Miller v. Gibbons

34 Ark. 212
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 34 Ark. 212 (Miller v. Gibbons) 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
Miller v. Gibbons, 34 Ark. 212 (Ark. 1879).

Opinion

Eakin, J.

This suit involves a contest between claimants to pre-empt certain swamp and overflowed lauds of the state.

About the year 1845, John Blakely owned a tract of land in Montgomery county (now Garland), just south of, and adjoining, the tract in question, which was vacant land of the United States. His residence was very near the north line of his tract, and for his convenience he extended his improvements over the line, taking in three or four acres of the vacant land, upon which he built a stable, crib, etc., and used the land for cultivation. He had no intention to pre-empt, having already as much land as he cared to pay taxes upon. He died in 1854. His estate seems to have been solvent. Letters of administration were granted on the eleventh of April of that year. On the seventh day of January, 1860, the final settlement and account current of the administrator was approved by the probate court, and he was ordered to turn over the assets in his hands to the guardian of the minor heirs of Blakely. This he did; filed his receipt, and was discharged.

Upon the death of John Blakely, dower was allotted, or assigned, to his widow, Olarinda. No order of court, or instrument of writing, is shown to indicate the extent of her dower, but it appears from the pleadings, and from depositions, that it consisted of about forty acres, including the residence and a portion of the lands, if not all that was arable.

The inference, from the vague and unsatisfactory testimony of witnesses on this point, is, that she took whatever interest her husband had in those vacant lands as a part of her dpw-er. This was the natural result, indeed, of assigning to her the residence, from which all things necessary to-its enjoyment would be implied. The stables, crib and opening were household conveniences. The administrator and heirs of Blakely never set up any claim to the improvements on the vacant land.. As to them, it was abandoned.

From the death of her husband, in 1854, until her own death, in 1861, there is no evidence that she increased the improvements, or did any -work to keep them up or add to their value. It seems that on several occasions she endeavored, through friends, to enter the vacant land under the pre-emption laws of the state, relying on the old extension of her husband’s impi-ovements over the line, and her possession of the lands contiguous under her dower. She was unable to do so, because the lands were unconfirmed. In 1861 she died also.

Defendant Gibbons, was appointed her administrator, and assumed control of the lands which she had occupied {dower. He did nothing whatever upon the vacant land. It was apparently abandoned, and up to the year 1865 had been allowed to go to wreck. The buildings rotted away, and the clearing grew up in weeds and bushes. At this time one Golden went upon the vacant tract, consisting of three forty-acre subdivisions, and commenced an improvement. Complainant Miller, during the same year, bought from him the improvements which he had begun, took possession, and continued enlarging them from year to year, with the declared intention of making a pre-emption under the swamp land acts of the state, as soon as he might be able to do so. He continued in possession until the commencement of this suit. His improvements had reached the extent of a very pretty farm, variously estimated at from thirty-five to seventy-five acres. During all this time, until his attempted purchase from the state, Gibbons stood aloof, and made no attempt to stop him; or to warn him against interference. Whilst Miller was in possession of, and cultivating his improvement, he rented the Blakely farm, also, from Gibbons, for the year 1867, and perhaps continued to hold it longer, as lessee. The evidence on this point is not clear. •

The lands were duly confirmed to the state in 1872.

Within sixty days afterwards, on the twenty-eighth day of July, 1872, Miller filed in the office of commissioner of state lands, his declaratory statement, under oath, to the effect that he had, on or about the first day of March, 1866, commenced an improvement on the lands in question, describing them as the northwest of southeast quarter, and the north half of southwest quarter, and the southeast quarter of southeast quarter of section thirty-four, in town-one south, of range twelve west — that he had filed his application to pre-empt the same, in said office, on the thirteenth day of August, 1869 — that the improvements on said land consisted of a barn and corn-crib, and between fifty and seventy-five acres under fence and in cultivationT and that he made this application for the purpose of availing himself of the benefit of the pre-emption laws of the state, and to procure a deed to the land; and that he had not theretofore availed himself of the benefit of said preemption laws. This application was supported by the affidavits of P. Thornton and John D. Thornton, “citizens of said county, to me well known to be men of credibility,”' as recited in the affidavit, who swore that they knew the-facts, as set forth in the foregoing affidavit of Miller, of their.own personal knowledge to be true. The certificates of these affidavits were signed only by the words “Deputy Commissioner of State Lands,” with a blank above for file-name; but it is well proved that the oaths were actually taken before the deputy commissioner, and that, by mistake and inadvertence, he neglected to write bis name in the blank left for that purpose. The lands were paid for by bonds $120, and fees $5.50. Having filed these papers,. Miller left town, expecting to return in October, and find his patent ready.

On the second day of August, 1872, defendant Robert ”W. Gibbons, describing himself as “ administrator of C. Blakely’s estate,” made an affidavit before the clerk of' the circuit coui’t of Montgomery county, to the effect: that about the first day of January, 1850, he commenced an improvement on the north half of southwest quarter and northwest quarter of southeast quarter of section thirty-four, in township one south, range twenty-one west, and that, on the eleventh day of January, 1870, he had filed in the commissioner’s office his application for pre eruption;. that the improvements on said land consisted of about thirty acres under fence and in cultivation, and a good corn-crib and stables — worth $800; that he made the affidavit for the purpose of availing himself of the benefit of the pre emption laws of the state, and to procure a deed; and that he had not availed himself, theretofore, of the benefit of the pre-emption laws. This affidavit was supported by what purports to be the affidavits of II. S. Lamb aud Shelton Eulton, credible citizens, to the effect that they knew the facts set forth in the foregoing affidavit to be true of their own personal knowledge. With regard to this affidavit, Shelton Eulton swears positively, in his deposition, that he never made it, before the clerk of the Montgomery circuit court, or anyone else; that he was not in Montgomery county, or a citizen of it, in 1850, and did not, at that time, know R. W. Gibbons, the defendant, nor the land in controversy.

These papers were presented to the commissioner of state lands, who arrested the issuance of the patent to complainant, and declared a contest for pre-emption, which was set for hearing on the eighteenth day of November, following. Of this Miller had verbal but no formal notice.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Horn Et Ux. v. Gibson
1909 OK 174 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1909)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 Ark. 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-gibbons-ark-1879.