Rogers v. Brooks

30 Ark. 612
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 30 Ark. 612 (Rogers v. Brooks) 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
Rogers v. Brooks, 30 Ark. 612 (Ark. 1875).

Opinion

English, Ch. J.:

In January, 1872, Wm. H. Rogers, as administrator of the estate of Mary Rogers, deceased, brought ejectment in the Phillips Circuit Court against Samuel H. Brooks for the south half of section fourteen, and the south half of section fifteen (except ten acres off of the north side of the southeast quarter of said section fifteen), township one south, range four east, 630 acres.

Brooks filed an answer and an equitable counter claim, alleging, in substance:

That early in February, 1868, plaintiff (Rogers) purchased of Willis Long the lands described in the complaint, for the consideration of $6300, of which sum he paid $4300 about the 18th of February, 1868, axid the remaining $2000 was to be paid by taking up a mortgage for that sum, executed by said Willis Long to Arthur Slaughter, dated 22d January, 1866, which was a lien upon the lands; that plaintiff and his wife, Mary Rogers, took up the mortgage by executing their note to Slaughter for $2333.33, dated 18th February, 1868, payable 1st December, of the same year, and secured by deed of trust executed by them upon the lands to John J. Hornor. Copies of the deeds referred to are made exhibits.

That at the time of said purchase, plaintiff proposed to defendant to go in with him in the purchase of one-half the lands, and that the" place should be equitably divided between them (though no time was set for-such division). That in the division plaintiff was to have choice of parts, and the party getting the improvements, dwelling house, etc., was to pay their estimated value. To which proposition defendant agreed, and moved with his family into the dwelling house on the place, where he had ever since resided. That about three weeks after defendant moved on to said place, plaintiff came to him and remarked that matters and things were very uncertain, and there was no telling what might happen, and that he believed he would take the deed to said lands in his wife’s name, but- that as between plaintiff and defendant that would make no difference; the deed should be made at the proper time.

That at the time of the first payment defendant furnished plaintiff with $808.19 of the purchase money paid by him, and that the remainder, plaintiff told defendant, came from a place he (plaintiff) sold in New York.

v That it was a fraud on the part of plaintiff to take the title to said lands in the name of his wife.

That on the 1st of November, 1868, defendant paid plaintiff $2000, part of the purchase money for one-half of said lands, which was received by him as such, and a receipt given therefor, which is made an exhibit.

That in the year 1869, plaintiff and defendant became partners in the working of the said plantation, so purchased of Long, and the Pillow place, on the river some three miles below Helena, and continued working said places in partnership for the years 1869 and 1870, and that the partnership continued on the Long place for the year 1871. That during all of said time defendant-furnished the supplies, teams, farming implements, and necessaries for carrying on said plantations, under an agreement with plaintiff that he should be allowed for all over one-half of the same, as a payment of the balance due upon said lands in the final settlement between them, and that there was no time fixed for the payment of said balance due, plaintiff stating that he did not care how long it remained unpaid, provided defendant would pay ten per cent interest.

That in marketing the crop of 1869, plaintiff overdrew more than the sum of $1,500. That in July, 1870, defendant paid plaintiff, of his own money, $300. That in September, 1870, defendant paid plaintiff, of his own money, $430, and on 16th November, 1870, $350.

That defendant as partner with plaintiff paid $400 interest each year to Arthur Slaughter, on the note secured by deed of trust as above stated, for the years 1869 and 1870, out bf the partnership fund from the crops of those years. That he had paid all of the taxes due upon the lands purchased as aforesaid except those for the year 1871.

That there never had been a settlement between himself and plaintiff bf the partnership affairs, although he had often applied to plaintiff to settle, and plaintiff had always evaded a settlement because he was largely in arrears.

That some two years after the purchase, the place was surveyed by the county surveyor for the purpose of division, and a plat of the survey is made an exhibit.

That the plaintiff made choice of the north part, leaving the south part, with the improvements, dwelling-houses, etc., to defendant, and which south part was valued to defendant by plaintiff at $4,000.

That the sum of $4,000 had long since been fully paid off and discharged, as would fully appear from the payments above recited, and a settlement of the partnership accounts between plaintiff and defendant.

That said Mary Rogers, wife of plaintiff, never paid one dollar of the purchase money for said place, and that the fraud perpetrated by plaintiff in procuring said Willis Long to make title to her should not be allowed to deprive defendant of his rights in the premises.

That Mary Rogers left two minor children, Kate and Alfred, her heirs at law.'

That no written agreement was ever entered into between plaintiff and defendant in regard to said lands, nor had defendant any written evidence of title, etc.

That the division of the lands made by the surveyor, was agreed to and acquiesced in at the time by both plaintiff and defendant, and possession thereupon limited and narrowed accordingly.

That since the making of the survey defendant had not claimed any right or title to the lands north of the division line, except as a partner with plaintiff in the cultivation of the place up to the termination of the partnership, about the 1st of January, 1871, and since that'time he had not claimed or been in possession of any part of the lands north of the division line.

That since the making of the division, plaintiff had excused himself from making a deed to the defendant for the part allotted to lrim, by saying that he could not do so until the' deed of trust to Hornor was paid, until within a few months past, when he had claimed that defendant had no interest in said lands.

That defendant since he had been in possession of the premises had put about $1,300 worth of improvements upon dwelling-house, and had greatly improved the condition of the cleared land on the whole place, by building fences, opening ditches, clearing up briar patches, etc., all of which he had done because of his contract for the purchase of one-half of the place, and the agreement between the parties as to the particular land defendant should have.

Prayer that plaintiff and Kate and Alfred Rogers be required to answer, etc.; that the deed from Willis Long to Mary Rogers be declared to be a fraud upon the rights of defendant and void. That she be declared a trustee of the lands for her husband (the plaintiff) and the defendant. That an account be taken by the Master, of the partnership matters between plaintiff and defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Ark. 612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-brooks-ark-1875.