Toler v. Fischer and Holmes

148 S.W.2d 159, 201 Ark. 1107, 1941 Ark. LEXIS 89
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 3, 1941
Docket4-6216
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 148 S.W.2d 159 (Toler v. Fischer and Holmes) 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
Toler v. Fischer and Holmes, 148 S.W.2d 159, 201 Ark. 1107, 1941 Ark. LEXIS 89 (Ark. 1941).

Opinion

Holt, J.

December 15,1936, appellee, H. W. Holmes, filed complaint making appellant, W. W. Toler, and certain alleged employees of Toler, defendants. In this complaint Holmes alleged that he was the owner of a certain tract of land in Lawrence county and certain personal property thereon; that the defendants were unlawfully removing, and attempting to remove, the personal property from -the lands and out of the State of Arkansas.

He further alleged that W. W. Toler owned no property in the state and asked for a temporary restraining order and that upon final hearing it be made permanent, and further sought damages for the unlawful conversion of the property.

Toler is a nonresident of Arkansas and service was sought by warning order. An attorney ad litem was appointed and gave notice to Toler of the suit, furnishing him a copy of the complaint.

Toler filed separate answer September 28, 1937, denying the allegations of the complaint and further pleaded that he was the owner of the tract of land and the personal property described in Holmes’ complaint, having acquired title January 31,1934, by purchase 'from the Western Lawrence County Eoad Improvement District. He alleged that the road district had theretofore acquired title by sale and confirmation of the land in question for delinquent taxes for 1921 and 1922, and prayed for dismissal of appellee Holmes’ complaint, and that title to the land and “all appurtenances, machinery and fixtures be vested in him.”

Subsequent to the filing of appellant’s separate answer, W. W. Fischer, by interlineations in the original complaint, was made a party plaintiff to the cause, and April 4, 1938, appellees, Holmes and Fischer, filed an amendment to the original complaint and a reply to appellant’s answer in which they denied every material allegation in appellant’s answer, and in addition asserted that appellant’s alleged title to the property claimed to have been acquired from the Western Lawrence County Road Improvement District was void because of fatally defective description of the property in the sale and confirmation by the road district and in its deed of conveyance to appellant Toler..

They further alleged that on November 18, 1926, Holmes had redeemed the property in question for the delinquent taxes for 1921 and 1922, prior to the alleged sale and confirmation by the road district and that said district’s attempted sale and confirmation was void; that on March 28, 1924, Holmes sold to appellee, W. W. Fischer, all of the tools, machinery, buildings, and other improvements, located upon said land under a conditional sales contract whereby said lands were leased to Fischer for a. term of years ending April G, 1939, with permission to Fischer to maintain, use and operate same; that appellant and his employees had unlawfully taken possession of and removed said equipment and machinery belonging to Fischer and converted same to his own use, to Fischer’s damage in the sum of $25,051.40.

They further alleged that Holmes derived title to the lands by warranty deed on August 29, 1922, from the then owners and has had title thereto since that date. They prayed for cancellation of the purported deed from the road district to W. W. Toler, that title to the land be confirmed in appellee Holmes and that appellee Fischer recover damages for the wrongful conversion.

March 29, 1939, appellant Toler filed an amended answer in all material respects containing allegations similar to those contained in his separate answer filed September 28, 1937.

April 2,1940, the cause was heard before the court on the pleadings, testimony, depositions, and exhibits, submitted by the parties, and the court found that it had jurisdiction of all the parties and the subject-matter of the action; and

“That the lands involved in this suit were not properly and legally described in the complaint for foreclosure of delinquent-taxes due Western Lawrence County Road Improvement District; in the advertisement for sale, in the report of sale, and in the deed purporting to sell said lands to the defendant, W. W. Toler, and for that reason the purported sale thereof and the deed therefor to W. W. Toler is void and of no effect.

“. . . that the plaintiff, W. W. Fischer, is the owner of the rock quarry and all machinery located upon the lands involved herein ...

“That the plaintiff, H. W. Holmes, is the owner of the above described lands and is entitled to have his title thereto confirmed by this court.

“. . . that the defendant, W. W. Toler, has no title, right, or interest in and to said lands or to the rock crusher or machinery located thereon, and never had any such title by reason of his void deed from the "Western Lawrence County Eoad Improvement District, or by payment of any taxes he might have paid.

“. . . that the temporary restraining order should be made permanent, and that said defendant be forever enjoined from destroying, or removing any of the machinery or other personal property from said lands, and further enjoined fom interfering with the title or possession of the plaintiffs, W. W. Fischer and H. W. Holmes, to all of said real and personal property.

“. . . that the defendant, W. W. Toler, wrongfully, unlawfully and without right destroyed and converted to his own use portions of the rock crusher and machinery, railroad tracks, cars, and other personal property, belonging to the plaintiff, W. W. Fischer, to the amount of $1,000'for which amount W. W. Fischer has been damaged, and that he should have judgment against W. W. Toler for said sum, with interest from April 2, 1940, at 6 per cent, until paid.

“That the deed from Western Lawrence County Eoad Improvement District to W. W. Toler, as well as the deed from the commissioner in chancery conveying said lands to the improvement district, should be canceled as a cloud upon the title of plaintiff, H. W. Holmes,” and entered a decree accordingly. This appeal followed.

Appellant first contends that he was never properly served with summons in the cause; that no service was had upon him by personal service, and that the attempted service ¡by warning- order was invalid and insufficient.

Without attempting- to set out here the facts on the* question of the attempted service on appellant, it is undisputed that after appellant received notice from the attorney ad litem appointed by -the court, he filed, first, a separate answer to appellee Holmes’ original complaint.-, and later, after Holmes had amended his original complaint making W. W. Fischer a party plaintiff, Toler filed an amended answer, all without objection or attempting to preserve protest to the jurisdiction of his person. In addition, he filed certain motions, took depositions and submitted to a trial of the cause.

Clearly we think by these acts appellant entered his appearance for all purposes, even though not served personally, or constructively, with summons.

In Spratley v. Louisiana & Arkansas Ry. Co., 77 Ark. 412, 95 S. W.

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Bluebook (online)
148 S.W.2d 159, 201 Ark. 1107, 1941 Ark. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toler-v-fischer-and-holmes-ark-1941.