Young v. Garrett

5 F.R.D. 117, 1946 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1517
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 28, 1946
DocketNos. 163, 164
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 F.R.D. 117 (Young v. Garrett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young v. Garrett, 5 F.R.D. 117, 1946 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1517 (W.D. Ark. 1946).

Opinion

MILLER, District Judge.

These are separate but companion cases in each of which a motion for permission to amend the original complaint has been filed in accordance with an order of the United States Circuit Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit, made August 8, 1945, 149 F.2d 223. For a clear understanding of the questions presented, it is necessary that a brief statement of the facts reflected by the records of this court in the tortuous history of this litigation be made.

[118]*118On December 26, 1941, the plaintiffs in Civil Action No. 164, Betty Jean Gilbert, et ah, all residents of Louisiana, filed in this court their complaint, Civil Action No. 138, against Harry L. Elam and forty-seven other individuals and corporations, including the defendants in the two cases now before the Court. In that suit the plaintiffs sought recovery of an undivided interest in the lands involved in the present cases, for rents and profits, and for an accounting, upon the allegation that Sarah E. Pace was the owner of only a life estate in the lands and at her death the fee simple title vested in the heirs of the said Sarah E. Pace; that Mary Christine Pace, a daughter, was one of nine children surviving Sarah E. Pace, and that the said Mary Christine Pace was at the time non compos mentis and remained so until her death, December 27, 1939; that they had inherited the interest of Amelia A. Pace Dismukes, deceased, who was a sister of the said Mary Christine Pace.

On the same date, December 26, 1941, the present plaintiff in Civil Action No. 163, Horace A. Young, a resident of Illinois,' without obtaining permission of the court, filed an intervention in Civil Action No. 138 in which he alleged that his claim and the action of plaintiffs had questions of law and fact in common, and that the entire controversy might be more expeditiously and fairly decided by presenting them as one controversy. Permission to file the intervention was granted on March 30, 1942.

The intervenor sought a recovery of an interest in the same lands for rents, profits, damages because of removal of oil and gas, and for an accounting and interest on the value of oil and gas and crops against the same forty-eight defendants, and in addition thereto, he alleged that the Standard Oil Company of Louisiana and certain individual residents of Louisiana were necessary and indispensable parties, and asked that they be made parties defendant. The intervener adopted the allegations of the plaintiffs with respect to the interest in the lands owned by Mary Christine Pace at her death, and alleged that he had acquired by warranty deed, dated May 27, 1941, all of the interest in the lands of the heirs of Mary Christine Pace, except such interest as was acquired by the plaintiffs by inheritance.

In due time all the defendants answered the complaint and intervention, except eleven, and on the opening day of the trial, the court after a conference with the various attorneys entered an order finding and declaring that such defendants as had not answered did not then exist, or had no interest in the controversy. At the same time the complaint and intervention was also dismissed as to the defendant, Lion Oil Company.

The case was tried to the court on October 27 and 28, 1942, and at the conclusion of the introduction of the testimony, was submitted to the court, but the Attorneys were requested- to submit written briefs upon the questions, (a) effect of the deed of April IS, 1867, from Wesley Arnold to Sarah E. Pace, (b) effect of deed of December 12, 1867, from William H. Pace and Sarah E. Pace to L. H. Young, and (c) legal effect of the uncontradicted testimony as to the intervention of Horace A. Young, and whether the court had jurisdiction of the intervention, and if the court did not, whether the plaintiffs’ complaint should be dismissed or only the intervention.

The attorneys for plaintiffs and intervenor filed their brief on November 17, 1942. The attorneys for defendants requested that the testimony be transcribed, which was done, and the time for filing of the brief for defendants was extended to December 22, 1942. The brief was filed December 21, 1942. The time for filing reply brief of plaintiffs and intervenor was extended from time to time upon request of the attorneys for said parties, and the same was not filed until April 1, 1943, along with a full transcript of all the testimony. In the meantime the plaintiffs and intervenor dismissed at various times their case against many of the defendants, and on December 24, 1942, filed the present cases, Civil Actions Nos. 163 and 164, against only the defendants Levi Garrett, Asa C. Garrett, Frank Garrett, R. S. Foster, Mid-Continent Petroleum Corporation and the Carter Oil Company.

On April 14, 1943, within less than two weeks after all the briefs had been filed, the court with the briefs and a full transcript of all the testimony before it, made and filed specific findings of fact and declarations of law, separately stated.

On October 28, 1942, at the conclusion of the introduction of the testimony, the judge had announced in open court that he was prepared to announce -his findings [119]*119of fact on the question of the mental competency of Mary Christine Pace, but did not think that should be done until the jurisdictional questions were determined.-

The intervenor, Horace A. Young, was claiming an interest in the land, etc., by reason of a deed executed on May 27, 1941, by all the collateral heirs of Mary Christine Pace that were residents of Arkansas. The plaintiffs in the case were residents of Louisiana and did not convey their interest to the intervenor.

The court found that the grantors did not receive any consideration for the execution of the deed; that the execution of the deed was supervised by A. A. Thomason, one of the attorneys of record for the Louisiana heirs and plaintiffs; that the deed was executed at his request upon the understanding with the Arkansas heirs that they retained their interest in the land and the fruits of the litigation; that as .between the intervenor, Horace A. Young and the said grantors, no interest in the land or proceeds of the litigation was conveyed; that the deed was executed by the Arkansas heirs upon the advice of their attorney for the sole purpose of creating a fictitiods ground of federal jurisdiction.

Since the above facts were found, the court refrained from announcing any finding of fact as to the mental competency of Mary Christine Pace, either at the time of the death of her mother, Sarah E. Pace, or subsequent thereto, and likewise refrained from filing any declarations of law as to the legal effect of the deed executed by Wesley Arnold to Sarah E. Pace ón April 15, 1867.

The court did hold that it had no jurisdiction of the case; that the Arkansas heirs, grantors in the deed under 'which the intervenor claimed, were indispensable parties and that if they were made parties and properly aligned, diversity of citizenship, the only alleged ground of jurisdiction, would be destroyed. Therefore ■ a decree dismissing the complaint and intervention in Civil Action No. 138 was entered April 14, 1943.

Subsequent to the dismissal of' the first case, Civil Action No. 138, the present cases came on for consideration having been filed as heretofore stated on December 24, 1942. Prior to the filing of these cases and on December 16 and 18, 1942, the plaintiff in Civil Action No. 163, Horace A.

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Bluebook (online)
5 F.R.D. 117, 1946 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-garrett-arwd-1946.