Zackery v. Warmack

212 S.W.2d 706, 213 Ark. 808, 1948 Ark. LEXIS 536
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 5, 1948
Docket4-8594
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 212 S.W.2d 706 (Zackery v. Warmack) 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
Zackery v. Warmack, 212 S.W.2d 706, 213 Ark. 808, 1948 Ark. LEXIS 536 (Ark. 1948).

Opinion

Minor W. Millwee, Justice.

At the time of her death intestate about the year 1919, Fannie Mixon was the owner of a 40-acre tract of land in Nevada county, Arkansas. She left surviving her the appellant, John Zackery, and five other children as her sole heirs at law.

On May 20,1920, Rufus Zackery, one of the children, conveyed his interest in the land to John Zackery, Dock Zackery, Alfred Zackery, Annette Sterling and Mary Ellen Leake, his five brothers and sisters. The general taxes for the year 1929 were not paid and appellant, John' Zackery, purchased the land at the 1930 tax sale. He received a clerk’s tax deed on March 31, 1937, and has since paid taxes each year until, and including, the year 1945.

Alfred Zackery died intestate without issue in 1943. Rufus Zackery died intestate in 1944 leaving 10 children as his sole heirs, and Annette Sterling died intestate in 1945 survived by eight children.

Appellee, J. B. Warmack, filed this suit on July 8, 1947, against all the heirs of Fannie Mixon, deceased, except Dock Zackery. lie alleged that he was the owner of an eighteen-fortieths interest in the land by virtue of warranty deeds from Pat Robinson and wife and Dock Zackery and wife, executed in March, 1947; that the tax sale and deed to appellant based thereon were void and the procurement of said deed by appellant was merely a redemption for the benefit of his relatives and tenants in common; that appellant was wrongfully claiming full title to the lands and cutting and removing the timber therefrom. Appellee prayed that the interests of the respective owners be fixed and the land sold for the purpose of partition; that judgment also be rendered for the value of the timber cut by appellant and that the amount of such judgment be charged against his interest in the land.

No defense was interposed by any of the defendants except appellant, John Zackery, who filed an answer and cross complaint alleging that he acquired full title to the land under his tax deed and the payment of taxes for the years 1930 to 1945, inclusive, under claim of ownership against the other heirs of Fannie Mixon, deceased, and all parties claiming through them. Appellant prayed that the deeds from Pat Robinson and Dock Zackery to appellee be cancelled and that his title to all the land be quieted.

Trial resulted in a decree in favor of appellee ordering sale of the lands for the purpose of partition according to the respective interests of the parties fixed in the decree. The court found that the tax sale and clerk’s deed to appellant were void, but that said deed was color of title and constituted a redemption from the tax forfeiture for the benefit of appellant’s relatives and tenants in common; that appellant had at all times recognized the interests of the other heirs of Fannie Mixon, and their assigns, and that his possession had never been adverse to them. The decree further found that appellant should be permitted to retain the proceeds of the sale of timber of the value of approximately $83 to reimburse him for taxes paid on the land. The cross complaint of appellant was dismissed and he has appealed.

At the time of Fannie Mixon’s death in 1919, a part of the 40-acre tract was in cultivation and appellant rented the lands to a tenant for one year following the death of his mother. The land has since remained wild, unenclosed and unimproved. Appellant is the eldest of the six children of Fannie Mixon and has at all times resided near the property. All the other heirs, except Dock Zackery who lives at Prescott, Arkansas, moved to other counties shortly after their mother’s death.

The taxes on the land were apparently paid by appellant in the name of Fannie Mixon from 1919 to 1929. After his purchase at the 1930 tax sale, appellant paid the taxes in his own name until 1945. In March, 1925, he executed a right-of-way deed to the 40-acre tract to the Arkansas Power & Light Company and collected the consideration of $1.00 per pole. In August, 1935, he executed a mineral deed and an oil and gas lease to Earl Morgan and a consideration of $40 is recited in each instrument. In 1937, he sold some timber from the land.

The testimony of appellant is replete with faulty recollection of dates and events and contains conflicting statements on material factual issues. This is no doubt due to his advanced age. On direct examination, he- stated that he told all of his brothers and sisters except Dock Zackery that he had purchased the land at the tax sale and was claiming it. On cross-examination, he testified:

“,Q. When you bought the land in for that tax forfeiture, you were going to freeze out your brothers and sisters and take it all yourself? A. They did not say anything about it and I did not either. I just bought it in and supposed it was mine. Q. You say they did not say anything about it and you did not either? A. No, it just sold for taxes and I bought it in. I kept it like it was mine for it sold for taxes and I bought it in. Q. Didn’t you think you ought to tell them something about it if you were going to claim all the land your mother owned? A. I thought they ought to say something about it. . . . Q. You never told them you were claiming all the land, that they did not have any more claim in the land? A. I did not think I had to tell them that. They knowed it was forfeited. They knowed somebody bought it in and whoever bought it, it belonged to them. Q. If they knew you had bought it, if they knew their brother had bought it? A. Just like anybody else had bought it. . . . Q. The heirs that were scattered and gone did not know every time you made any transaction down there about that land? A. I don’t know whether or not they did. I haven’t told them nothing about it.”

Appellant did not remember having an understanding with the other heirs that he would pay the taxes with the money received for the right-of-way deed in 1925. Although his brothers and sisters have not lived near the land since he purchased it at the tax sale, he had seen them occasionally when they returned on visits. He produced several witnesses who testified that the tract had been known as the John Zackery land for 15 or 20 years.-

Appellee placed in evidence a warranty deed dated April 11, 1939, from Dock Zackery, Annette Sterling, Mary Ellen Leake and Alfred Zackery to Pat Robinson conveying a six-twentieths interest in the land. This deed was recorded May 18, 1939.

Robinson testified that sometime prior to execution of this deed Alfred Zackery, who lived near Lewisville in Lafayette county, employed witness to defend him in a criminal case; that Alfred and his two sisters first executed a mortgage of their interest in the land to secure payment of the attorney’s fee and later, along with Dock Zackery, executed the deed. After obtaining the deed Robinson was checking the title and learned that appellant had sold or was attempting to sell timber from the land. He stated that he wrote a letter for his client, Alfred Zackery, to appellant warning him against further cutting of the timber and that Alfred received a reply from appellant about thirty days later in which the latter stated that none of the other heirs had contributed to payment of taxes and that proceeds from the sale of timber were being used for that purpose only.

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Bluebook (online)
212 S.W.2d 706, 213 Ark. 808, 1948 Ark. LEXIS 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zackery-v-warmack-ark-1948.