, Mrs. Hughes testified that during the time she lived on the tract adjoining the land in controversy none of the Short family or the Langston family ever came there and made claim to the lands. In 1882 and 1883, or 1883 and 1884, Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
280 S.W. 374, 170 Ark. 272, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langston-v-hughes-ark-1926.