Wimberly v. Norman

253 S.W.2d 222, 221 Ark. 319, 1952 Ark. LEXIS 900
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 8, 1952
Docket4-9926
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 253 S.W.2d 222 (Wimberly v. Norman) 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
Wimberly v. Norman, 253 S.W.2d 222, 221 Ark. 319, 1952 Ark. LEXIS 900 (Ark. 1952).

Opinion

Minor W. Millwee, Justice.

Appellants are the widow and heirs of R. W. Wimberly who died intestate in 1947. Appellees are the heirs and devisees of George Norman and E. W. Gates, deceased.

Appellants brought this suit against appellees to quiet their title to a 40-acre tract of land described as the NE% of the SE% of section 18, township 17 south, range 8 west, in Ashley County, Arkansas. They alleged that R. W. Wimberly acquired title by warranty deed executed in 1902 and by adverse possession of the tract from that date until his death in 1947. They also alleged that a tax deed to the land issued to George Norman and E. W. Gates in 1904 was void for numerous reasons. Appellees denied these allegations and asserted that appellants’ complaint was barred by limitations and laches. Trial resulted in a decree holding that appellees had superior title to ■ the lands and ordering-dismissal of appellants’ complaint.

In 1899 R. W. Wimberly moved with his family into a house on an 80-acre tract of land lying immediately north of the forty in controversy and described as the of the NE1/^ of section 18, township 17 south, range 8 west, under a rental contract with Amanda Thompson. On November 27, 1902, Amanda and Maria Thompson conveyed the 40 acres in controversy and the 80 acres north of said forty to R. W. Wimberly. In June, 1902, the 40 acres in controversy forfeited for the taxes of 1901 and was purchased at the tax sale by George Norman who assigned a half interest in the certificate of purchase to E. W. Gates. The land not having been redeemed, a clerk’s tax deed was executed and delivered to Norman and Gates on June 21, 1904. The validity of this tax deed is now conceded. While a few of the tax payments between 1908 and 1913 were not shown, the county records having burned about 1922, it is fairly certain from the record that Norman and Gates paid the taxes each year from 1903 to 1913 and it is undisputed that they paid said taxes from 1914 to 1946.

In 1919 It. W. Wimberly and wife executed an oil and gas lease covering the 80 acres lying north of the forty in controversy and another 40-acre tract which Wimberly then owned lying east of the 40 acres in controversy. In 1920 they executed a mortgage on the same lands which did not include the forty in controversy. This mortgage was foreclosed in 1928 and the lands involved therein were eventually purchased by Luther Wimberly, one of the appellants. R. W. Wimberly continued to reside in a house located on the 80-acre tract north of the forty in controversy, until his death in 1947 and his widow and some of their children have continued to live there since. There is a sharp dispute in the evidence as to their use or possession of the 40 acres in controversy from 1904 to 1921. Some of the appellants testified that a rail fence enclosed a part of the forty in 1902, and that R. W. Wimberly cultivated small patches on the tract until about 1921 when he quit farming; that the rail fence subsequently burned and in 1925 Wimberly constructed a wire fence along the north boundary of the 40 acres in controversy; that since 1925 they have continued to cut fire wood and fence posts from the forty and that they maintained a small pasture which ran down to a water hole on the forty until about 1942.

L. L. Morris, a timber cruiser for a lumber company who had been familiar with the tract since 1908 and had looked after it and other lands for George Norman, testified that he had observed no enclosure or fencing of the forty; that it appeared there had been some cultivation on the east side about fifty or sixty years ago, but that a good stand of timber had since grown on it and the timber recently cut showed to be of an average age of 35 or 40 years.

A railway line runs through the forty and there are about 10 acres west of the line which have never been enclosed or cultivated. While no survey of boundary lines was introduced, witnesses testified that the 1925 fence ran west from the northeast corner of the forty in controversy and varied slightly to the south of what they thought was the true line so that it enclosed less than y2 acre of the forty in controversy.

Henry Stevens testified that about 1945 he cruised some timber for R. W. Wimberly for the purpose of selling the pulp wood therefrom and that the lands cruised were east of and across the road from the forty in controversy and nothing was said about the sale of timber from said forty. He also stated that he had since cut the timber off the north half of the forty in controversy and found no pastures or fields and that some of the timber was more than fifty years old and was scattered over the entire tract except for a plot of about 2y2 acres near the road in the northeast corner where the timber was not large enough to cut as saw logs. He also stated that the water hole described by appellants was not on the forty in question and he saw no evidence that it had ever been enclosed.

The chancellor found that appellees and their predecessors acquired superior title to the 40-acre tract under their 1904 tax deed and the payment of taxes for 45 years; that the evidence was insufficient to show actual adverse possession of any portion of said land by the Wimberlys after 1925 except the narrow strip along the north fence boundary; that the evidence strongly indicated that R. W. Wimberly did not hold possession 'of any part of the forty in hostility to the title of Norman and Gates, but had abandoned said lands and recognized their superior title. The chancellor further found that appellants were guilty of laches in delaying institution of the present suit until after the death of Wimberly and Norman whose testimony could have made certain many uncertainties relative to the title.

Since the validity of the tax deed to Norman and Gates in 1904 is conceded, it is apparent that they thereby acquired superior record title to the lands in controversy. Ark. Stats., § 84-1302, provides, and our eases hold, that the effect of a valid clerk’s tax deed is to vest in the grantee all right, title and interest of the former owner. Nelson v. Pierce, 119 Ark. 291, 177 S. W. 899. But appellants contend that they reacquired title to the forty acres by continued adverse possession for more than seven years after the issuance of the tax deed. They rely on such cases as McCrary v. Joyner, 64 Ark. 547, 44 S. W. 79, and Moorehead v. Dial, 134 Ark. 548, 204 S. W. 424, which hold that the original owner of lands sold for general taxes may by subsequent adverse possession acquire title as against the purchaser at a tax sale. We agree with the chancellor that the preponderance of the evidence fails to show that R. W. Wimberly held actual adverse possession of the 40-acre tract for the statutory period after the tax deed to Norman and Grates. There are several circumstances which support this conclusion. Although Wimberly continued to pay taxes on the north 80 acres and another forty that he owned, he did not pay the taxes on the forty in controversy. The tract was not included in the mortgage, lease or sales of timber which he made from the other lands. His construction of the fence in 1925 along the boundary between the forty in controversy and the north forty where he lived also indicates a lack of intention on his part to claim the land in controversy.

Appellants also contend that even if they did not establish actual adverse possession of the lands, the deed to R. W.

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Bluebook (online)
253 S.W.2d 222, 221 Ark. 319, 1952 Ark. LEXIS 900, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wimberly-v-norman-ark-1952.