Shinn v. Taylor

28 Ark. 523
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 28 Ark. 523 (Shinn v. Taylor) 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
Shinn v. Taylor, 28 Ark. 523 (Ark. 1873).

Opinion

Farrelly, Sp. J.

This was an action, under the Code, for the recovery of certain real property, in the complaint described, brought by the appellant against the appellees, in the Washington circuit court, and afterward transferred to, and tried in the Madison circuit court.

The appellees answered, admitting that they held possession of the lands, but denied property in the appellant, or that he was entitled to the possession thereof.

A trial was had and a verdict and judgment for the appellees ; appellant moved for a new trial; the court overruled the motion; he excepted and tendered his bill of exceptions) setting out the evidence, the instructions asked by the appellant and refused, the instructions asked by the appellees and given, and the instructions given by the court on its own motion, and appealed.

The facts adduced at the trial, on the part of the appellant, as appears from certain deeds and depositions read in evidence, without objection on the part of the appellees, are substantially as follows: Charles W. Dean purchased the lands in question from one Samuel R. Bell in 1856 ; Dean sold the lands in 1857, to one Jacob Battenfeld for a valuable consideration, the sum of six hundred dollars, and gave title bond conditioned to make a good and sufficient title when the last instalment of the purchase money should be paid. Battenfeld fully paid off the last of the purchase money in 1862, at which time Dean was leaving the country and went off neglecting to make a deed. Battenfeld subsequently went to the state of Ohio, taking with him the title bond, .and while there, in June, 1864, sold the property in question to Shinn, the appellant, for the sum of seven hundred dollars, which was fully paid off in July, 1866, and the title bond of Dean to Battenfeld transferred in writting to the appellant in order that he might receive a deed direct from Dean. The purchase by appellant was made in good faith for a valuable consideration, without any knowledge on his part, or on the part of Battenfeld, of any claim or incumbrance upon the property. Battenfield and appellant were not in communication with Dean at the time of this transaction. When Dean returned home, appellant informed him of his purchase from Battenfield, and requested him to make a deed direct to appellant, which Dean, by letter, readily agreed to do at any time, saying that Battenfeld had fully paid him the purchase money; but through neglect of appellant’s attorney, or other cause, the making of the deed was neglected or delayed until the 18th of June, 1867. Battenfeld, who is the father-in-law of the appellant, went into possession of the property under his purchase from Dean, and held possession until sometime after the commencement of the rebellion, when he went to the state of Ohio. In 1865, or earty in 1866, Battenfield wrote to one La Fayette Gregg, directing him to take charge of the property and rent it, and afterward wrote that appellant was the owner ; appellant also wrote to Gregg in regard to the property. Gregg, as agent, rented the property as directed, until sometime in the fall of 1867 or 1868. While acting as agent, he received the title bond given by Dean to Battenfeld, with an assignment on the bond to appellant, with directions to take a deed from Dean to appellant. In 1867 or 1868, C. M. Duke, who was holding the property under the agent of the appellant, refused to continue paying the rent as he had been doing, and claimed to have possession under J. L. Duke (his son) who claimed to have bought the property at a sheriff's sale, sold upon execution as the property of C. W. Dean. The agent of the appellant ousted C. M. Duke, the tenant, by legal process, but J. L. Duke refused to give possession, and the appellees afterward came into possession, and by their tenant, Marr, held actual possession of the premises, at and before the commencement of this suit. Demand for the possession of the premises was made, in writing, upon each of the appellees by the agent of the appellant before suit commenced. The property in question was sold under two executions, one against Dean and the other against Battenfeld ; the sale was made, under the former, in August, 1867, at which J. L. Duke became the purchaser, and under the latter, sometime after that, and at which one Wesley Barnes became the purchaser. The agent of the appellant, acting in his capacity as such, appeared at both sales and forbid the selling of the propert} and notified the parties purchasing, and others present, that the property belonged to appellant and stated aloud at the sales, respectively, that Dean and Battenfeld, against whom the ex-cutions under which the property was to be sold, had no title or claim to the property. This was all the evidence introduced on the part of the appellant.

The appellees introduced and read to the jury deeds to the property in question, of the following purport: Sheriff’s deed, of date February, 1868, to Wesley Barnes, as purchaser at a sale had under an execution issued December 12, 1867, on a judgment obtained against Battenfeld and others, on the 18th of August, 1866. Sheriff’s deed, of date August, 1867, to J. L. Duke, as purchaser at a sale had under an execution issued April ■ — •, 1867, on a judgment obtained against Gibson & Dean on the 15th of February, 1867. Deed of J. L. Duke to Wesley Barnes, of date February, 1868. Deed of ■ Barnes and wife to Jennings and Taylor, appellees, of date 12th of January, 1869.

The above is substantially all the evidence introduced by the parties at the trial.

Several instructions were asked by the respective parties, but we deem it necessary only to notice, as principally relied upon, and as materially affecting the rights of the parties under the case presented, the first two instructions asked by the appellant and refused, and the first two asked by the appellees and given by the court over the objection o£ the appellant, and those given b} the court on its own motion.

The appellant asked the court to declare the law as follows:

1st. “ That if the jury believe from the evidence that Dean owned the land in controversy and that before the judgment was obtained against him, upon which the execution and sale to Duke was had, he, Dean, had sold the land and received pay therefor and that Duke was notified that Dean had no title, or that he had sold the property and had been paid for it at or before his bidding for the property at the sheriff’s sale and before the property was bid off by him, that he, Duke, acquired no title by his bidding or purchase at such sale.

2d. “ That if the jury believe from the evidence that Battenfeld had a legal or equitable title to the property and that before the judgment was obtained against him upon which an execution and sale was had to Barnes, he, Battenfeld, had sold all his interest in that property to the plaintiff and that before the property was bid off by Barnes, he was notified that such sale and payment had been made, or that Battenfeld had no title to the property, he, Barnes, acquired no title by his purchase at such sheriff’s sale.

The court refused to give these instructions, to which decision the appellant excepted.

At the instance of the appellees, the court gave the following:

1st. “That if the jury find from the evidence that C. W.

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Bluebook (online)
28 Ark. 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shinn-v-taylor-ark-1873.