Wells v. Rice

34 Ark. 346
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 34 Ark. 346 (Wells v. Rice) 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
Wells v. Rice, 34 Ark. 346 (Ark. 1879).

Opinion

Harrison, J.

On the twenty-second day of March, 1875, Fielding Rice and Susan Rice commenced this action against James M. Wells and Adolphus Kibler, to recover possession of the west half of the southwest quarter of section 11, in township 21, north, of range 1, west, to which they claimed title as heirs at law of their father, William L. Rice, who claimed title by entry and purchase from the government.

The defendants claimed the land in severalty, but did not in their answer, which was joint, designate the part of each, nor was it in any manner shown in the subsequent proceedings. Kibler, they said, purchased from Wells, and Wells the whole tract from Louis Hanauer, who purchased the north half of it, at a sale under a decree of foreclosure of a mortgage thereof from said William L. Rice to said Hanauer; aud the south half at a sale made by the administrator of said William L. Rice under an order of the court of probate, for the payment of the debts of his intestate’s estate; and they averred that they had had peaceable, adverse and continuous possession for more than seven years before the commencement of the suit, and set up and pleaded the statute of limitations.

The vei’dict of the jury was in favor of the plaintiffs, for the whole tract, and for six hundred dollars damages; but the plaintiffs entered a disclaimer as to the south half of the tract, and a remittitur of the damages.

The defendants moved for a new trial; their motion was overruled, and they appealed.

It is unnecessary to notice the evidence and proceedings upon the trial in relation to the south half of the tract.

The plaintiffs read to the jury a patent from the United States to William L. Rice, for the northwest quarter of the southwest quarter of said section 11, dated the seventeenth day of August, 1838.

They then read from the chancery record of the Randolph circuit court the following two orders in — so stated in the bill of exceptions — the suit of foreclosure recited in the deed of the commissioner therein, to Louis Ilanauer, exhibited with the answer:

“ Louis Hanauer, Daniel Hanauer and' Jacob Hanauer, merchants and partners, doing business by the firm name, style and description ofL. Hanauer& Co. vs. William L. Rice.

Bill to foreclose.

“Now come the plaintiffs by their solicitors, and file their motion to require James Martin, the commissioner heretofore appointed in this case to sell the lands as commanded.”

“Louis Hanauer, Jacob Ilanauer and Dan-' iel Hanauer, merchants and partners, doing business by the firm name, style and description of

L. Hanauer & Co., Complainants, vs. William L. Rice, Defendant.

Bill to foreclose mortgage.

“ On this day come the complainants by their solicitor, and showed to the court here that James Martin, Esq., who was appointed commissioner in this case to sell the mortgaged premises, has failed to make sale thereof according to the direction of the decree in this case, and moved the court to direct said commissioner to proceed to sell said premises ; and the premises being seen and fully understood by the court, it is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that the order of this court, made at the last term, in this case, be, and is hereby, revived ; and the said commissioner is hereby directed to proceed and sell said lands according to the terms and directions of said decree; and that he, as such commissioner, report his proceedings to this court at the next term, to which time this case stands continued.”

They then introduced the following witnesses:

Larkin Johnson, who testified : That he, in 1852 or 1853, lived at the Warm Springs — the land in controversy — and ivas well acquainted with William L. Rice and his daughter, Susan. Susan was about the age of witness’s sou, who ivas, at the time mentioned, eighteen months or two years old, and he was a little older than she; neither of them could talk plainly. His son was twenty-live years old on the fifth of January, 1877; she was then, at the time of testifying, he understood, married.

Edmond Gilliam testified: That he, in 1856 or 1857, went with William L. Rice to Pocahontas to see Louis Hanauer, who was then merchandizing there. The witness then knew that Rice had before sold or delivered to Hanauer a negro woman on a mortgage, for which Hanauer was to allow him $1,000 and all he could get for her over that sum. Hanauer told Rice that he did not get but $400 for the woman, and refused to account to him for any more. They got angry and had some words, and the interview ended by Rice telling Hanauer that he would sue him unless he paid him the overplus on the negro woman, and Hanauer saying he would not pay, and that he (Rice) owed him on a fair settlement.

William H. W addle testified: That he was a clerk of Louis Hanauer, in Pocahontas, in the years 1856, 1857 and 1858, and knew that William L. Rice, about that time, let Louis Hanauer have a negro woman. Louis, Jacob and Daniel Hanauer did business together, and appeared to be jointly interested. When any land was sold under deed of trust, mortgage or execution, that which was valuable was generally bought in by Louis Hanauer. William L. Rice sometimes had an open-account with the house.

Nicholas Bach testified: That shortly after the death of William L. Rice, which was in 1857 or 1858, he went to Batesville to enter a tract of land adjoining the Rice Springs, or Warm Springs, and he met Daniel Hanauer there. That Daniel Hanauer asked him why he did not buy the springs-property. He told him he was not able— that if he should do so, they would want their money on the mortgage, and he could not pay it, and Daniel Hanauer replied, “ that that was all settled, and the mortgage satisfied ; and that there was not more than fifty dollars between them, and that was against the estate.”

And John P. Black testified: That Louis, Jacob and Daniel Hanauer were partners. That he was present at the foreclosure sale of the land — the northwest quarter of the southwest quarter of said section (11), and that it was bid in by Jacob Hanauer.

It was admitted that the plaintiffs had brought a previous action against the defendants for the land, which was commenced on the twenty-second day of May, 1874, and a non-suit was taken in it at the November term of the same year. The defendants objected to the admission of the orders read from the chancery record, of the testimony of Gilliam, Waddle, Bach and Black.

The defendants read to the jury a deed, from James Mai’tin, as commissioner in chancery, to Louis Hanauer, for the said northwest quarter of the said southwest quarter, in which it was, in substance, recited: That the said William L.

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Bluebook (online)
34 Ark. 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-v-rice-ark-1879.