McKenzie v. Roleson

28 Ark. 102
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 28 Ark. 102 (McKenzie v. Roleson) 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
McKenzie v. Roleson, 28 Ark. 102 (Ark. 1872).

Opinion

Searle, J.

The appellees brought their complaint in equity to the November term, 1871, of the Cross circuit court, for the recovery of certain real property situate in the town of Wittsburg, in Cross county. The appellant answered, alleging title in himself, to which answer appellees demurred. The court sustained the demurrer, and rendered a decree in favor of the appellees, from which the appellant, refusing to answer further, appealed to this court.

The facts material to the disposition of the cause here, that are alleged in the complaint and not denied by the answer, and that are alleged in the answer and conceded by the demurrer, are, in substance, the following:

Isaac Wafford, who was owner in fee of the property in controversy, a short time previous to his death, duly made and published his last will and testament, on the 6th day of May, A. D. 1848, and his codicil thereto, on the 7th day of July, A. D. 1849. In due time, after the death of Wafford, the will, with the codicil thereto, was duly probated and admitted to record, on the 80th day of August, 1849, and letters testamentary were issued to Samuel L. Austill, the person named in the codicil to the will as executor.

The rights of the parties in this case depending chiefly upon the construction given to this will and codicil, so much of them will be set forth in this statement as is material to the determination of the issues presented.

The third item of the will is as follows: “I will and desire, immediately after my death, that my children, or some one of them, select four negroes out of my stock of negroes, and dispose of them in the following manner, viz: to have them valued, each separately, and then for them to be drawn for my children, or some one to draw for them whom they may select, or for their legal representatives; the one that may be drawn in the name of Caroline Austell, my youngest ■daughter, I will to her absolutely; the one that may be drawn in the name of Juliana Nickels, my second daughter, I will to her absolutely; and the one that may be drawn in the name of my son James H. Wafford, I will to him absolutely; .and the one that may be drawn in the name of Delia C. Eergurson, my eldest daughter, I will also to my son James EL "Wafford, in trust for the use and benefit of my said daughter, Delia C. EergursOn, the trust fund or property above mentioned to be managed by my son, James H. Wafford, as trustee as aforesaid, in the manner hereinafter to be mentioned by me; and each one is to account to the other, who may draw the most valuable negro, making each equal in value.”

The sixth item of the will, after making other- devises of personal property, devised as follows, to-wit: “I will that my children agree among themselves, and sell on such time or for cash (a majority agreeing to sell), as they may think best, the residue of all my property, not above specifically devised, both personal and real; and the proceeds thereof to be divided into four equal parts, which I will and bequeath to the parties, and in the same manner and for the same purposes and uses that I have set forth and mentioned in the third clause or item of this will. In.order that no misconstruction shall be placed upon the clause and language therein set forth and used, I make 'this plain statement, that I will my daughter D. C. Fergurson’s portioh be equal to each of my other children’s; that I have willed it to my son James H. Wafford, in trust for her, during her natural life, and then, after her death, to-descend to her children, heirs of her body, absolutely; and the negroes thus willed by me for her use, I will that my son James H., trustee as aforesaid, hire out annually, and the moneys that may be, as a portion from my estate, to be kept, at interest, and apply the proceeds of the hire of said negroes and the interest aforesaid to her comfort and benefit, during her natural life, and thereafter, the residue to her children as aforesaid, equally and absolute^. I appoint no executor for the reason that my children are all of age and can legally wind up my estate without the expense of an administration.”

The codicil to the will, after making some changes in the provisions of the will in relation to the devises to testator’s wife, is as follows: “ I make this other change or alteration in the last clause of my will aforesaid, wherein I appoint no-executor ; that is, I constitute and appoint my son-in-law Samuel L. Austell, of St. Francis county, Arkansas, the sole executor of my last will and testament aforesaid, of date the 6th of May, 1848, and desire him to execute the same in every particular as therein I- have set forth and expressed, with the provisions of this codicil, which I make and ordain as a part of the same,” etc., etc.

The property in litigation in this suit was a part of the real property, to which the sale, as directed to be made in the above quoted portions of tbe will, had reference. James H. Wafford, one of the devisees of the will, conveyed his right, title and interest in the property in controversy, to Britton Boleson, one of the appellees in this suit, and Thomas H. Mc-Crary, on the 27th day of February, 1871 ; Delia O. Fergurson, another one of the devisees of the will, became discovert by the death of her husband in the year 1852, and died on the 16th day of March, 1869, leaving surviving her, her children and heirs at law, Thomas H. McCrary, Marietta W. Fergurson and Caroline Fergurson (who afterward intermarried with Benjamin F. Scott); and these last named persons, heirs, of Mrs. Fergurson, conveyed their right, title and interest in the property to Britton Boleson and Thomas H. McCrary, on the 28th day of February, 1871; and McCrary conveyed his interest to the appellees, B. C. Brown and O. P. Lyles. The appellees claimed title to one-half of the property described in their complaint, by virtue of the will and the above mentioned conveyances. The appellant claimed title to the same property by virtue of the will and the folio-wing conveyances and facts, as set forth and pleaded in his answer:

That Samuel L. Austell, as executor of said will, etc., and as authorized so to do by the well and codicil, on the 23d day of August, 1853, and on the 17th day of February, 1859, sold, and by his deeds of these dates, conveyed to one John Wilson, the property in the complaint described, which deeds were duly executed, acknowledged and recorded. That said Wilson died, leaving him surviving, his widow, Ann B., who intermarried with appellant; that said Ann B., during her widowhood, continued 'to occupy said property, the same being the homestead of the former husband, and no dower being assigned to her, until her said marriage with the appellant, since when she and her husband, the appellant, have had and held possession of the property; that the possession of Wilson from the dates of said deeds, and after his death of his widow, and after her marriage with the appellant, of her and the appellant jointly, was adverse to all the world, under and by virtue of the conveyances and facts aforesaid, and the statute of limitation is set up in defense of his title.

The demurrer to the answer admitting the facts therein pleaded as true, questions their legal sufficiency to defeat a recovery by the appellees.

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Bluebook (online)
28 Ark. 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckenzie-v-roleson-ark-1872.