Wooten v. Farmers' & Merchants' Bank

249 S.W. 569, 158 Ark. 179, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 393
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 2, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 249 S.W. 569 (Wooten v. Farmers' & Merchants' Bank) 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
Wooten v. Farmers' & Merchants' Bank, 249 S.W. 569, 158 Ark. 179, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 393 (Ark. 1923).

Opinion

Humphreys, J.

Appellees brought suit against appellants in the Poinsett Chancery Court to foreclose a deed of trust executed by appellants to appellees upon the SEi/|., NW%, section 26, township 11 north, range 7 east, and other lands in said county, to secure a large indebtedness.

Appellants interposed the defense that the deed of trust was invalid as to the dower interest of Mattie L. Wooten in.all of the lands, on the alleged ground that she did not sign or acknowledge the instrument, and invalid as to the interest of both in the forty-acre tract particularly described above, on the alleged ground that it was their homestead, and in executing the instrument there was a failure to comply with the law necessary to convey homesteads.

The cause was submitted to the court upon the pleadings and testimony, which resulted in a decree adverse to appellants, from which is this appeal.

Appellant, Gr. C. Wooten, bought the forty-acre tract above described in the year 1916, and impressed it as his homestead by actual occupancy and otherwise. He also purchased the adjoining forty-acre tract, called the Wall place. He built a barn upon the Wall place and made other improvements upon both places of a substantial and permanent character. About January 1, 1918, he leased the plantation known as the Chapman & Dewey lands and moved upon and occupied them during the years 1918 and 1919, but with the declared purpose of returning later on to the Reynolds place, which he called his home place. While occupying these leased lands, he purchased two other large tracts, which adjoined, one known as the Harris and the other as the Marr place. These were good places, well located for farming purposes, and near the school. In order to make the initial payment on the Harris place, he executed the deed of trust in question to appellees on the 22nd day of December, 1919. J. D. DuBard, the cashier of the bank, testified that when If. C. Wooten applied for and obtained the loan he said he intended to sell the Wall and Reynolds places, and, as they were sold, to apply the proceeds to the payment of the debt, whereupon he prepared the notes and deed of trust and gave them to Wooten to be executed; that Wooten returned them duly executed and received the money; that in February or March, 1921, Wooten sold the Wall place to Schoenberger & Blum and applied the proceeds to the payment of the debt, according to promise; that Wooten sold the Reynolds place to Dr. Sims, who executed his note for $2,000 to cover the cash payment which was to be made after Wooten borrowed and placed a $2,000 mortgage on the place, which mortgage Sims was to assume ; that the sale was not finally consummated because the money market tightened up and prevented Wooten from borrowing $2,000 on the long-time paper, and because Sims was unable to get the money to make a cash payment; that he examined the signatures on the deed of trust and discovered that Mr. and Mrs. Wooten’s names were signed by different persons in different colored ink; that in September, 1921, he demanded a payment upon the indebtedness; that Wooten refused to pay anything, and said, “Well, I have good grounds to scrap you on, and I might as well tell you now as later; I forged my wife’s name to the deed of trust which you hold, and if you insist on carrying this into court, it may send me to the penitentiary, but it won’t make you any money; but if you let me alone I will pay it. ”

The record reflects that appellant made an oral, sale of che Reynolds ¡place and received -some earnest money on it, ibut afterwards backed out and returned the money and offered to sell it to others; it also reflects that he moved off of the leased land to the Marr place, and made a number of improvements upon it and the Harris place, such as screening and repairing the main dwelling, building tenant houses, planting out an orchard, building a large barn, etc.; it also reflects that, during the time he was improving the Marr and Harris places, he told friends and neighbors that he intended to make the Marr place his home; it also reflects that he had a change for the worse in fortune, due to the slump in the price of cotton, and, when" pressed by the bank and other creditors, hé moved, at -an unusual time of the year, back • to the Reynolds place, claiming that it had always been their homestead. The following testimony, in sub-stance, appears in the record concerning the execution and acknowledgment of the deed of trust: Gr. C. Wooten testified that he signed his name to the notes and deed of trust at the bank, and signed his wife’s name to them at Williams’ store; that he signed her name because he knew she would not do so at his request; that he signed her name without her knowledge or consent, and did not inform her that he had done so until the year 1921; that he took.the papers to F. R. Proctor, notary public, and told him to call his wife over the telephone and take her acknowledgment; that he left the papers with the notary, and got them later in the day; that he took them to Mr. BuBard, and called his attention to the fact that he had signed his wife’s name to them. Emmif Wooten, appellant’s son, who was with him at the time, also testified that his father called Mr. DuBard’s attention "to the fact that he had signed his mother’s name. Mr. Du-Bard denied that his attention was called'to this-fact,' and said if if had been he 'would not-have aceeptéd -'the-papers; Mrs. Mattie L; Wóótén testified-that -she did not sign the notes and mortgage ’ or authorize her bus.-band to sign her name to them, and. that she was never requested to sign them, and would not have done so had such a request been made; that she never acknowledged the execution of the deed of trust before F. R. Proctor; that she did not know Mr. Proctor. F. R. Proctor testified that G. C. Wooten brought the deed of trust to him and requested him to take Mrs. Wooten’s acknowledgment over the telephone; that he was personally acquainted with both G. C. Wooten and his wife, as they had been trading in the store; that, pursuant to the request, he called Mrs. Mattie L. Wooten over the telephone at her home, recognized her voice, and told her that Mr. Wooten had brought him a deed of trust and requested that he take her acknowledgment to it; that he asked her if she had read and signed it and understood what it was. She said that it was all right, and acknowledged that she had executed it; that G. C. Wooten remained near him while he telephoned to Mrs. Wooten, and could hear the questions he asked her; that his name and the name of G. C. Wooten were signed in the same sort of ink; that Mrs. Wooten’s name was signed with a different kind of ink. G. H. Williams testified that he remembered when G. C. Wooten came into his place on business to get Mr. Proctor to take the acknowledgment in question; that Mr. Proctor rang and called for Mrs. Wooten; that he heard Mr. Proctor ask if it was Mrs. Wooten, and then whether she had signed the deed of trust, and if she knew what she was signing, and if she had signed it of her own free will; that he was standing within eight feet of the ’phone at the time.

Appellants make two contentions for a reversal of the decree, the first being that the court erred in finding G. C. Wooten had abandoned his homestead right in the Reynolds place, and second, in finding that the deed of trust was executed in manner required to waive dower right of Mrs. Mattie L. Wooten in the lands.

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Bluebook (online)
249 S.W. 569, 158 Ark. 179, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wooten-v-farmers-merchants-bank-ark-1923.