Welch v. McKenzie

50 S.W. 505, 66 Ark. 251, 1899 Ark. LEXIS 90
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 11, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 50 S.W. 505 (Welch v. McKenzie) 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
Welch v. McKenzie, 50 S.W. 505, 66 Ark. 251, 1899 Ark. LEXIS 90 (Ark. 1899).

Opinion

Hughes, J.

These suits were brought by appellant, on the chancery side of the Yell circuit court for the. Dardanelle district, to the February term, 1896, for dower in certain lands and town lots owned by her deceased husband, C. W. Welch, and by him sold and conveyed during coverture without procuring her relinquishment of dower therein.

On the hearing in the court below, the two cases mentioned in No. 3671 were consolidated. To the same term six other suits were brought by appellant for dower, which were consolidated by agreement, all of which eight cases were submitted and argued together in the court below as No. 3672. The proof was taken in but one case, that is, the case of Harriet P. Welch v. J. G. McKenzie, and it was agreed that the depositions, exhibits, and proof in that ease should be read, considered and treated as evidence in each of the eight cases for dower, as far as applicable.

The six cases mentioned in No. 3672 involve the same questions as in the two eases consolidated in No. 3671, except it is contended that the lands and town lots described in the six eases mentioned in No. 3672 were partnership property, and, therefore, not subject to dower. It was also agreed that the six cases mentioned in No. 3672 should all abide the decision of the supreme court in the case of Harriet P. Welch v. T. A. Johnston.

The complaints allege that appellant is the widow of C. W. Welch, late a citizen of Dardanelle, Arkansas; that she intermarried with C. W. Welch on the 30th day of April, 1867; that C. W. Welch died intestate on the 23d day of October, 1890; that, during their coverture C. W. Welch was seized of an estate of inheritance in the S. ½ of the S. W. ¼ of sec. 25 in T. 7 N., R. 21 west, situated in said district, county and state, which is now claimed by appellee, J. G. McKenzie, and the N. ½ of S. W. ¼ of sec. 25 in T. 7 N., R. 21 west, which is now claimed by appellee, T. H. Marr; that dower in said land has never been allotted to.her; that said G. W. Welch sold and conveyed said lands to appellees during their coverture; that she never joined her said husband in said deeds, nor relinquished her dower in and to said lands; that said appellees have been in possession of said lands respectively claimed by them, and have enjoyed the rents and profits thereof, continuously since the death of her said husband,—and pray that an account be taken of the annual rental .value of said lands since the death of her said, husband, and that she be decreed one-third thereof, with six per cent, interest since the accrual of said rents, and that dower be decreed to her in said lands, and that an assignment thereof be made according to the statute.

Appellees, J. G. McKenzie and T. H. Marr, by their respective answers, state that they purchased said lands from C. W. Welch long prior to his death, and that he conveyed said lands to them with proper covenants of warranty and relinquishment of dower by Rosana Welch; that they paid full value for said lands; that C. W. Welch lived with said Rosana, and represented that she was his lawful wife; that, after the death of C. W. Welch, E. P. Welch, the son and sole heir of C. W. Welch, came to Dardanelle with power of attorne.) from his mother (the appellant herein), and that all of the estate of the said C. W. Welch, deceased, undisposed of at his death, was turned over to E. P. Welch and appellant; that appellees learned that appellant was about to begin proceedings to recover dower in the lands mentioned in these suits, and they were about to proceed against the estate of C. W. Welch to recover on the breach of warranty embraced in said deeds made to them for said lands; that appellant agreed with appellees that she would not claim dower in said lands if appellees would not bring their suit; that, since that time, E. P. Welch and appellant have sold and disposed of the entire estate, or removed it from the state; that, on account of the false and fraudulent representations “made as aforesaid,” appellees were induced to abandon their claims against said estate for breach of warranty; that appellant is estopped by'her fraudulent conduct, as aforesaid, from claiming dower in said lands. Appellee Marr avers that the northeast | of southwest aforesaid, claimed by him, was exchanged by C. W. Welch with J. H. Daeus for Dardan elle property, and that appellant is barred from recovering dower in that forty acres because she did not begin suit within one year after the death of C. W. Welch.

In the case of Harriet P. Welch v. T. A. Johnson the complaint is substantially the same as the complaints of J. G. McKenzie and T. H. Marr. And the answer of T. A. Johnston is substantially the same as the answers of J. G. McKenzie and T. H. Maxr, except that T. A. Johnston contends that lots 9, 10, 11 and 12 in block 56 in Dardanelle, and described in the complaint against him, were purchased by W. E. Cotton and C. W. Welch “out of partnership funds for speculative purposes, and were sold, and the proceeds of sale were put into the partnership.”

There is evidence tending to show that E. P. Welch, the son and heir of E. W. Welch, by his words and conduct led the appellees to believe that his mother, Harriet P. Welch, the widow of C. W. Welch, would not claim dower in the lands which her husband had owned and sold in his lifetime, in which she had not relinquished dower, and that, relying thereon, the appellees, who had bought said lands of said Welch in his lifetime, refrained from suing the estate of C. W. Welch for breach of warranty contained in the deeds by him conveying said lands. It is not disputed that Harriet P. Welch is entitled to dower in the lands involved in No. 3676, if she is not estopped to claim the same.

After the death of C. W. Welch, his son, the said E. P. Welch, went to Dardanelle with a power of attorney from his mother, to look after and represent her interest in the estate of her deceased husband, the said C. W. Welch, who it seems had for some years been living with a Mrs Rosana Burton, as his wife, and who as such had signed the relinquishments of dower in the deeds conveying the lands in controversy in these cases, and who was generally supposed to be his lawful wife. Following are copies of said power of attorney, and of a letter written by R. C. Bullock to Edwin P. Welch and the reply of Edwin P. Welch to the same, relied upon as evidence to show that Harriet P. Welch is estopped to claim dower in said lands, together with some other evidence contained in the testimony of witnesses.

“Power of Attorney. The State of South Carolina; County of Anderson. Know all men by these presents: That I, Harriet P. Welch, widow of Clark W. Welch, deceased, and before my marriage named and known as P. A. Harriet Hall, do make, constitute and appoint my son, Edwin P. Welch, my true and lawful attorney for me and in my name to represent me and my interest in the estate of my late husband, the said Clark W.

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Bluebook (online)
50 S.W. 505, 66 Ark. 251, 1899 Ark. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welch-v-mckenzie-ark-1899.