Puckett v. Glendenning

205 S.W. 454, 135 Ark. 551, 1918 Ark. LEXIS 424
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 10, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 205 S.W. 454 (Puckett v. Glendenning) 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
Puckett v. Glendenning, 205 S.W. 454, 135 Ark. 551, 1918 Ark. LEXIS 424 (Ark. 1918).

Opinion

HART, J.,

(after stating the facts). It is first contended by counsel for the plaintiff that the guardian’s sale of the lands in controversy is void because the probate. court had approved the final settlement of the guardian and discharged her and the sureties on her bond as. such guardian before an order directing the sale ■of the lands was made. "We do not agree with counsel in this contention. On the third day of its October term, 1906, the probate court approved and confirmed what was called the third annual and final settlement of Mrs. Mittie Polk, as guardian of the plaintiff and her other minor children. The order concludes as follows: “The court further finds that said guardian has properly ■charged herself, with all amounts coming into her hands "belonging to her said wards. And that the credits claimed "by her are supported by good and valid vouchers, and said settlement being found in all things correct, same is fully approved and confirmed and ordered recorded in the proper record of settlements of administrators, guardians, etc., and the said guardian with sureties are hereby discharged and released from any further liability thereon.”

(1) On the same day the court made an order directing the guardian to sell the lands in controversy for the maintenance and education of the minors. The lands were duly appraised by appraisers thereafter appointed by the probate court and the appraisement was approved by the said court. On .November 14, 1906, the guardian filed her report of sale of said lands- and the same was approved and confirmed by the probate court and a deed was ordered to be executed by the guardian to the purchaser. On Novembr 24, 1907, a petition was filed by the next friend of said minors to have the letters of guardianship of Mrs. Mittie Polk revoked. On the 20th of January, 1908, Mrs. Mittie Polk filed a response in the probate court to this petition which also purports to be a settlement with her wards for the proceeds of the sale of the real estate in controversy. The record does not show that the petition or the response were ever acted upon by the probate court. When the whole record is considered we are of the opinion that the court did not discharge the guardian before the order for the sale of the lands was made. We think that the only effect of that part of the order which we have quoted above was to approve and confirm the settlement made by the guardian and to discharge and release her and her sureties from any further liability as to the matters embraced in her said settlement. This is shown by the concluding-part of such order as follows: “And the said guardian with sureties are hereby discharged and released from any further liability thereon.” The word “thereon” evidently refers to the settlement and not to the discharge from the guardianship. The fact that the order confirming the guardian’s sale and the order directing the guardian to sell the minor’s interest in the lands were made on the same day indicates that the court did not intend to discharge the guardian from the guardianship, but only to discharge and release her and her sureties as to the matters embraced in her settlement. We' are strengthened in this view from the fact that the' same judge immediately made an order directing her to sell the lands and afterwards appointed appraisers, approved her report of sale and ordered her to execute a deed to the purchaser at the guardian’s sale.

In Ex parte Baldwin, 118 Ark. 416, it was held that when two orders are made on the same day with reference to the same matter, the subsequent order tends to explain and control the former.

(3) It is also contended that the lands sold constituted the homestead of the minors and that the sale is void because.the order of sale does not show that there were no debts existing against their deceased father. See Ex parte Tipton, 123 Ark. 389. In that case we held that the record of the probate court in the matter of selling the minor’s homestead upon the application of the guardian should show the fact that there were no debts, and that when the record is silent on that point the order of sale is void. The record in the instant case does not contain any showing that there were no debts against the estate. This brings us to the question of whether or not the land ordered sold was the homestead of the minors. The evidence shows that Prank Polk owned two tracts of land in Ouachita County. Prior to the time he moved on the land in controversy, he lived on another tract of land known as the old Polk Place. He had resided there for many years and all of his five children had been born there. He had a comfortable and substantial dwelling house and a good barn and outhouses. He purchased a herd of one hundred head of cattle and in the fall of 1899 moved on the land in controversy where there was a better pasture for his cattle and resided there until his death in March, 1900.

The deposition of the plaintiff was taken on the 6th day of April, 1917. According to her testimony, she was twenty-three years of age and resided at Little Hock, Arkansas. She had not seen the lands involved in this suit and had never received any of the proceeds from their sale. She had not heard directly from her mother for six or seven years. She stated that at the time of her father’s death he was living on the land involved in this suit and that it was his homestead. On cross-examination she stated that she was not able to give the numbers of the particular forty acres of land on which her father resided at the time of his death but that the land in question was the homestead and that they never had any other home; that all of the children were born there and that her grandfather and grandmother were buried there.

Edwin Morgan testified that in the fall or winter of the year 1899, Frank Polk moved on the land in controversy; that Polk told him that the bottom land was better than the land on which he had been living; that Polk did not say anything about how long he was going to live on the bottom place.

Brad Polk testified that Frank Polk was his uncle, and that he was intimately associated with him prior to his death; that in the fall of 1899, his uncle had one hundred head of cattle and moved on the land in controversy because there was better pasture land there; that his uncle did not talk like he would ever move back to the Old Polk Place, but stated that he might go to Texas; that if he did.not go to Texas, he thought he would build a house on the bottom place; that he, (witness,) considered the bottom place the only home Polk had when he moved there; that Frank Polk was going to send his cattle to Texas and turn them over to his brother-in-law ; that he might move to Texas the next fall if things turned out right; that the bottom place had a good barn and good lots and pastures. On cross-examination he stated that the house on the bottom place was a small one and that a family of negroes had lived in it before his uncle moved there; that Polk cleaned out the house and papered it before he moved in but did not make any other repairs on it:

On behalf of the defendant, J. G.

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Bluebook (online)
205 S.W. 454, 135 Ark. 551, 1918 Ark. LEXIS 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/puckett-v-glendenning-ark-1918.