Reed v. Rumph

280 S.W. 357, 170 Ark. 258, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 365
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 11, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 280 S.W. 357 (Reed v. Rumph) 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
Reed v. Rumph, 280 S.W. 357, 170 Ark. 258, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 365 (Ark. 1926).

Opinions

Appellants, who were the plaintiffs below, allege in their complaint that they, together with their sister Nannie Berry, were the sole heirs-at-law of their mother, Fannie Reed, who died April 2, 1885, and that at the time of their mother's death she owned a 160-acre tract of land in Ouachita County. That Fannie Reed, their mother, had mortgaged this land in 1885 to one D. W. Chandler to secure advances to be made by said Chandler to enable Fannie Reed to make a crop in the year 1885, and upon the security of this mortgage Chandler made advances to Fannie Reed amounting to $51.82. That Fannie Reed died before the crop was gathered, and it was agreed between these appellants and their sister Nannie Berry that this sister should remain *Page 259 in possession of the land and out of the proceeds of the crop should pay Chandler the indebtedness secured by the mortgage to him. That this was done and the indebtedness fully paid, and that, pursuant to this agreement in regard to the possession, Nannie Berry continued to occupy the land after the death of Fannie Reed, it being understood that Nannie Berry should occupy and cultivate the land and keep the taxes paid, her possession being for the benefit of herself and her tenants in common, to-wit, her brother and two sisters, who were the plaintiffs below and are the appellants here. That Nannie Berry made a crop on the land in 1886, and obtained advances to enable her to do so from Chandler in the sum of $82. That this debt of $82 was the personal obligation of Nannie Berry, and was not secured by the mortgage which her mother had executed the previous year, but it was alleged that this debt of $82 was fully paid, and that nothing was due Chandler on account of advances for either 1885 or 1886.

It was further alleged that, notwithstanding the fact that nothing was due under the mortgage, one J. C. Russell, in 1892, applied for and secured letters of administration on the estate of Fannie Reed, and thereafter the claim of Chandler for $82 was probated against the estate, and the land was sold in satisfaction of this demand.

Various irregularities in this sale are alleged; in fact, a conspiracy is charged between Chandler and Nannie Berry to procure the sale of the land. Chandler became the purchaser at the administrator's sale, which was confirmed, and, after cutting the timber off the land, Chandler conveyed it to Nannie Berry by a quitclaim deed. The administrator's deed was dated August 2, 1895, and the deed from Chandler to Nannie Berry was executed February 11, 1904.

We do not review the testimony tending to establish the allegations of the complaint in which it was prayed that this deed from Chandler to Nannie Berry be canceled, *Page 260 for the reason that it appears that the plaintiffs here were the plaintiffs in a former suit, which was decided adversely to them and is conclusive of the question.

Nannie Berry died in 1916, and was survived by an only child, a daughter named Parthenia, who had married one Arthur Sewell, and to this union two children were born, one a son named A.W., the other a son named John W. Sewell. These children are minors, and their mother Parthenia is dead.

In 1911 plaintiffs here brought suit to recover an undivided three-fourths interest in the land, and partition thereof was prayed. This complaint recited the ownership of the land by Fannie Reed, the execution and payment of the mortgage hereinbefore referred to, the fraudulent appointment of an administrator of her estate, the probate of a demand against her estate which she did not owe and which had been paid by the person who did owe it, the irregularity of the appraisement, the inadequacy of the price at which the land was sold by the administrator, and the collusion between Nannie Berry and Chandler by which the sale was effected. This complaint prayed that the deed to Nannie Berry from Chandler should be treated as a conveyance to her as trustee for the benefit of herself and her tenants in common, the plaintiffs here, who were the plaintiffs there.

Upon these allegations the court was asked to appoint a commissioner to state an account as to the rents, etc., and that the mortgage executed by Fannie Reed be canceled and held for naught, and that Nannie Berry be declared a trustee under the deed to her from Chandler, and that partition of the land be decreed.

The depositions in that case were lost, but the pleadings were produced and offered in evidence at the trial from which the present appeal comes, and it appears from the answer filed in that case that issue was joined as to all the allegations of the complaint, and the answer alleged that title was claimed under the administrator's deed and also by virtue of the more than seven years' *Page 261 possession by Chandler after receiving the administrator's deed before conveying the land to Nannie Berry. An attorney who participated in the trial of that cause testified that a day of the court was consumed in the trial. At the conclusion of that trial a decree was entered dismissing the compliant as being without equity. This decree was offered in evidence, and it is therein recited that the cause was heard on the pleadings and exhibits, the depositions of witnesses and documentary evidence, from all of which the court found "that the complaint of plaintiffs should be dismissed for want of equity and as not established by the proof introduced in said cause."

Upon this finding of fact it was there decreed "that the plaintiffs take nothing herein by virtue of their complaint, and that the same be and is hereby dismissed for want of equity, and as having not been established by the proof." Upon this record the defendants herein entered a plea of res judicata.

Appellants now say this plea is unavailing, as nothing more was there adjudged than that the complaint was without equity, and that this finding resulted from the fact that the defendants were in the actual possession of the land and had alleged a title adverse to the plaintiffs, and upon this finding nothing remained for the chancery court to do but to dismiss the cause and remit the plaintiffs to their action at law.

We do not, however, so understand the effect of the decree. The cause was not transferred to the law docket, as it might and should have been if the chancery court had found only that there was an adverse holding of the land which presented an issue triable at law.

The complaint prayed equitable relief by way of the cancellation of the mortgage, and the declaration of an existing trust, and, if the court had found that the testimony sustained the allegations raising these issues, the equitable relief prayed could have been granted as an incident thereto, and partition could also have been ordered. *Page 262

The chancery court had jurisdiction for this purpose, and that jurisdiction was invoked by the plaintiff, and, having acquired this jurisdiction, partition could have been decreed, had the testimony supported the allegations of the complaint, although defendants asserted an adverse holding. Trapnall v. Hill, 31 Ark. 345; Moore v. Gordon, 44 Ark. 334; Criscoe v. Hambrick, 47 Ark. 235; Hawkins v. Layne, 48 Ark. 544; Cannon v. Stevens,88 Ark. 610.

The case of Wheeler v. Bennett, 79 Ark. 210, sustains the plea of res judicata in the present case.

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Related

Consolidated Oil & Gas, Inc. v. Ryan
250 F. Supp. 600 (W.D. Arkansas, 1966)
Spruill v. Hamilton
181 S.W.2d 35 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1944)
Sewell v. Reed
71 S.W.2d 191 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
280 S.W. 357, 170 Ark. 258, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-v-rumph-ark-1926.