State v. Robinson

220 S.W. 836, 143 Ark. 456, 1920 Ark. LEXIS 232
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 19, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 220 S.W. 836 (State v. Robinson) 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
State v. Robinson, 220 S.W. 836, 143 Ark. 456, 1920 Ark. LEXIS 232 (Ark. 1920).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This is an action in unlawful detainer brought to recover possession of a portion of section 16, township 15 north, range 12 east, Mississippi County, Arkansas, and rent thereon for the year 1918.

In 1909 the county judge of that county leased the entire section to Lee Wilson & Company, a corporation. That contract of lease was not dated, but it became effective January 1,1909, and expired January 1, 1913. This contract gave Wilson & Company “the use and free access of said sixteenth section for the above term of four years, with the privilege of cutting and removing what timber they wish from said land,” but imposed upon Wilson & Company the duty only of clearing the land lying in the section south of the J., L. C. & E. Rd. and sixty acres of land north of the county road running through said land, and to deaden one hundred acres in addition thereto. This lease to Wilson & Company was made by L. D. Rozell, who was county judge at the time. Rozell was succeeded in office by W. C. Armstrong, who, on March 3, 1909, extended the lease to Wilson & Company for one year, which made January 1, 1914, the date of expiration. This extension of the Wilson & Company lease was made by an endorsement thereon by Armstrong as county judge, which recited that the extension was made in consideration of the lessee agreeing to build a dwelling house and necessary outhouses on the land. This extension was evidently made under the purported authority to act acquired under the notice given by Rozell as county judge that a lease contract would be made, that notice being recited in the first or original contract.

Thereafter Grladish succeeded Armstrong as county judge, and on January 23,1911, another contract of lease was made. This lease recited that, after due notice, S. D. Mauldin had become the best bidder, and that there had been leased to him all of the land north of the J., L. C. & E. Railroad “except what is now in cultivation,” it being the evident purpose of this lease to have cleared and put in cultivation the land which Wilson & Company was not required to clear under its lease. The Mauldin lease contract recited that it was for a period of five years, but it contained the proviso that “what land the said Mauldin fails to put in cultivation this year he shall have an extension of one year’s time to put it in cultivation.”

The effect' of this proviso is, of course, to make the lease for six years on any land which Mauldin failed to put in cultivation during the first year of the lease. This contract was duly signed by G-ladish as county judge and by Mauldin, and a bond to perform its conditions — which was duly approved — was given by Mauldin with appellee Clyde Robinson as surety. Thereafter, on March 14, 1911, this contract was re-executed in the exact language of the contract of January 23, 1911, except that the following paragraph was added:

“It is agreed that the above land was leased to the said S. D. Mauldin on the 23d day of January, 1911, and that said land was prior to that time leased to R. E. Lee Wilson for a period of four years beginning January 1, 1909, and ending January 1, 1913, that said Wilson lease is of record in book 8 at page 309 in the recorder’s office of this county, and that the original contract of S. D. Mauldin is of record in book............, at page ............in the recorder’s office of this county, and that this contract and lease is made in lieu of said former of said Maul-din’s above referred, and is to begin and take effect January 1,1913, or at the expiration of the said lease of R. E. Lee Wilson.”

Mauldin, for some reason not made clear in the record, declined to perf orm the 'contract, whereupon Robinson, as surety on Mauldin’s bond, assumed its performance. It is shown that Robinson did not enter upon the land until January 1, 1914, and it is said that he could not have entered upon it at an earlier date because of the outstanding contract in favor of Wilson & Company. Robinson cleared the land and performed all the conditions contained in Mauldin’s contract, and, through his tenants, cultivated the land during the years 1914, 1915, 1916 and 1917. In January, 1918, this suit was brought; but Robinson executed bond and retained possession of the land during the year 1918.

Among other questions raised is that of the sufficiency of the notice to vacate which was given Robinson and his tenants. This question is now purely academic, as Robinson and his tenants surrendered possession of the land on the 1st of January, 1919, and now claim no right to further occupy it. But if Robinson’s occupancy during the year 1918 was without authority he can not defeat this action, insofar as a judgment for rent is prayed, because proper notice to vacate may not have been given. Robinson entered under a lease contract, and he thereby became a tenant, and if he has held over beyond the expiration of his term, then rent for that period may be recovered in this action.

The briefs discuss at length the question of the validity of Mauldin’s contract, and the right to maintain this action if it is in fact invalid. But if it were, conceded that Mauldin’s contract was void ab initio — and we do not so decide — that fact could make no difference, for a tenancy existed under a contract which the parties mutually treated as valid. The law on this subject is stated in 16 R. C. L., p. 574, as follows: “The authorities agree that from the entry and occupation and payment of rent under a void lease, as in case of a.lease invalid by reason of a noncompliance with the statute of frauds, there results a legal relation of landlord and tenant between the owner and the occupant of the land. The tenancy is not created by the defective written lease, but it is implied by the law from the occupancy of the premises and the payment and receipt of the rent therefor. * * * The agreement in such a case is void at the option of the parties, or either of them; but if they both see fit to engage in the execution of its terms, and do acts under it, they may thereby establish such a relation between themselves as the law will recognize and enforce.”

The real and controlling question in the case is, Did the contract cover the year 1918? This contract was made under the authority of Act No. 156, Acts 1905, p. 398, which is a special act applying only to Mississippi County. This act reads as follows:

“Section 1. The county judges of the State of Arkansas are hereby authorized and empowered to lease any tract or parcel of wild and uncleared sixteenth section school lands situated in their respective counties, for a term not exceeding five (5) years, on terms satisfactory to said judges, upon the lessee entering into a good and sufficient bond to be approved by said county (judge) for tbe faithful performance of this lease contract.
“Section 2. Whenever the county judge of any county in this State shall desire to lease any lands under the provisions of this act, he shall first cause notice of the time and place of the leasing of said lands, together with a description thereof, to be published in some newspaper published in said county, or by posting written or printed notices in ten (10) conspicuous places in such county, one of which shall be at the courthouse and one on the land to be leased, thirty (30) days before the leasing of the same.
“Section 3.

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Related

Hamilton Coal & Coke Co. v. Johns
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251 P. 630 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
220 S.W. 836, 143 Ark. 456, 1920 Ark. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-robinson-ark-1920.