Sterlin v. Everett

191 S.W.2d 949, 209 Ark. 590, 1946 Ark. LEXIS 290
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 14, 1946
Docket4-7795
StatusPublished

This text of 191 S.W.2d 949 (Sterlin v. Everett) 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
Sterlin v. Everett, 191 S.W.2d 949, 209 Ark. 590, 1946 Ark. LEXIS 290 (Ark. 1946).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Mrs. Emma ’Sterlin Tuel died intestate June 2,1944. Her heirs at law surviving her were a son, named Cratus Sterlin, and a 14-year-old granddaughter, named Adele Everett, the only child of a deceased daughter. By a second marriage she became Mrs. Tuel, but she was a widow at the time of her death. The witnesses refer to her as Mrs. Sterlin, and we refer to her by that name. A few months before Mrs. Sterlin’s death there was placed of record a deed from her to her son, Cratus, in which she apparently conveyed to her son 100' acres of a 385-acre tract of land, which she at one time owned, and certain lots in the town of Elba. The date of this deed is mutilated. It was apparently first dated April, 1935, but the date 1935 was marked out, and the date 1941 inserted. It recited a consideration of $2,000 in hand paid by Cratus to his mother. The acknowledgment which purports to have been taken by T. M. Williams, a justice of the peace, has the same mutilation of dates. This deed was filed for record April 14, 1944, and was duly recorded.

The father of Adele, as her next friend, filed this suit to cancel this deed, it being alleged that Mrs. Sterlin had never executed the deed and that it was forgery. The relief prayed was granted and the deed was canceled, and from that decree is this appeal. In this decree it was ordered that an administrator be appointed with directions to assemble, administer upon and distribute the personal property of Mrs. Sterlin, and no one complains of that order.

There was much testimony to the effect that Mrs. Sterlin referred to this deed on numerous occasions as a “bogus deed,” and that she denied ever having executed it, and she said that Cratus told her he would destroy it. This testimony was all hearsay evidence, and must be disregarded for that reason. Strickland v. Strickland, 103 Ark. 183, 146 S. W. 501.

There was competent testimony, however, which casts grave doubt as to the authenticity of the deed. A justice of the peace testified that about the time of the date of this deed Cratus asked him if he would take the acknowledgment of a deed without requiring the grantor to appear before him, and the witness declined to do so.

The deposition of T. M. Williams, another justice of the peace, who made the certificate of acknowledgment, was taken and his testimony leaves much to be desired. He was interrogated in regard to the 1941 deed as follows: “Q. Do you remember when the defendant, Cratus Sterlin, brought you a deed purporting to have been signed by his mother conveying to him certain land and lots in Elba? A. Yes. Q. Was his mother present at the time? A. No. Q. State whether or not he wanted you to certify and sign the acknowledgment to that deed. A. Yes. Q. Please state as well as you can remember what he said to you about it. A. Well, the best I remember Cratus said that he wanted to go down there and make a deed. I told him I was busy. And I believe in a day or two he brought the deed out there. He came by and I made it, but I didn’t acknowledge it that day and he said something about he would get his mother to sign the deed and that I could acknowledge it, and I did. Q. Did you see his mother sign that deed at any time? A. No. Q. Did she ever appear before you and acknowledge that she had signed that deed? A. No. Q. So far as you know, if she ever signed you do not know it? A. No. Q. Did you ever say anything to her about it afterwards? A. No, I never did say anything to her about it.”

On the cross-examination the witness was asked only this one question: “Q. The deed you mention was in 1942, was it? A. Yes. No, I think it was in 1941.”

The witness was recalled for further direct examination by appellee’s attorney, and was asked: “Q. Was this the only deed you ever made and certified the acknowledgment to for them? A. No. Q. Was it the only deed you ever made at his request for his mother to sign for him? A. Yes. The only one he ever requested without his mother being present. Q. This was a deed, as I understand you, that purported to convey to Cratus Sterlin certain lands and lots in Elba including her home? A. Yes.”

Why the witness was not asked by counsel for either party about the other deed from Mrs. Sterlin, the acknowledgment of which he had taken, does not appear.

The prima facie effect of this testimony is that the deed was a forgery, and the court so found, although there was other testimony to the effect that Mrs. Sterlin did in fact sign the deed and deliver it, although she did not acknowledge it. If she signed the deed and delivered it the deed was valid between the parties, although it was not acknowledged. Floyd v. Ricks, 14 Ark. 286, 58 Am. Dec. 374; Jackson v. Allen, 30 Ark. 110; McKneely v. Terry, 61 Ark. 527, 33 S. W. 953; Dawkins v. Petteys, 121 Ark. 498, 181 S. W. 901.

If Mrs. Steriin signed the deed she probably delivered it as Cratus had it in his possession. The deed had attached.to it two documentary stamps of $1 each, and two for 10 cents each.

Cratus did not deny the testimony of the two justices of the peace, that he had asked them to take his mother’s acknowledgment without the appearance of his mother, but he offered an explanation which, while it is unusual, is not improbable and which we think the testimony shows to be true. It was to the following effect.

His mother became an invalid and sold him all of her real estate for the sum of $2',000, and gave him a deed reciting .its payment, although it was not paid in cash at the time. Payment, however, was secured by a mortgage given by Cratus to his mother, covering considerable live stock, farming implements and other personal property. This consideration of $2,000 was evidenced by four notes for $500 each, payable in one, two, three and four years, respectively. A significant fact is that the deed to Cratus from his mother and the mortgage from him to her bear the same date — April 1,1935 — and both instruments were acknowledged before T. M. Williams, as justice of the peace. These may have been the other instruments referred to by the witness in the deposition from which we have quoted. Cratus further testified that notwithstanding the execution and delivery of the deed to him from his mother, it was agreed that she should retain possession of the land and, in consideration of that possession, he should have the right to pasture the land, a right which he testified was to offset the interest on the notes.

This mortgage from Cratus to his mother was filed for record January 21, 1939, and was duly recorded. Indorsed upon the margin of the record where the mortgage is recorded are four small payments, which are also indorsed upon the mortgage itself. The indorsement on the record was attested by the clerk and recorder under date of August 2, 19391, although none of the payments were made that day. The clerk in office now, and at that time, testified that he was familiar with Mrs. Sterlin’s signature and that the indorsement was her genuine signature, and that the signature to the indorsement on the mortgage was the same as that to the deed.

Cratus was asked by appellee’s counsel if this mortgage had not been given to protect him against a contingent liability which he had incurred by reason of .having indorsed certain notes as surety, and he denied that he had.

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Related

Floyd v. Ricks
14 Ark. 286 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1853)
Jackson v. Allen
30 Ark. 110 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1875)
McKneely v. Terry
33 S.W. 953 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1896)
Strickland v. Strickland
146 S.W. 501 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1912)
Dawkins v. Petteys
181 S.W. 901 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1915)

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Bluebook (online)
191 S.W.2d 949, 209 Ark. 590, 1946 Ark. LEXIS 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sterlin-v-everett-ark-1946.