Pettus v. Wallace

29 Ark. 476
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 29 Ark. 476 (Pettus v. Wallace) 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
Pettus v. Wallace, 29 Ark. 476 (Ark. 1874).

Opinion

English, C. J.

Thomas E. Pettus and Mary E. Glenn brought an action, on the law side of the Phillips circuit court, against Benjamin E. Wallace, for the N. E. frl. qr. of sec. 2; part of the S. E. qr. of sec. 2, and the N. W. frl. qr. of sec. 1, township 2 S., range 2 E., containing as alleged in the complaint, 490 acres.

Wallace filed an answer containing a number of paragraphs, denying the plaintiffs’ alleged title and right of possession, pleading the statute of limitation, and setting up an equitable defense and counterclaim, which may be briefly stated as follows:

That on the 27th of May, 1862, he sold to Richard P. Glenn and Elias R. Carr the lands described in the complaint, and an additional tract, (S. W. qr. sec. 1, T. 2 S., R. 2 E.), making 650 acres, for $27.20 per acre. That for the three tracts described in the complaint, they paid him $13,328, in confederate money, and he executed and delivered to them a deed, which was recorded, but he retained possession of the lands, which he had never surrendered. That the consideration for the sale was illegal, and the deed void; and that plaintiffs purchased the lands of Glenn and Carr with knowledge of that fact. That having purchased the additional tract (160 acres) of one Nath. S. Turner, but obtained no deed therefor, he procured Turner to execute to Glenn & Carr a bond to make them a title on payment of the price agreed on, being $27.20 per acre, which they had never paid. He prayed that Glenn & Carr, Turner and plaintiffs be made defendants to his counterclaims, that the deed executed by him to Glenn & Carr for the three tracts described in the complaint be surrendered and canceled, and that he have a decree for the amount due on the additional tract. After the coming in of the answer of "Wallace setting up his equitable defense, and counterclaim, the cause was transferred to the chancery side of the court; and demurrers were interposed to some of the paragraphs of the answer, and ruled out, but no question grows out of them on this appeal.

To the paragraphs of the answer of Wallace, setting up his equitable defense, etc., the plaintiffs replied that they purchased the lands described in their complaint, in good faith, of Glenn & Carr, on the 25th of April, 1866, for $18,475, cash, and took their deed therefor of that date, without any knowledge of the equitable matters set up by Wallace.

Carr answered the counterclaim of Wallace, admitting that he and Glenn purchased the four tracts of land of Wallace in May, 1862, paid for the three tracts described in the original complaint in confederate money, and took his deed therefor, and the title bond of Turner for the additional tract. Avers that Wallace had a crop planted on the lands at the time of the purchase, and it was agreed between the parties that he should remain on the lands until he gathered his crop in the following fall, but that in the meantime respondent and Glenn were to have access thereto, etc. Respondent went east of the Mississippi intending to make arrangements for moving on to the lands the next year, but was prevented by the war from returning until after its close. On his return, he claimed rent of Wallace, but he insisted that the care and protection he had given the place during the war were worth the rent, and it was arranged that he should remain on the lands as a tenant of respondent and Glenn; and they never heard of his setting up any adverse claim to the lands in dispute, until after they sold and conveyed them to Pettus and Glenn. Respondent had been ready to pay for the additional tract but could get no deed therefor.

Wallace demurred to the reply of plaintiffs, and the answer of Carr to his counterclaim, and the demurrers were overruled.

Nathaniel S. Turner, who was made a defendant to the counterclaim of Wallace and Bart. Y. Turner, who was made a party thereto on his own motion, filed an answer and crossclaim.

They admit that Wallace sold the four tracts of land to-Glenn and Carr, and that they paid him in confederate money for the three tracts described in the original complaint, and took his deed therefor; as alleged.

But they aver that they, as executors of Edmond Turner, deceased, sold the four tracts of land to Wallace, under an order of the probate court of Phillips county, about the 1st of January 1860, .for $12.75 per acre. That he paid them one-third of the purchase money 1st of March following, and was to pay them one-third 1st March 1861, and the remaining-third, 1st March 1862, but had made but the one payment, and that the other two-thirds of the purchase money, being-$2,762.50 each, with interest from the time they severally matured, remained due and unpaid. That Wallace was let into possession of the lands at the time he so purchased them, and remained in possession until the 9th of January 1872, when he surrendered possession of three-fourths of the lands to Nathaniel S. Turner, for himself and Bart. Y. Turner, and Palmer & Saunders, their attorneys in this case, and that Nathaniel S. Turner was still in the actual possession of three-fourths of the lands, by metes and bounds, as agreed between him and Wallace. That they (the Turners) never made Wallace a deed or title bond for any part of the lands, or took his notes for the unpaid purchase money, nor was there any written contract of sale between them. They admit that when Wallace sold the lands to Glenn and Carr, being an entire sale of the four tracts, making 650 acres, Nathaniel S. Turner became a party to the contract, so far as to execute a bond to make them a title to the S. W. qr. of sec. 1, on payment of the purchase money, as alleged by Wallace; and that they (the Turners) would have made Glenn and Carr a title to this tract, if they had paid the purchase money; but they would not do so because they could not pay it in confederate money.

That the three tracts conveyed by Wallace to Glenn and Carr embraced all the improvements, and were the most valuable of the lands; and that the original plaintiffs were not innocent purchasers, etc.

They make the original plaintiffs, and Wallace and Glenn & Carr defendants to their crossclaim, and pray a decree for the balance of purchase money, with interest due to them from Wallace, and for satisfaction by sale of the lands.

It appears from the exhibits made part of the crossclaim of the Turners, that Edmond Turner, by his will, appointed his sons, Nathaniel- S., and Bart. Y. Turner, the crossclaimants, his executors, and directed them to sell his lands for one-third cash, and the remaining two-thirds on a credit of one and two years, without interest. That by an order of the probate court of Phillips county, where the will was probated, made upon the petition of the executors, they were directed to sell the four tracts of land in controversy in this suit, at public sale, on the 28th November 1859, on the terms indicated in the will, to pay debts of the estate. That the executors made a written report to the court, in which they stated that they had accordingly offered the lands at public sale, and no one offering what was deemed their fair value, they bid them off for the benefit of the estate; and that they had afterward sold them at private sale to Wallace for $12.75 per acre, one-third in cash, March 1, 1860, and the remainder on a credit of one and two years, without interest; and they prayed that the sale be confirmed, and they authorized to make a deed, etc.

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Related

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29 Ark. 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pettus-v-wallace-ark-1874.