Wofford v. Young

293 S.W. 725, 173 Ark. 802, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 251
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 25, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 293 S.W. 725 (Wofford v. Young) 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
Wofford v. Young, 293 S.W. 725, 173 Ark. 802, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 251 (Ark. 1927).

Opinion

Wood, J.

J. L. Mercer, doing business under the name of J. L. Mercer & Company,- was the beneficiary in a deed of trust in which W. S. Ayers was the trustee. The deed- of trust was executed on March 28, 1923, by James L. Wofford and Frances Wofford, covering the northeast quarter of section 4, township 5 north, range 7 east, containing 160 acres, in Crittenden County, Arkansas, and was given to secure a promissory note in the sum of $676, of even date, and other advances made by Mercer to the Woffords. This action was instituted on February 3, 1925, by Mercer against the Woffords to foreclose the deed of trust in the sum of $1,204.63, the amount alleged to be due at that date under the deed. It was alleged that J. L. Wofford owned an undivided half interest in the land and that Frances Wofford owned a life estate therein.

Ill the affidavit for warning order against Frances Wofford it was alleged that she resided in Clay County, Kentucky, and was absent from Crittenden County, Arkansas. Wofford was served with summons, and Frank Berry Avas appointed attorney ad litem for Frances Wofford and a warning order issued for her February 3, 1925. A decree was rendered on March 16, 1925, against J. L. Wofford and against Frances Wofford, the latter by default, for $1,204.63, balance claimed to be due Mercer by the Woffords. The land as described in the deed of trust was described in the decree, and the court declared the amount of the decree “to be a lien against the interests of the defendant in the land described,” and directed that the land be sold. A commissioner was appointed to make the sale upon giving notice of the time, place and terms of the sale. The notice described the land to be sold as contained in the deed of trust. The report of the sale by the commissioner shoAved that he sold the land condemned in the decree and that C. Cl. Young “became the purchaser of the whole of said premises at and for the sum of $1,314.13, he being the highest and best bidder for said lands.” The lands were sold subject to a prior indebtedness in fa\mr of the Federal Land Bank of St. Louis, Missouri. After the report of the commissioner Avas made to the court and confirmed, the clerk of the court interpolated in the report of the commissioner the Avords, “all the interest of the defendants herein,” so as to make the same mean that the commissioner had sold all the interest. of the defendants in the land as described in the deed of trust. Mercer had arranged Avith his counsel to be present at the sale, but failed to get notice and did not attend. His counsel put in a bid for him, but the property Avas sold for the sum of $1,314.13, and Avas purchased by C. G-. Young, as reported by the commissioner.

There was no appeal from the decree of foreclosure. The attorneys for Wofford, on October 19, 1925, filed exceptions to the report of sale by the commissioner and a motion to set same aside on the ground that same had sold for gross inadequacy of consideration; that the lands were worth $14,400; that they were incumbered by liens amounting in the aggregate to about $2,000, and that the rents thereon for the year 1925 amounted to $1,193, and the purchaser bid for same only $1',314.13, the net price of $21,13 an acre, when the lands were worth $90 per acre. The Woffords tendered into court the amount of the indebtedness for which the lands sold, and asked that the sale be set aside. The motion was supported by the affidavits of four landowners, residents of Crittenden County, who were familiar with the land in controversy and who placed the market value thereof at $90 per acre. Each of the affiants stated that they had no interest in the matter.

The purchaser, C. Gf. Young, responded to the motion to set aside the sale, and specifically denied the same. On October 21, 1925, the chancery court heard the report of sale of the commissioner and the exceptions thereto, and the motion by the Woffords to set the sale aside and to redeem the land, and the response thereto, and the oral evidence of Wheeler, Young and Reese, and the court found that the sale was in all respects properly conducted, and that the Woffords had no right to. redeem, and overruled the exceptions to the report of sale, and entered its decree confirming the same and directing the commissioner to make a deed to Young, the purchaser.

On December 14, 1925, which was the first day the court would meet after rendition of the confirmation decree, the Woffords filed their petition to rehear the former motion to set aside the sale, in which they reiterated the, facts substantially as above set forth as grounds for vacating the sale. They said, among other things, that they were misled by the actions of Mercer in the foreclosure suit, who informed them that he had no intention to deprive them of their farm; that he intended to foreclose and bid the land in at the sale, and that all he wanted was his money, and that, if the Woffords would pay him his money in the fall, they should have their lands back; that they were, by these representations, lulled into security, and gave no further attention to the foreclosure proceedings. They set up that the foreclosure proceedings were all misleading as to a description of the property, in ’ that the entire interest was advertised to be sold, whereas the "Woffords only owned a half undivided interest, and a widow’s interest, and the decree failed to declare her interest and to fix the interest of the owner of the other undivided interest; that, as a result, the apparent title to the entire tract had been placed in the purchaser. The Woffords further alleged that they had new evidence which they were unable to produce at the former hearing through no fault of theirs. They again asked that the sale he set aside and that they be allowed to pay the purchaser the purchase money, and asked that he be required to account for the rents.

C. Gr. Young filed a demurrer and response to this additional petition, and alleged that the issue was res judicata, and denied all the allegations of the petition.

There was the following stipulation of facts: “Right after the rendition of the decree of October 21, 1925, appellants engaged other counsel, who went to Marion, Arkansas, to examine the record, and found that the decree had not then been reduced to writing, and that the report of sale indicated that the entire interest in the land had been sold; counsel called the attention of the clerk to this state of 'affairs, pointing out that the decree had clouded the title of the bystander, Jessie May Smith. Counsel was in Marion again on December 14, 1925, and the clerk called his attention to the interpolation which the clerk had made in the report of sale and the decree, by adding the words, “all 'the interests of the defendants herein.’’ Counsel asked to see the published notice of sale, but this could not be found. Counsel later procured a copy of the paper in which the notice of sale was published. and filed it. The notice is copied in the stipulation. It is further stipulated that Mi. Mercer’s attorney was present at the sale and bid for Mr. Mercer the amount of the debt and costs. Also that the petition.for receiver was never presented to the court, but instead, an arrangement was made between counsel, as a result of which W. B. Rhodes, cashier of the local bank, collected the rents as custodian. That Rhodes collected $1,038 of the rents for 1925, and J. L. Wofford collected $155. That G. Gr. Young now claims only two-thirds of the rents, and Rhodes paid over to Jessie May Smith $346, being one-third of the amount he had collected.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
293 S.W. 725, 173 Ark. 802, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wofford-v-young-ark-1927.