Ledbetter v. Smith

149 S.W.2d 564, 202 Ark. 144, 1941 Ark. LEXIS 128
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 7, 1941
Docket4-6284
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 149 S.W.2d 564 (Ledbetter v. Smith) 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
Ledbetter v. Smith, 149 S.W.2d 564, 202 Ark. 144, 1941 Ark. LEXIS 128 (Ark. 1941).

Opinion

Mehaeey, J.

This action was instituted by the appellant, Mrs. Leonard Ledbetter, in the Clark chancery court to cancel and set aside a certain deed alleged to have been made to one of the appellees, Mrs. Luther Smith. The suit was originally against Mrs. Luther Smith, Mrs. Tom Horton, and Mrs. Une Matthews.

It was alleged in the complaint filed by appellant that the plaintiff and defendants are the only heirs and next of kin to one Ella Kirby, deceased, who died in Clark county on March 9, 1939. The original defendants were the daughters of said Ella Kirby, and the plaintiff was a granddaughter. Mrs. Ella Kirby had three daughters and one son who died in 1916. It was alleged that at the time of the death of Ella Kirby she was seized and possessed of the land described in the complaint, and that defendants were making a claim to the title of said lands by virtue of a purported deed in the possession of defendants and alleged to have been executed by the said Ella Kirby, purporting* to convey the lands described to Mrs. Luther Smith. It is alleged that the deed is not a true and genuine deed, but that the same is false and fraudulent and a forgery; that said deed casts a cloud on the title of plaintiff, Mrs. Leonard Ledbetter, to a one-fourth interest in said lands. It is further alleged that if the deed is found not to be a forgery that the said Ella Kirby was so physically and mentally weak by long* and continued illness that she was incompetent and incapable of knowing and understanding the legal effect of said deed, and that while she was in that condition she was pressed and overpersuaded by the defendants in whose care she was during her last illness, to execute said deed, she being* unable to resist their appeals and persuasions; that if Ella Kirby signed the deed, said act was not a free and voluntary act on her part, but was the result of a deliberate and wicked conspiracy on the part of defendants to defraud plaintiff out of her interest in said lands by taking advantage of said Ella Kirby while in her weakened and disabled condition, and inducing her to execute same; that since the death of Ella Kirby the defendants have sold and caused to be cut and removed from said land a large portion of the valuable timber standing and growing on said lands, which was done for the purpose of cheating and defrauding the plaintiff; that the plaintiff has no way of knowing the extent of the value of the timber, but the information rests solely with defendants. The prayer was for a cancellation of the deed, and that the defendants be restrained from exhibiting* the same as evidence of their title to said lands, and that the plaintiff be decreed the owner and titleholder to an undivided one-fourth interest; that the defendants be ordered and directed to file a verified, itemized statement, showing the amount of each kind and character of timber cut since the death of said Ella Kirby, and the price received therefor, and that they be ordered to account to plaintiff for one-fourth of the amount.

Thereafter there was an amendment to the complaint filed stating that subsequent to the filing of the suit Mrs. Luther Smith filed for record in the recorder’s office of Clark county the deed referred to in plaintiff’s complaint, and alleged to be a forgery; that said deed is dated June 18, 1930; that said deed purports to have been executed for the land described in plaintiff’s complaint; that there was no valid consideration for said deed.

Answer was filed denying the material allegations of the complaint, and alleging that the deed was a true and genuine conveyance. There was also an answer filed to the amendment to the complaint denying every material allegation in the amendment.

Evidence was introduced and the court made a finding and entered a decree that there was no equity in plaintiff’s complaint, and that the same was dismissed for want of equity. An appeal was prayed and granted to the Supreme Court, and the case is now here on appeal.

Appellants argue that there are four issues of fact presented by the appeal. First, is the deed in controversy a genuine deed of conveyance, or is it a forgery?

The appellee, Mrs. Luther Smith, was called by the appellant as a witness, and testified that she was one of the daughters of Mrs. Ella Kirby; that there are three living children, Mrs. Matthews, Mrs. Horton, and witness ; they had one brother who was killed a good many years ago. Witness testified that her mother at one time owned all the lands involved in this suit, but she thinks there was some of it she did not own; witness was married to Mr. Smith in 1904, and they moved into the house with witness’ mother after the brother was killed in 1916; the brother lived in the house with the mother before his death; he was separated from his wife; witness’ mother said to her: "I picked you out of the three children to come and live with me. You have always attended to my business, attended to the taxes, drawn all the checks from the government,” and everything that was done, witness attended to; witness lived with her mother continually after that until her mother’s death; Mrs. Matthews lived about a half mile from there part of the time; her other sister lived in Little Rock part of the time and in Grurdon; there were 20 or 30 acres in cultivation; there were 40 acres in the home place; it did not all join; witness’ mother gave both of her sisters 40 acres of land which joined; she kept this property and it was assessed in her name until she died; witness attended to” it for her; about two years before she died she had rheumatism in her arm and she did not do anything after that; about two years before she died she got in feeble health; she had an account in the Clark County Bank and got money out of the bank by giving witness checks; she was to give checks and attend to it just like it was hers; whatever rents she collected she deposited in the bank at Grurdon; she came to the courthouse and signed checks for her taxes; she signed a check or two while she was in bed sick; sometimes she would give witness blank cheeks and witness would fill them out afterwards; witness had one with her; witness and her mother kept their papers together in the locker; witness kept the keys part of the time- and her mother part of the time; when her mother was sick witness had to go to town after the doctor and look after other things, and she gave the keys to Mrs. Matthews; her mother paid the taxes because she wished to do so and wished to handle the property as though it was hers until her death; witness told Mrs. Matthews to come up any time she wanted to and Mrs. Matthews and Mrs. Horton knew about this deed and it was understood that the property was all witness’; witness owned everything; witness was present when the deed was made; does not know just who was present, but knows that her mother, her aunt, Mrs. Sallie Slaughter, and Ross Calloway were there; Mrs. Slaughter is dead; her grandfather was named Nash, and her grandfather on her father’s side was named Kirby; witness does remember her mother’s father, but her father’s father was dead when she was born; when witness ’ mother’s father died he had several children; some of them live in El Dorado and different places in the state; witness was present when the deed to her was executed, and carried it home; her mother gave her the deed oil the way home; part of the time the deed was in the locker and witness brought it to Arkadelphia when she came to pay taxes; had all the deeds.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
149 S.W.2d 564, 202 Ark. 144, 1941 Ark. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ledbetter-v-smith-ark-1941.