Title: Duncan v. McAdams

State: arkansas

Issuer: Arkansas Supreme Court

Document:

257 S.W.2d 568 (1953) DUNCAN et al. v. McADAMS et al. No. 5-79. Supreme Court of Arkansas. May 11, 1953. George E. Pike, DeWitt, for appellants. Bdtts & Botts, DeWitt, for appellees. McFADDIN, Justice. The right of ownership of a 40-acre tract is the dispute presented by this appeal. Appellants (Duncan and his grantees) filed suit to compel appellees (McAdams and wife) to convey the 40-acre tract; and from a decree refusing the prayed relief, there is this appeal. On January 1, 1941, McAdams and Duncan entered info a contract whereby Mc-Adams agreed to sell and Duncan agreed to buy certain lands in Arkansas County, described in the said contract as follows: The agreed price was $600, evidenced by a series of notes to be paid $100 and interest each year, and the contract provided that if any payment should not be made when due, then the seller could declare all payments theretofore made to be rent. On November 27, 1948, Duncan finally paid the last of the notes and interest, and McAdams and wife executed to Duncan a warranty deed, conveying an 80-acfe tract; described as follows: On August 3, 1950, Duncan and wife conveyed the 40 acres, here in dispute, to Williams, Shackelford, Purdy and Trussell; and the said grantees, along with Duncan, filed this suit against McAdams and wife, on August 16, 1950, seeking to compel Mc-Adams and wife to convey the said 40-acre tract. Against the complaint, McAdams claimed that the 40-acre tract was included in the 1941 contract by mutual mistake; that McAdams only intended to contract to sell, and Duncan only intended to buy, the 80-acre tract described in the 1948 deed; that Duncan frequently acknowledged said mistake between 1941 and 1948; that Duncan accepted the 1948 deed as fully satisfying the 1941 contract; and that the present suit was inspired by Duncan's grantees, who knew long prior to their deed from Duncan that he had no claim to the said 40 acres. On the issues framed by the pleadings, many witnesses were heard by the Chancellor, and it became a question of which set of witnesses to believe. The rules of law applying to a case like the one here are: (a) Before Duncan accepted any deed under the contract, the burden would have been on McAdams to show a mistake in the contract; (b) But after Duncan accepted the 1948 deed in satisfaction of the contract, the burden devolved on Duncan and his coappellants to prove that there was a mistake made by the parties, a misrepresentation, or a fraud perpetrated on Duncan when he accepted the 1948 deed in satisfaction of the contract. These rules are true because our cases hold that a contract for the conveyance of lands is deemed merged in the deed subsequently executed under the terms of the contract. See O'Bar v. Hight, 169 Ark. 1008, 277 S.W. 533; Allen v. Thompson, 169 Ark. 169, 273 S.W. 396; Fretwell v. Nix, 172 Ark. 230, 288 S.W. 8; and Jackson v. Lady, 140 Ark. 512, 216 S.W. 505. Cases from many jurisdictions are cited in the Annotation in 84 A.L.R. 1008 on the matter of a deed as merging the provisions of an antecedent contract. In 55 Am.Jur. 756, the rule is stated: Again in 55 Am.Jur. 758, the rule is stated: The fact that Duncan accepted the 1948 deed is clearly established; so the burden was and is on Duncan and his coappellants to prove that there was a mistake, a misrepresentation, or a fraud perpetrated on Duncan, when he accepted the 1948 deed. There is no occasion for us to consider whether such proof would have to be merely by a preponderance of the evidence, or by evidence clear, cogent and convincing; because Duncan and his coappellants have failed to sustain the burden under either rule. It would unduly prolong this opinion to detail the pertinent testimony' of the various witnesses and to comment on the original papers which we have caused to be brought up to this Court for examination. We conclude that Duncan and his co-appellants failed to prove their case even by a preponderance of the evidence; *570 and we also conclude that before Duncan's grantees received the deed from him, they knew of all the defects in Duncan's claim to the 40 acres. Therefore, the decree of the Chancery Court is in all things affirmed.