Waggener v. McLaughlin

33 Ark. 195
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 33 Ark. 195 (Waggener v. McLaughlin) 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
Waggener v. McLaughlin, 33 Ark. 195 (Ark. 1878).

Opinion

Eakin, J.:

This is a branch and continuation of the case of Waggener et al. v. Lyles et al., in which an opinion was delivered here on the 5th December, 1874 ; and an order made remanding it, with instructions.

Pending the former appeal, a portion of the property in controversy, was on the 20th of February, 1871, forfeited to the .State for non-payment of the taxes of 1869, to-wit: Part of Spanish Grant No. 2290, and also the southeast and the southwest quarter of section 27, in township 7 north, of range-9 east.

Meanwhile, the Receiver, Berry, seems to have continued, nominally, to be recognized as such, although he did nothing-more than to transfer the custody and control of the property to George W. Cheek as a tenant. He collected no rents from Cheek; but the rents, whatever they were, were disposed of by agreement amongst the parties interested. All matters in litigation seem to have been compromised amongst the original litigants, before the decision of the case here; and perhaps for that reason no action has since been taken, in the court below, in accordance with the mandate of this court on said 5th, December 1874.

George W. Cheek, holding nominally under the said receiver, had, pending the appeal, sub let to John McLaughlin the Mound City property, described as ‘ ‘ part of Spanish Grant, No. 2290 — 108.00,” and to D. C. Robinson the two' quarter sections above described in section 27 ; who were holding, as tenants of Cheek, when the time for redemption expired in 1873.

On the 14th of April, 1873, each applied to the Auditor of State to purchase the respective portions of land, held by them under sec. 172 and 173, chap. 148, of Gould’s Digest, by which citizens or heads of families and actual settlers upon lands forfeited to the State for taxes, were authorized to purchase the same of the Auditor, upon payment of the amount of taxes due thereon, with penalty and costs. They made the necessary affidavits to this end, and received deeds from the Auditor, McLaughlin paying for his portion the sum of $2892.90, and Robinson, the sum of $123.68; which sums included the taxes of 1869-70-71 and 72.

About the same time Robinson conveyed all his interest to McLaughlin.

There have been intermediate conveyances since then, of shares of these lands from McLaughlin to others, and recon-veyances back to him and to his wife, which it is unnecessary to notice, as all the interests, under these purchasers from the State, became united again in McLaughlin’s estate after his ■death. It is in proof that, before purchasing from the State, McLaughlin advised Cheek, his landlord, that the time for redemption was about to run out, and that others were looking after the land with a view to its purchase ; to which Cheek responded that McLaughlin did not know what he was talking about.

After his purchase from the auditor, McLaughlin repudiated the tenancy and claimed the property as his own, refusing to pay rents. A contest then began for possession, through orders of the court below, regarding the property; based upon the idea that it was still in the custody of the law,, from having been ordered into the hands of Berry, as receiver. On the 9th of December, 1873, Robert B. Burton, was by the Crittenden Circuit Court appointed receiver to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of Berry, and in January following, by agreement of attorneys, the appointment was confirmed here, where the appeal was still pending. It was ordered that said Burton be x’ecognized as such receiver, as well in this court as in the court below.

Thereupon the parties to the original suit, making common cause against McLaughlin, began proceedings in the court below to remove him from possession, and to compel restitution to the Receiver Burton. Application was made by petition to the Hon. John W. Fox, Circuit Judge, for the purpose, who for some reason did not act. On the 13th of May, 1874, the petition was granted by the Hon. John E. Bennett,, then an associate justice of this court, who afterwards, by writ of assistance, put the property in the hands of Burton.

McLaughlin and. his co-tenants, afterwards applied to his. honor, Judge Hutton of the Circuit Court, who sitting in Chambers on the 29th of July, 1874, ruled that the injunction had been improvidently awarded by a judge having no jurisdiction, dissolved it, and ordered- Burton to restore possession to McLaughlin and his co-tenants.

Afterwards it seems from an order in the transcript without date or file mark, that the Circuit Court ordered Burton to bring an action of forcible entry and detainer for the lands, against James McLaughlin, as guardian, and Mary McLaughlin, as executrix ; John McLaughlin, having died in possession leaving a son, and devisee of these lands, Francis P. A. McLaughlin. When the action was brought does not appear in the transcript, (which throughout is wonderfully careless, and regardless of the rules of this court) but we might infer from a paper, bound up with the transcript, that it was pending on the 25th of October 1876 ; and dismissed on the 3d of November of the same year; at the cost of the plaintiff.

Resort was again had to the chancery proceedings ; and after several attempts, all the parties interested were brought in on a rule to show cause why the lands should not be surrendered to the receiver ; and those holding it punished for contempt.

Respondents to the petition, in showing cause, set up the purchases from the State ; and amount of taxes paid, with pen-penalties and costs ; and also claims for valuable improvements ; for all which no one had paid or offered to pay them.

They also relied upon two years’ possession as a bar under the statute of limitations.

Upon the hearing, the court appointed a special master to report “ the amount paid the State as taxes for said lands by John McLaughlin, and by D. A. Robinson, with one-hundred per centum per annum thereon, and the amount of taxes since paid thereon by John McLaughlin and his successors, witn twenty-five centum per annum thereon from the date of payment, and the value of all improvements thereon,” made since the payment.

The receiver reported on the first of November, 1876, as follows:

Amount paid by McLaughlin to Auditor for taxes, $2,892 50

Amount paid Ivy Robinson to Auditor for taxes. . . 138 06

100 per cent, on both sums. 3,025 36

Taxes for 1874. 234 09

Penalt} for 1874 and 1875. ' 117 04

Taxes for 1875. 133 86

Penaltv. 33 46

$6,570 37

The improvements of a permanent character were reported, with valuations swelling the amount to... $7,148 37

To this report, the parties moving for the rule, consisting of those interested in the fund in court as represented by the receiver excepted ; objecting only to such parts as allowed any interest or penalty on the amount of taxes paid, and as to all or any sutn for improvements.

The court overruled the exceptions, and ordered that upon payment to the said Mary A. McLaughlin, and Francis P. A.

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Bluebook (online)
33 Ark. 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waggener-v-mclaughlin-ark-1878.