Nuckolls v. Mantooth

350 S.W.2d 512, 234 Ark. 64, 1961 Ark. LEXIS 533
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 30, 1961
Docket5-2392 & 5-2393
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 350 S.W.2d 512 (Nuckolls v. Mantooth) 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
Nuckolls v. Mantooth, 350 S.W.2d 512, 234 Ark. 64, 1961 Ark. LEXIS 533 (Ark. 1961).

Opinion

George Rose Smith, J.

These two appeals were consolidated in this court. The principal case is a partition suit in which the main question is that of determining the exact proportion in which the parties own two adjoining 120-acre tracts as tenants in common. In that appeal the two appellants, Joe and Bill Nuckolls, contend that the chancellor erred in awarding each of them only an undivided two-ninths interest in each tract. The other appeal, from the probate court, involves a distribution of accrued rent and will be governed by the decision in the chancery case.

The facts are not simple. The parties’ common source of title, Samuel Anthony, formerly owned the entire 240 acres. Samuel had four children: Kate Sheppard, Edgar Anthony, Ethel Washam, and Emma Man-tooth. In 1914 Samuel conveyed the 240 acres (and other land) to two of his children, Kate and Edgar, for life, with remainder to their bodily heirs. In an earlier case, Hutchison v. Sheppard, 225 Ark. 14, 279 S. W. 2d 33, we construed the 1914 deed and held that (a) it created a life estate in the two grantees during their joint lives; (b) it created a life estate in the surviving grantee upon the death of the other grantee without bodily heirs; and (c) there remained in the grantor. Samuel, a reversion that would become an estate in possession upon the death of both grantees without bodily heirs. We also held that Samuel’s reversion could be transferred by deed, by will, or by inheritance.

Samuel died in 1917. By the residuary clause in his will his reversionary interest in the 240 acres passed to three of his children, Kate, Edgar, and Emma Man-tooth, equally.

In 1924 Kate and Edgar, who were entitled to possession as joint life tenants under their father’s 1914 deed, divided the land by partition deed. The north 120 acres, known as the Sheppard farm, went to Kate, and the south 120 acres, later known as the Hutchison farm, went to Edgar. The construction of this partition deed is really the principal point of controversy in the present appeals.

From this point on the two tracts have different chains of title. We consider first the Hutchison farm, which Edgar received in the partition. In 1927 Edgar conveyed his entire interest in this 120-acre tract to Yirgil Hutchison. In 1946 Emma Mantooth, who owned one third of the reversionary interest, died intestate. Her interest passed to her two sons, the appellees Loyd Mantooth and Herman Ireland. In 1953 Edgar died without bodily heirs.

Our decision in the first case was handed down in 1955, in a case involving only the Hutchison farm. In 1956 that farm was partitioned by a proceeding in equity. All the owners (Kate Sheppard, the two sons of Emma Mantooth, and the remote grantees of Yirgil Hutchison) were parties to that partition suit. It is now immaterial whether the court’s decree correctly determined the ownership of the parties, for there was no appeal. The partition was by public sale, and the land was bought in by Kate Sheppard as to an undivided four ninths and by Emma Mantooth’s two sons as to the other undivided five ninths. Kate died intestate in 1959, survived only by two adopted sons, the appellants Joe and Bill Nuckolls, who inherited her interest in the land.

The chancellor held that -the Hutchison farm is :owned two ninths hy Joe Nuckolls, two ninths by Bill Nuckolls, and the other five ninths by Emma Man-tooth’s two sons. This decision is plainly correct, for these interests conform to the purchase at the partition sale in 1956. Indeed, the only contention made by the appellants upon this phase of the case is that they are riot bound by that decree, it being argued that they were bodily heirs of Kate Sheppard and should therefore have been made parties to the partition suit in 1956. The short answer to this contention is that adopted children are not bodily heirs of their foster parent. Davis v. Davis, 219 Ark. 623, 243 S. W. 2d 739.

The title to the Sheppard farm presents a more difficult question. This property was not involved in any of the earlier litigation and has not been the subject of any conveyance since Kate and Edgar divided it in 1924. Inasmuch as both Kate and Edgar, the grantees in the 1914 deed, died without bodily heirs it will be seen that their father’s reversionary interest eventually ripened into complete title. One third of that reversionary interest passed under Samuel Anthony’s will to Emma Mantooth, and that one third is now owned by Emma’s two sons. The chancellor correctly so held. Another third of the reversionary interest passed by Samuel’s will to Kate Sheppard, and that one third is now owned by Kate’s heirs, her adopted sons. The chancellor correctly so held.

The dispute centers upon the remaining one-third interest in the Sheppard 120 acres. Under Samuel’s will this reversionary interest passed to Edgar Anthony. The question is, was that one third conveyed by Edgar to Kate in the 1924 partition deed! The appellees contend that it was not. In that view the interest was still owned by Edgar at his death intestate in 1953; it would now be .vested one third in Kate’s heirs, one third in Emma’s heirs, and one third in the other sister, the appellee Ethel Washam. The chancellor so held. On the other hand, the appellants contend that by the partition deed Edgar conveyed his reversionary interest in the Sheppard 120 acres to Ms sister Kate. In that view the interest is now owned by the appellants as the heirs of their foster mother.

The partition deed is perhaps open to either interpretation. It will "be remembered that in 1924 Edgar and Kate each owned three separate estates in the entire 240 acres: (1) A joint life estate as long as both were living; (2) an inchoate right to a life estate by survivorship if the other life tenant should die without bodily heirs; and (3) a one-third interest in the reversion, received under the will of Samuel Anthony. It seems probable that Edgar and Kate did not realize in 1924 that they had a reversionary interest in the land, but their deed is to be construed according to its language rather than according to the parties’ subjective intent. Stegall v. Bugh, 228 Ark. 632, 310 S. W. 2d 251.

The material parts of the partition deed read as follows:

“Whereas, the said Edgar Anthony and the said Kate Nuckolls are the owners for life as tenants in common and are in possession of the following described lands [240 acres described], and;
“Whereas, the said tenants in common acquired a life estate in said lands under ... a certain deed of conveyance from their father, Samuel W. Anthony, dated the 27th day of January, 1914 . . . and;
“Whereas, the said tenants in common have agreed upon a partition of said lands so that each may have and hold Ms or her interest therein in severalty and in dividing said lands have made the allotment to each as near in value as possible;
“Now, Therefore, for the purpose of making partition of all the real property above described, and in consideration thereof, the parties hereto do mutually covenant and agree, each with the other, as follows:

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Related

Dickson v. Renfro
569 S.W.2d 66 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1978)
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536 S.W.2d 109 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1976)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
350 S.W.2d 512, 234 Ark. 64, 1961 Ark. LEXIS 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nuckolls-v-mantooth-ark-1961.