Rowland v. McAlester Fuel Company

202 S.W.2d 204, 201 S.W.2d 742, 211 Ark. 599, 1947 Ark. LEXIS 587
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 28, 1947
Docket4-8177
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 202 S.W.2d 204 (Rowland v. McAlester Fuel Company) 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
Rowland v. McAlester Fuel Company, 202 S.W.2d 204, 201 S.W.2d 742, 211 Ark. 599, 1947 Ark. LEXIS 587 (Ark. 1947).

Opinions

McHaney, Justice.

This appeal involves the title to one-fourth of the oil and gas royalty in and to 60 acres of land in Columbia county, described as SW NE and S]/t SE NW, 15-18-22. The land was owned by James H. Atkinson who died intestate February 5, 1892, and who was the owner of 300 acres of other land in said county, not here involved. He left surviving him five children and three grandchildren, appellee Charlie Menshew being one of such grandchildren. One of his daughters, Mattie M., had married A. B. Rowland and, prior to her father’s death, he had either given or planned to give to his said daughter, Mattie M., or to her and her husband, A. B. Rowland, the 60 acres of land here involved, and he put them in the actual possession thereof, but never gave them a deed to said land. Just when they took possession is not shown in the record,'or whether they made any improvements or paid the taxes thereon in his lifetime, but they were in possession for some time prior to his death. On November 18, 1893, all the other heirs of James H. Atkinson, except appellee Menshew who has no interest in this litigation, conveyed said 60 acre tract to “A. B. & M. M. Rowland” in consideration of “a deed release all claims in the real estate of J. H. Atkinson, deceased.” On the same date said “A. B. Rowland & M. M. Rowland” conveyed to “the remaining heirs of the estate of J. H. Atkinson, Dec.,” the other 300 acres of land belonging to said estate. Thus the 60 acre tract was carved out of tlje whole and convejnd to “ A. B. and M. M. Rowland” who conveyed to the other heirs their interest in the 300 acres, and who later or .at the same time partitioned it among themselves. The deed to A. B. and M. M. Rowland was not recorded until April 2,1927, while their deed to the other heirs was not recorded until August 10, 1939.

Appellants O. A., R. A. and J. W. Rowland are the only children of A. B. and Mattie M. or M. M. Rowland. Their mother died intestate May 17, ¿917. They brought this action March 6, 1913, against Charlie Menshew and wife, McAlester Fuel Company, A. B. Rowland and his second wife, and a number of others not concerned iii this appeal, including Charlie Menshew. They alleged their ownership of said 60 acre tract by inheritance from their mother, subject to the right of curtesy of their father, A. B. Rowland, and set out the facts above stated, claiming an agreed partition among themselves as a result of said conveyances. They also allege that on July 5,1939, A. B. Rowland and his present wife executed to appellee, McAlester Fuel Company, a deed conveying a portion of the minerals in said land to it, and that their right to said lands, royalties, rentals and gas payments should be determined, quieted and confirmed against appellees, subject to the admitted life estate of A. B. Rowland and those claiming under him, for which they prayed.

McAlester Fuel Company answered with a general denial of all allegations not admitted, but admitting the conveyance to A. B. and M. M. Rowland of the 60 acre tract in 1893 by the other heirs- of James H. Atkinson, the death of M. M. Rowland in 1917, the subsequent second marriage of A. B. Rowland to his present wife, and the conveyance by them to it of an undivided one-fourth royalty interest in said 60 acre tract for a cash consideration of $2,000, after a confirmation decree which quieted the title thereto in A. B. Rowland and his former wife, then dead, and which action was brought and decree secured at the instance of appellant, J. W. Rowland. They plead estoppel as to all appellants and particularly as to J. W. Rowland, who, it was further alleged, negotiated and participated in the sale and conveyance to it by his father and his then wife of said royalty interest, representing to it that the title was good in his father, having previously been confirmed and quieted in him. Laches, limitations and innocent purchaser were also interposed in bar of the action.

Trial resulted in a decree dismissing the complaint for want of equity, the court finding that James H. Atkinson made a verbal gift of the 60 acres to his daughter, M. M. Rowland, and her husband, A. B. Rowland, and put them in possession; that the heirs of James W. Rowland, in recognition of such verbal gift, executed to them the deed of November 18, 1893; that such gift and deed created an estate by the entirety; that J. W. Rowland is estopped because of his participation in the action to quiet the title in his father and in securing the decree to this effect, and by assisting in and encouragement of the sale by his father to McAlester; and that all the plaintiffs are barred by laches and limitations, the land having been in the actual possession of A. B. and M. M. Rowland since 1892 under a claim of title and that he paid the taxes thereon all these years under color of title, and that the land has been wild and unimproved for more than seven years. This appeal followed.

For a reversal of this decree, appellants contend that the findings of the trial court to the effect that James H. Atkinson made a verbal gift of the 60 acres to his son-in-law and daughter, A. B. and M. M. Rowland, and put them in possession, and that the deed of the other heirs to them of November 18, 1893, was in recognition and confirmation of such gift, creating an estate by the entirety, are erroneous and without evidence to support them. "We do not agree with appellants in this contention. They say that S. W. Atkinson, son and only surviving heir of James H. Atkinson, who testified as a witness for appellants, did not testify there was a verbal gift of this land to A. B. Rowland. While the witness, S. W. Atkinson, was 88 years old at the time of trial, it is not shown that he is not sound .mentally. On direct examination he testified that his father “was aiming to give it to her, that was the understanding, ’ ’ referring to the 60 acres and his sister, M. M. Rowland. On cross-examination, he testified that his father gave 60 acres of land to his sister, Mrs. Rowland, put her in possession of it and she was living on it prior to her father’s death. In answer to the question, “He had already given it to her?” he answered: “We supposed he was going to give it to her; I don’t think he ever made any deed to her to it. ’ ’ He said he supposed the only reason the deed of the heirs was made to Mrs. Rowland was because his father had given it to her, she asked for it and all the heirs agreed, she was living on it and it did not interfere with the main part of the farm anyway. ' While this testimony does not in terms state there was a verbal gift of this land to A. B. Rowland, the fact that the witness and all the other heirs joined in a deed conveying the land to A. B. and M. M. Rowland is strong corroboration of the fact that M. M. Rowland wanted it that way and that the ancestor intended for both of them to have the 60 acres, and the witness was certain that the heirs were carrying out the intention of their father. There is no other explanation of the insertion of the name of A. B. Rowland in the deed, except appellants say in their complaint that “without any reason or explanation therefor, the name of A‘. B. Rowland, the then husband of Mattie M. Rowland, appeared in the deed as a grantee.” A. B. Rowland was present at the trial, but did not testify. Perhaps he could have explained it, but he did not. Nevertheless he was a grantee in this deed and his title as surviving tenant by the entirety cannot be taken away on the assertion that there is no reason or explanation therefor. We think the court, under the circumstances, had the right to presume that parties to the instrument, particularly M. M.

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Bluebook (online)
202 S.W.2d 204, 201 S.W.2d 742, 211 Ark. 599, 1947 Ark. LEXIS 587, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rowland-v-mcalester-fuel-company-ark-1947.