Thacker v. Hicks

224 S.W.2d 1, 215 Ark. 898, 1949 Ark. LEXIS 848
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 24, 1949
Docket4-8942
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 224 S.W.2d 1 (Thacker v. Hicks) 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
Thacker v. Hicks, 224 S.W.2d 1, 215 Ark. 898, 1949 Ark. LEXIS 848 (Ark. 1949).

Opinion

Minor W. Millwee, Justice.

This is an action in forcible entry and unlawful detainer by appellants, L. F. Thacker and ~W. T. Kitchen, against appellees, Steve-Hicks and wife, Tommie Hicks. This is the second appeal of the case. On the former appeal in Thacker v. Hicks, 213 Ark. 822, 212 S. W. 2d 713, we held there was substantial evidence to support the verdict and that there was no error in the giving and refusing of instructions, but the cause was reversed on account of the admission of certain testimony prejudicial to appellants.

Appellant, L. F. Thacker, originally instituted an action in forcible entry and detainer against appellees in September, 1946, alleging that he was lessee of a large acreage of farm lands, including the Frl. North % of the SE % of Sec. 29, Township 18 North, Range 8 East in Greene County, containing 44.82 acres, which appellees forcibly and unlawfully occupied and refused to vacate. In February, 1947, appellant, W. T. Kitchen, intervened and asserted that the term of Thacker’s lease had expired and that Kitchen had succeeded to Thacker’s rights by virtue of a lease from the owner, Lester Kent. On October 6,1947, Kitchen filed an amended complaint and intervention setting up unlawful detainer as an additional cause of action under an alleged oral rent agreement for the year 1946 between Thacker and appellees.

In their answer appellees denied generally the allegations of the complaint and asserted title and right to possession of the lands by adverse possession. Having-been removed from the lands by the sheriff under a writ executed on February 19, 1947, appellees also asked for restitution of possession and damages.

The first trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for appellees for restitution and damages in the sum of $250. A similar result followed the trial from which comes this appeal, except that the amount of damages was fixed at $300.

The evidence at both trials was substantially the same and tended to show that appellees moved on the lands in controversy in 1931; that they erected improvements thereon and cultivated a part of the lands under claim of absolute ownership until 1941. In December, 1941, Charles Davidson, an employee of a lessee of the record owner of the lands, filed an affidavit in the probate court that appellees were insane. After examination, appellees were adjudged insane and committed to the State Hospital where they remained for approximately four months. Immediately after execution of the commitment, Davidson moved on the property in controversy, and tenants of lessees of the record owner remained in possession until the latter part of 1945 or the early part of 1946, when appellees, finding the property vacant, moved back on the land where they resided until evicted in February, 1947.

On the second trial appellants introduced a complaint, summons, writ of possession and default judgment in ejectment rendered against appellee, Steve Hicks, on March 4, 1941, in favor of the purported record owners of the lands in controversy. There is no evidence of service of the writ of possession and, as heretofore stated, appellees were removed from the lands under the insanity proceedings in December, 1941.

After remand of the case on the first appeal, Lester Kent, the alleged record owner, filed an ejectment suit against appellees on October 2, 1948. When the instant suit came on for trial October 13, 1948, service had not ripened in this ejectment action and appellees had not pleaded thereto. Appellants filed a “Plea in Bar” alleging that a determination of the new ejectment suit by the purported record owner would determine the issues in the instant case, because appellees’ defense herein was based on a claim of title by adverse possession and a denial of title in appellants’ lessor. The pendency of the ejectment suit was pleaded as a bar of appellees’ right to maintain their cross-complaint in the present action, and it was prayed that the instant case be continued until the ejectment suit could be tried.

The action of the trial court in overruling the plea in abatement and proceeding with the trial of the forcible entry and unlawful detainer action is the first ground urged by appellants for reversal of the judgment. It is insisted that appellees’ claim of adverse possession and denial of title in appellants’ lessor could only be finally determined in the ejectment suit. It will be noted that appellants are not claiming title to the lands in controversy and chose forcible entry and unlawful detainer as the proper form of action. The alleged record owner has not seen fit to intervene in the instant suit nor have appellants requested a consolidation of this action with the ejectment suit. If the record owner had intervened in this suit, the actions of forcible entry and unlawful detainer and ejectment could have been properly consolidated. DeClerk v. Spikes, 206 Ark. 1004, 178 S. W. 2d 70.

Section 34-1519, Ark. Stats. (1947), provides that in actions of forcible entry and unlawful detainer the title to the lands shall not be adjudicated, nor proved, except to show the right to possession and the extent thereof. Section 34-1520 provides that a judgment in a forcible entry or unlawful detainer action shall not bar a suit in ejectment. Under § 34-1522, an ejectment action may be instituted and prosecuted during the pendency of an action in forcible entry and unlawful detainer. In Necklace v. West, 33 Ark. 682, appellant contended that his action in unlawful detainer should be treated as one in ejectment and, in construing the above sections of the statute, the court said: “Counsel for appellant submits that the complaint contains all the material allegations requisite in a complaint in ejectment, and that under the code practice he ought not to fail in the suit because of a mistake in the proper form of action.

‘ ‘ This may be true as a general rule, but it would be an unjust application of the rule to allow a plaintiff to bring the statutory action of unlawful detainer, deprive defendant of possession of the premises in advance of a trial, fail upon a trial to prove his right to maintain the action, and then avoid the consequences of the mistake, and defeat the defendants claim to damages under the statute for having been wrongfully dispossessed in a summary mode, by taking judgment in ejectment.

“That the statute did not intend to substitute unlawful detainer for ejectment, is manifest from its provisions that a judgment in the former action shall be no bar to the latter, and that ejectment may be brought during the pendency of unlawful detainer. . . .”

The setting of the docket and granting or refusing a continuance is a matter within the sound discretion of the trial court. We find no abuse of that discretion in requiring appellants to retry the instant suit which they instituted more than two years before.

It is next insisted that the court erred in the admission of testimony by various witnesses to the effect that appellees had been claiming the lands in controversy as their own since 1931. It is conceded by appellants that declarations by one in possession of real property, although self-serving, may be admissible as a part of the res gestae, but it is now insisted that such testimony is inadmissible unless the party offering it lays the proper foundation therefor by first showing the time, place and circumstances of the making thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
224 S.W.2d 1, 215 Ark. 898, 1949 Ark. LEXIS 848, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thacker-v-hicks-ark-1949.