Steele v. Steele

216 S.W.2d 875, 214 Ark. 500, 1949 Ark. LEXIS 589
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 31, 1949
Docket4-8673
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 216 S.W.2d 875 (Steele v. Steele) 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
Steele v. Steele, 216 S.W.2d 875, 214 Ark. 500, 1949 Ark. LEXIS 589 (Ark. 1949).

Opinions

Smith, J.

In the period from 1890 to 1900 two negroes, Joseph Steele and Nancy Steele Butler, brother and sister, owning adjoining farms, lived together in Lee County. Their relationship was close and affectionate. Nancy, referred to by the witnesses as Aunt Nancy, on account of her age, owned a forty-acre farm, and her brother’s farm consisted of forty-two .acres. It is this latter which is the subject matter of this litigation.

On November 17,1900, Joseph executed a deed to his farm to Nancy, his sister, for'the recited consideration of $600, yet notwithstanding this deed, the uncontradicted testimony is that Joseph continued to remain on his farm until his death in 1940. During this time he exercised all the acts of ownership, including the payment of the taxes, and was generally believed to be the owner .and a number of his friends and neighbors testified that he always referred to the land as his farm. There are irreconcilable conflicts in the testimony as to just what Joseph said about his ownership. While all the testimony is that he referred to the land as his own, the more explicit testimony of some of his more intimate friends was that he said it was his for life.

It is undisputed that Joseph conveyed the land to his sister, but it is also undisputed that Joseph remained on the land after executing the deed, for a period of forty years, during all of which time he occupied the land as his own without payment of rent and he paid the taxes thereon.

In 1921, which was twenty-one years .after executing the deed, Joseph, who was then an old man, married ap-pellee, who was forty-one years his junior, and after this marriage he and Donnie, his wife, lived on the land in question. Prior to that Joseph had lived with his sister, Aunt Nancy, on her land.

Donnie, Joseph’s widow, offered this explanation of the deed. Joseph owed .a debt which he claimed to have twice paid, but it was demanded of him that he pay the debt a third time,, and he was advised to execute a “schedule deed,” which was the deed above mentioned. It does not appear that Joseph was ever sued for this debt or that the validity of his deed to Aunt Nancy was ever questioned as having been executed in fraud of any creditor and there is no testimony that Joseph himself ever raised with Aunt Nancy the question of its validity.

Aunt Nancy made no effort to regain possession of the land upon her brother’s death, and Donnie, Joseph’s widow, remained in possession until Aunt Nancy died, a period of about four years. After Aunt Nancy’s death this suit was brought by her nephews, who claimed title not only as heirs at law of Aunt Nancy, but also under her will.

It is conceded that the continued possession of J oseph and that of his widow after his death, was of such duration as would ordinarily overcome the presumption that J oseph had remained in possession permissively and in subordination of his conveyance, but it is insisted that that presumption of adverse possession was overcome’ by the testimony in the case.

It was said in the case of St. Louis S. W. Ry. Co. v. Fulkerson, 177 Ark. 723, 7 S. W. 2d 789, that: “While there is a presumption that the grantor who remains in possession after the execution of his deed does so in subordination to the title which he has conveyed, this is not a continuing, enduring presumption. On the contrary, the probative value of this presumption diminishes with the lapse-of time and may if the possession of the grantor be long enough continued, cease to exist.”

In the ease of Graham v. St. Louis, I. M. & So. Ry. Co., 69 Ark. 562, 65 S. W. 1048, 66 S. W. 344, Judge Biddick said: “Though the continued possession of the land by the vendor after conveyance executed is not, of itself, sufficient to show a holding adverse to the vendee, yet there is nothing in their relations which will prevent the vendor from acquiring a title by adverse possession. But before the vendor or those claiming under him can acquire title in that way against the vendee the intention to hold adversely must be manifested by some unequivocal act of hostility, such as to give notice to the vendee of the intention of the vendor to deny his right and hold adversely to him. Until this is shown, the statute does not commence to run. 1 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2d Ed.) 818, 819; Connor v. Bell, 152 Pa. St. 444, 25 Atl. 802; Paldi v. Paldi, 84 Mich. 346, 47 N. W. 510; Sherman v. Kane, 86 N. Y. 57.”

There is no testimony to the effect that Joseph ever apprized his sister that he was holding adversely to her. Had he done so and she had been willing for him to acquire the title by adverse possession she could, and in all probability would have reconveyed the land to him, if she was in fact willing for him to acquire the title.

It must be conceded that there is testimony to the effect that Joseph and Bonnie did claim adversely to Aunt Nancy, of which fact she must have had knowledge, but the chancellor found to the contrary and we are unable to say that finding is contrary to the preponderance of the testimony.

One Tarpley, a white man who testified that his only interest in the lawsuit was “to see that Aunt Nancy’s and Uncle Joe’s will is carried out,” testified that he was born and reared on an adjoining farm and that he probably “knew more about Uncle Joe’s and Aunt Nancy’s business than any other person white or colored in that community.” He testified that they advised with him about their business affairs and that Joseph had s.aid to him, “Now this place I am living on as you know is already deeded to Nannie, and I am not going to change that. I am going to buy another place and deed that to Donnie,” his wife, .appellant here. He further testified that shortly before Aunt Naney executed her will she said to him, “As long as I and Joe live I want him to have control of it (the land in litigation) that when me and him both die I want the property to stay in the Steele (her own) family.”

Aunt Nancy’s will, which was duly probated, corroborated this testimony. A paragraph of this will reads as follows : “To my brother, Joe Steele, in memory of his constant kindness and thoughtful provision for me, I give and bequeath all of my lands owned by me at the time of my death wherever situated for and during his natural life only, and at his death the remainder to my nephews, Willie Steele .and Sidney Steele in fee simple forever.”

It will be observed that this will devised not merely my farm, but also “all of my lands owned by me at the time of my death wherever situated for and during his natural life only, and at his death the remainder to my nephews, Willie Steele and Sidney Steele, in fee simple forever. ”

This will conformed to the relationship under which, according to the testimony of witness, Tarpley, Joseph had occupied the land which he had conveyed to Aunt Nancy, and in addition the testatrix requested her nephews to allow her brother Joe to use her personal property during his natural life if he should desire to do so.

After Aunt Nancy’s death her nephews and devisees brought suit in ejectment against Donnie, then in possession, to recover the land, basing the suit upon the record title to the land, and upon the will of their aunt.

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Bluebook (online)
216 S.W.2d 875, 214 Ark. 500, 1949 Ark. LEXIS 589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steele-v-steele-ark-1949.