Mooney v. Cooledge

30 Ark. 640
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 30 Ark. 640 (Mooney v. Cooledge) 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
Mooney v. Cooledge, 30 Ark. 640 (Ark. 1875).

Opinion

Walker, J.:

The plaintiffs, as heirs of Henry F. Mooney, deceased, filed their bill in the Phillips Circuit Court against Cooledge and others, owners of Evergreen Cemetery, to have their title quieted to one acre of land, and to enjoin the defendants from removing the bodies of the dead persons buried upon said acre of ground, and from making roads and thoroughfares on the same. The claim which the plaintiffs set up to this land is by descent, and by occupancy and adverse possession.

The defendants answered and denied the title and possession of plaintiffs, and set up title in one Fleetwood Hanks to said lands.

The case was heard upon bill, answer, exhibits an$l depositions, and a decree rendered in favor of defendants, from which plaintiffs have appealed.

The defendants contend that the plaintiffs, by their bill, show defendants to be in possession of the land in dispute, and claim to be the legal owners thereof, and if entitled to redress, they should seek it by an action at law, not in equity.

As a general proposition, the party who sues to remove a cloud upon his title should put himself in possession of the land. If out of possession and holding the legal title, he should sue in ejectment for possession, or in trespass for ordinary damages sustained. Birt there are exceptions to this rule, one of which is, that where the damages threatened, or being done, are irreparable, or where, from the nature of the injury, no just estimate of damages can be ascertained, the party receiving or threatened with such injury may, by a bill in chancery, restrain the act of trespass or violence threatened.

We think the facts stated in the bill bring the ease clearly within this exception.

The plaintiffs allege that this acre of land was, and for many years had been, the property of their ancestor, and had all the while been claimed and used as a family burial ground; that many of their near relatives and esteemed friends were buried there; that defendants, the owners of Evergeen Cemetery, have extended the cemetery upon this land, fenced it in, laid off part of the lands upon which their dead relatives and friends have been buried as an addition to said cemetery ; had given notice to them to remove the remains of their dead relatives and'friends, and were threatening to do so.

'• For such an injury as this there could be no standard by which to estimate the damages sustained. The extent of the injury to be inflicted must depend upon the sympathies and feelings of the parties injured, and their peculiar views as to the sacredness of the spot where the remains rest. Whilst it might be a matter of little moment to some, it might inflict an irreparable injury to others, which money could not compensate^ Under the state of case presented, we think that the suit was properly brought in a court of equity.

The plaintiffs claim title to this property as heirs of Henry F. Mooney, and they also claim that by a continued, uninterrupted, adverse possession for more than thirty years, they have acquired a valid title to the land.

We will first consider the validity of the title claimed by defendants.

It appears that Henry F. Mooney, under whom title is claimed, was, in the year 1835, the owner of a tract of one hundred and forty-seven acres of land near Helena, Arkansas, and, on that day, that he conveyed the same by deed to Milliner Hanks, Fleetwood Hanks and George W. Ferebee. The land sold is described in the deed as follows: “ Bounded on the east by the Mississippi river, on the north by a tract of land belonging to William Mooney, on the west by the public surveys, and on the south by a tract of land owned by [them the said M. Hanks, Fleetwood Hanks, and George W. Ferebee, being that part of a tract of land originally containing 640 acres, which Avas confirmed to, and patented in the name of, William H. Glass, which he, the said Henry F. Mooney inherited from his father, the late Daniel Mooney, deceased, and containing about 146 acres. The number of acres which fell to the share of said Henry F. Mooney being about 147 acres, and one acre of the same, to include the graveyard and burial ground, having been previously deeded to him,-the said George W. Ferebee, to be by him forever kept as a burial ground. The aforesaid number of about 146 acres remaining.”

This is the description given, and these the boundaries given of the tract sold, and upon a fair consideration of which, there can be no doubt but that Henry F. Mooney intended -to convey only 146 acres, leaving out one acre, which he says he had before that time conveyed to Ferrebee to be kept as a graveyard. It is but fair to infer, too, that a gráveyard spot had been selected, and that persons had already been buried in it, and, to this extent, the evidence is conclusive.

But there is nothing in the language of the reservation, nor in the evidence, to locate this acre of ground upon any particular part of the' 147 acre tract, and whilst the evidence most clearly shows that this burial ground was claimed by Henry F. Mooney as his, and was frequently used for that purpose, for the interment of members of his family, and by request also several friends, and perhaps, occasionally by strangers without his permission, there is nothing shown to give this spot a location upon the tract sold. It was not inclosed, no monuments, no boundary lines, in fact nothing to identify the spot so selected, except the graves dug, and the interments made upon it, with nothing whatever to indicate upon what part of the 147 acre survey it was situated.

The copy of a survey purporting to have been made by a surveyor and filed as an exhibit was of recent date, since Evergreen Cemetery was inclosed, and seems to commence on a line of the cemetery, has no established or known place of beginning, which had an existence when the spot was selected as a burial ground, and, so far as shown, was not made under an order of court, or upon notice to defendants, or other claimants of adjoining lands.

Under this state of facts the survey was not competent evidence for any purpose.

. The object of the descriptive part of a grant, says Washburn, is to define what the parties intended, the one to convey, the other to receive. Washburn on Real Property, vol. 3, p. 333.

That the grantor intended to except out of this grant, an acre of land, including his family burial ground, is clear enough. In order to effect this purpose, it was necessary to define its location, to identify it, so that it might be known upon what part of the tract this acre was to be taken.

In the case of Doe v. Porter, 3 Ark., 18, it was held by this court, that in all conveyances the grantor must describe the thing granted with sufficient certainty to ascertain its identity.

In the case of Hughes v. Streeter, 24 Ill., 647, the land was described as “a part of eighty acres containing seventy-four acres more or less.” This was held insufficient, was so indefinite that the land could not be located.

In the cast of Laflin v. Harrington et al., 16 Illinois, 304, “a deed for twelve acres of a tract of land described by metes and bounds, was held invalid for want of certainty in the description of the land intended to be conveyed.”

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Bluebook (online)
30 Ark. 640, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mooney-v-cooledge-ark-1875.