Moore v. Woodall

40 Ark. 42
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 40 Ark. 42 (Moore v. Woodall) 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
Moore v. Woodall, 40 Ark. 42 (Ark. 1882).

Opinion

S. W. Williams, Sp. J.

The Plaintiff, John P. Moore, brought an action of ejectment in this case in the Circuit Court of Phillips county against the defendant for certain lands, described in the complaint, lying in that county, to the possession of which plaintiff averred that he was entitled, and that the defendant withheld it. The complaint exhibits, and plaintiff claims title under the following conveyances :

1. A deed to Thomas M. Jacks from Jacob Trieber as commissioner appointed by a decree of the Circuit Court of Phillips County, rendered on the 20th day of May, 1876, in a certain cause therein pending, wherein S. P. Delatour was plaintiff, and S. W. Woodall, BythénaE. Woodall, Arthur B. Woodall, Mary E. Woodall and D. E. Holland as guardian of said Bythena E., Arthur B., and Mary.E. Wood-all, were defendants, which deed was dated the 27th day of May, 1878.

This deed recites the rendition of the decree in the above cause, for four hundred and sixty two 85-100 dollars and cost, and the order to sell in default of payment. That the Commissioner advertised and sold the land on tour month's credit, on the 26th day of May, 1877, in front of the court house at Helena, and after making all necessary recitals to make the deed good on its face, in consideration of the amount of six hundred and fifty dollars bid and paid by Jacks, the Commissioner conveyed the land, to him. This deed was acknowledged and approved in open court.

2. A deed of Thomas M. Jacks and wife, and L. A. Fitzpatrick to plaintiff, dated 15th day of July, 1879.

3. Several tax deeds for different portions of the land made to plaintiff as assignee of Jacks, under purchases made by him at a tax sale on the 11th day of June, 1877, are also exhibited as a further evidence of title in plaintiff.

Arthur B. Woodall, Mary E. Woodall and Willie N. Woodall, on their motion and disclosure of interest, were made parties defendant; Arthur B , and Mary E., acting by their guardian, and Willie N. Woodall acting by next friend in applying to be made parties. They answer by guardian denying the ownership of the plaintiff to the lands in controversy ; allege that the lands were the property of S. W. Woodall in his lifetime, and that they were his sole heirs at law. They deny the plaintiff’s right of possession and deny that Mrs. M. J. Woodall, the original defendant, is in possession, but admit that she is in possession of 40 48-100 acres of it, which they describe, and that they are in possession of the remainder. The answer attacks the deeds and the decree of 1876 in the Delatour case, and averred that it was null and void for errors apparent upon its face, as well as for erroneous proceedings against themselves as infants. They proceed in this answer to set out objections to the several tax deeds and moved to transfer the cause to the equity side of the docket. On the 11th day of May, 1880, the cause was so transferred, and leave was given the infants to file a cross bill against plaintiff and such other parties as they might deem proper, and they filed a cross bill against plaintiff and Thomas M. Jacks, S. P. Delatour and M. J. Wood-all..

They averred that they were infants of tender years, aged respectively seventeen, fifteen, and six years. That their late father, S. W. Woodall, died intestate, on or about the year 1871, seized and possessed of the premises described in the original complaint. That upon his death the lands descended to them and brother, By than E. Woodall, as his sole heirs at law. That Bythan, their brother, had since died (this record nowhere informs us when), and the plaintiffs in this cross bill are his only heirs and are in possession of all the land except the dower above mentioned.

That M. J. Woodall made some arrangement with Delatour for the payment of the taxes of 1873 upon all the lands ; that he paid them and afterwards exhibited in Court below his bill for the enforcement of a supposed lien in his favor as an agent for the payment of said taxes against these “plaintiffs” and others and on the 20th day of May, 1876, obtained a decree condemning the lands to be sold for the satisfaction of said lien. Said lands were accordingly sold by the Commissioner to defendant Jacks and conveyed to him, and that Jacks conveyed to Moore. The plaintiffs in the cross bill exhibit a copy of the Delatour decree and proceed to assign errors, irregularities and defects in it.

This decree is based upon a claim for a lien as stated in the crossbill. M. J. Woodall, D. E. Holland as guardian of Bythena, Arthur B., and Mary E. Woodall, and said minors by name were made defendants to Delatour’s bill and were served with process, and a decree was rendered condemning the land, and Jacks, a stranger to the proceedings, and for aught that appears here, without notice of any irregularity or defect, bought the lands in the proceedings.

Counsel here claims that Willie N. Woodall was not a party to the Delatour suit, and the partial transcript they exhibit here does not disclose her name. Nor does it appear in the copy of the complaint in that case, but in the copy of the decree the cause is entitled, “Samuel P. Delatour v. S. W. Woodall and others.” Now in the cross bill so far from averring that she was not a party, Willie N., as one of the plaintiffs, by her next friend, says that the suit “was against plaintiffs,” in this cross bill, of which she was one. If she had made that issue, Moore would have been at liberty to have corrected it and shown that she was in some mode made a party, and was one of the “others” against whom the decree was rendered.

Both in this case and in the Delatour case, Mrs. Woodall, the mother, seems to be called M. J., and sometimes Mrs. S.

W., and sometimes S. W. Woodall, while Bythan is sometimes ealled Bythena in both cases.

In the Delatour case Mrs. Woodall, Bythena E. Woodall, Arthur B. Woodall, Mary E. Woodall and Holland, their Guardian, were made parties and were served with process. The Court committed an error in holding that Delatour had a lien, as held by this Court in the case of Peay, ad’r. of Shall v. Field, 30 Arkansas, 600.

The infants — defendants—in the Delatour case were ed with process and their Guardian was made a party, and served with process. It was his duty to defend the action as well as his right, Gantt’s Digest, See. 4493. Where regular Guardian is before the Court there is no necessity or propriety in appointing a Guardian ad litem. We therefore fail to find the irregularity complained of. To have declared a lien on the land in favor of Delatour was a serious error the Court. But did it avoid the decree or make it null?

For unless this was so, Jaek’s title under the Trieber deed, is good.

The Court below seems to have treated the cross bill' of these parties as being in the nature of a bill of review; and that Court rendered a decree setting aside Jack’s deed from Trieber as Commissioner under the Delatour decree, adjusted the Equities and right of redemption for the taxes paid under the Delatour decree as well as under the tax purchases of 11th of June, 1877.

It is needless for us to inquire here whether this was abstractly a right or wrong practice, or whether a bill of review would or would not lie.

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Bluebook (online)
40 Ark. 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-woodall-ark-1882.