Pindall v. Trevor

30 Ark. 249
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 30 Ark. 249 (Pindall v. Trevor) 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
Pindall v. Trevor, 30 Ark. 249 (Ark. 1875).

Opinion

C. B. Moore, Sp. J.:

This was a suit brought on the chancery side of the Desha Circuit Court, to the fall term of 1867, by Wiggs and others, the heirs of Mrs. Maria L. Church, against Lafayette J. Carroll, Wm. R. Anderson, John A.. Klein, Carroll, Hoy & Co., Elihu Randolph, W. Warren Johnson and F. S. & F. G. Schlessinger, on original bill, and by Trevor & Colgate against the heirs of Mrs. Church, Randolph and others on cross bill.-

Complainants in the original bill allege that by an agreement in writing, dated January 1st, 1855, Wm. R. Amderson covenanted and promised with and to John A. Klein and Jacob Peale, for the use and benefit of Maria L. Church, on the fulfillment of certain promises of Klein and Peale, the payment of taxes, etc., and for the expressed consideration of $2,900 paid down, and two writings obligatory of Klein and Peale, each for the sum of $1,450 payable respectively on the 1st of January, 1856, and 1st of January, 1857, to make or cause to be made to them, a deed with usual covenants of warranty, to the West half of Northeast quarter of section thirty-five, and the Southeast quarter of section twenty-six (less eight acres specifically excepted) all in township nine, South of range two West, and containing in all 232 acres.

That the purchase of this land by Klein and Peale was made with the money of Mrs. Church, the mother of all the complainants, except James A. Wiggs, who is the husband of Lucy, •one of the heirs; that Mrs. Church died soon after the purchase, and that by her death the beneficial interest in the land was cast on complainants. That the land was held in trust, by Klein and Peale, for Mrs. Church and her heirs. That Klein and Peale, in fraud of the rights of complainants, on the 1st day of January, 1857, sold the lands to Lafayette J. Carroll, for the express consideration of $6,000 payable five years after date with eight per cent, interest, and that Carroll executed his note to Klein as "guardian of the heirs of Maria L. Church for the amount and payable as above stated.

After this sale to Carroll, Klein and Peale instructed Anderson in writing to make a deed to Carroll for the land, and to reserve a lien in the deed for the purchase money.

That on the 10th of April, 1857, Anderson executed a deed to Carroll with covenants of warranty and relinquishment of dower for the express consideration of $5,800; but that Anderson, in neglect and violation of his instructions, incorporated no lien in the deed.

Complainants aver that Klein and Peale aoted without authority in selling the lands to Carroll, though Klein was the guardian of Mrs. Church’s children, but even if he had authority that Anderson made the deed, without reserving a lien as expressly directed, that Carroll had full notice of the trust in Klein and Peale, and of Anderson’s violation of his instructions, and claim the deed to Carroll is absolutely null and void.

Peale died after the execution of the deed to Carroll, and' his heirs are not made parties to the suit.

At the date of filing the original bill complainants were all minors except Mrs. Wiggs, who had recently become of age.. Immediatlely after the execution of the deed to Carroll, he took possession of the lands, and has retained it ever since.

Complainants further aver that in the exercise of his ownership or pretended ownership of the lands, Carrroll permitted apparent incumbrances on them which are clouds on the claim and title of complainants. These incumbrances consist of judgments against Carroll, one for about $800 in favor of defendant Randolph, and one in favor of Carroll, Hoy & Co., for nearly $9,000, both obtained in the Desha Circuit Court on the 1st day of November, 1866, and a deed of trust executed by Lafayette J. Carroll and wife, on the 12th of February 1.8$7. to W. Warren Johnson as trustee for F. S. & F. G. Schlessinger, to the land in question and a large amount of other lands.

Complainants pray that the title to the lands described in their bill be decreed to them, their title quieted and that the encumbrances be set aside and held for naught. Or that, if the conveyance to Carroll by Anderson be held legal and valid, the $6,000 note executed by Carroll to Klein, with the interest thereon, be decreed a lien on the lands in complainants’ favor and the lands be sold to satisfy the same, and for general relief.

Several of the defendants filed answers to this bill. Randolph filed special demurrer, which was sustained, with leave to complainants to amend their bill, wliioh they afterwards did, setting out, with more accuracy and formality, the averments of the bill first filed.

Carroll, Hoy & Co. filed a formal answer. As they have never taken any step beyond obtaining their judgment against L. J. Carroll, their interest in the case will not be further noticed.

W. Warren Johnson, trustee for the Schlessingers, also answered, setting up his trust deed, and claiming to be an innocent purchaser of the lands without notice.

Defendant Randolph answered the bill as amended, denying all knowledge of the transactions except as shown by the contract between Anderson and Klein and Peale. He charges the facts to be that in 1854 Anderson was the owner of the lands described in the complainants’ bill, and in that year he made a verbal conditional agreement with Mrs. Church for the sale of the land for $5,800, of which $2,900 was to be paid January 1st, 1855; $1,450 January 1st, 1856, and $1,450 January 1st, 1857, and that on failure of Mrs. Church to make any of these payments when due, she was to forfeit the payment, with the land. Claiming that the contract of sale was verbal, and no memorandum or agreement in writing, Randolph sets up and relies on the statute of frauds.. He claims that Mrs. Church never paid any part of the purchase money, except the $1,250, within the time specified in the verbal contract, and that she forfeited the contract. That afterwards Anderson resold the lands to Klein and Peale, for the unpaid and deferred payments that Mrs. Church was to have made $1,650 cash, and two bonds of Klein and Peale for $1,450 each, due respectively January 1st, 1856, and January 1st, 1857, and that the agreement between Klein and Peale and Anderson was then executed and dated as of January 1st, 1855, and so framed as to cover and include the $1,250 paid by Mrs. Church. ’ . '

That Klein and Peale paid the second payment and exercised ownership over the lands, and tried to sell it as their own, and insists that they were the true owners of the equitable title; that they made default in the last payment, and sold their equitable title to Carroll and áuthorized Anderson, on payment by Carroll of the money due him, to convey the lands to Carroll; that Carroll made the last payment and received a deed from Anderson, which was acknowledged and recorded, and that Carroll received possession of the land from Klein and Peale, and continued in possession with no cloud on his recorded title.

He denies that Klein and Peale were Mrs. Church’s agents or paid the money out of her assets; denies all material allegations of the bill, except the recovery of his judgment, and that of Carroll, Hoy & Co., and the execution of the trust deed to W.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Ark. 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pindall-v-trevor-ark-1875.