Court Opinion

ID: 3273764
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:42:17.915624+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:00:16.551894
License: Public Domain

STATEMENT OF FACTS.
This is the second appeal in this case. Appellants brought this suit in equity against appellees, claiming title to a tract of land containing forty acres, and seeking to cancel, as clouds on their title, certain conveyances under which appellees assert title. The chancery court sustained a demurrer to the complaint, and upon appeal *Page 304 
the decree was reversed, because the complaint did not state facts showing that appellants were barred of relief by limitations, nor did it state any facts upon which the doctrine of laches could be invoked. The court said that appellees had color of title to the whole tract, but that it was not shown in the complaint that they had occupied the land for any particular period of time, or that they had paid the taxes on the land, or that there had been any change in the relationship of the parties so as to call for an application of the doctrine of laches. Sanders v. Flenniken, 172 Ark. 454, 289 S.W. 485.
Upon the remand of the case appellants introduced evidence tending to establish their claim of title to the land. According to their evidence, Sylvia Norris died intestate, owning said land, in 1899. She left surviving her a son, Seaborn Sanders, as her sole heir at law. He also died intestate, leaving surviving him as his sole heirs at law appellants in this action. Riley Sanders and Neil Sanders, two of the children and heirs at law of Seaborn Sanders, deceased, continued to live on the land in question. They both married before 1902, and in 1903 executed a deed of trust on the land to Young and Anderson to secure an indebtedness which they owed them. J. L. Primm was named as trustee in the deed of trust. They did not know that there had been any foreclosure of the deed of trust until the year their mother died, which was 1919. After the death of their father, his mother married Gip Coulter, and lived with him on the land for two or three years, until he died, in 1909. Their mother continued to reside on the land for some years thereafter, and sometimes some of her children would live with her. Riley Sanders, Lou Cotton and Mary Burns, all children of Seaborn Sanders, continued to live in the vicinity where the land was situated until the present suit was brought in May, 1925. The other children continued to live either near the land or in the same locality. There were two houses on the land, which were finally burned down; and a part of the land was cleared and in cultivation. *Page 305 
About twelve acres of the land is now susceptible of cultivation, and could now be cultivated if a little work was done in repairing fences.
According to the evidence for appellees, J. L. Primm, trustee in the deed of trust from Riley and Neil Sanders to Young and Anderson, came to the office of Marsh 
Flenniken, in the early part of 1906, and stated that he had been requested to foreclose the deed of trust. They were asked to assist him. Neill C. Marsh, one of the members of the firm, drew up a petition to a justice of the peace to appoint appraisers. He prepared other necessary papers, and the land, after being duly advertised, was sold under the power of sale contained in the deed of trust, by the trustee, and Marsh  Flenniken became the purchasers at the sale for the sum of $75. After a year had elapsed the trustee executed to them a deed, pursuant to the terms of the deed of trust. Alymer Flenniken, a member of the firm of Marsh  Flenniken, rented the land to Gip Coulter, and he lived on it about two years. In 1911 Alymer Flenniken rented the land to Andrew Bilyeu, and he lived on it for two years. Bilyeu had some kind of arrangements made to purchase the land, but moved off without completing his contract for the purchase of it. In 1917 Flenniken sold the timber on the land. In 1918 Marsh conveyed his interest in the land to Flenniken. From 1906 until 1918 Marsh  Flenniken paid the taxes on the land each year. After that, Alymer Flenniken continued to pay the taxes on the land until he conveyed the same to his wife, Mrs. Mary Flenniken, and Mrs. Flenniken has paid the taxes on the land ever since. In June, 1922, Mrs. Mary Flenniken executed an oil lease on the land to the Humble Oil and Refining Company. That company explored the land for oil, and discovered oil before this suit was brought. The company paid Mrs. Mary Flenniken $20,000 as a consideration for the lease and $32,000 in royalties under the lease. J. L. Primm and Young and Anderson all died before this suit was brought. Alymer Flenniken *Page 306 
also died before the suit was instituted. The justice of the peace who appointed the appraisers in the foreclosure of the deed of trust is dead, and a surveyor who surveyed the land for Marsh  Flenniken after they purchased at the foreclosure in the deed of trust is also dead.
Other facts will be stated or referred to in the opinion.
The chancellor found that appellants were guilty of laches, and a decree was entered of record dismissing their complaint for want of equity. The case is here on appeal.
(after stating the facts). Appellants brought this suit in equity, and asked that certain conveyances by appellees be canceled as clouds upon their title. Such a suit is of purely equitable cognizance, although appellants ask that the title to the land be also declared in themselves, and that they have possession under their claim of title.
Appellees pleaded in bar of the recovery of the land by appellants that they were guilty of laches. The doctrine of laches is entirely a defense in equity, and, if the facts justified it, constituted a bar to the right of appellants to the relief asked by them.
Mere lapse of time before bringing suit, without change of circumstances or in the relation of the parties, will not constitute laches. Not only must there have been unnecessary delay, but it must appear that, by reason of the delay, some change has occurred in the condition or relation of the parties to the property which would make it inequitable to enforce the claim. So long as the parties are in the same condition, a claim for land may be asserted within the time allowed by law. But when, knowing his rights, a party takes no steps to enforce them until the condition of the other party has, in good faith, become so changed that he cannot be restored to *Page 307 
his former state if the rights should be enforced, delay becomes inequitable, and operates as a species of estoppel against the assertion of the right. The disadvantage may come from loss of evidence, change of title, intervention of equities, and other causes; but, when the court sees negligence on one side and injury therefrom on the other, it is a ground for denial of relief. This doctrine has been recognized and applied according to the facts of the particular case in a great many cases by this court. It would serve no useful purpose, and would make this opinion too long to cite all of them. We deem it only necessary to cite a few of them in which the doctrine has been applied in cases of this sort: Avera v. Banks, 168 Ark. 718,271 S.W. 970; Walker-Lucas-Hudson Oil Co. v. Hudson, 168 Ark. 1098, 272 S.W. 836; Horn v. Hull,169 Ark. 463, 275 S.W. 905; Langston v. Hughes, 170 Ark. 272,280 S.W. 374; Clark v. Friend, 174 Ark. 26,295 S.W. 392; and Clark v. Wilson, 174 Ark. 669, 297 S.W. 1008.
The doctrine of laches has also been recognized and applied by the Supreme Court of the United States in cases involving oil and mining lands. The case of Taylor v. Salt Creek Consolidated Oil Co., 285 F. 532, contains a review of the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States in cases of this sort, and an instructive discussion of the reason for the application of the doctrine in oil and mining cases. In this connection, we quote from the opinion in Patterson v. Hewitt, 195 U.S. 309,25 S. Ct. 35, the following:
"There is no class of property more subject to sudden and violent fluctuations of value than mining lands. A location which today may have no salable value may in a month become worth its millions. Years may be spent in working such property, apparently to no purpose, when suddenly a mass of rich ore may be discovered from which an unusual fortune is realized. Under such circumstances, persons having claims to such property are bound to the utmost diligence in enforcing them, and there is no class of cases in which the doctrine of laches has been more relentlessly enforced." *Page 308 
In Twin-Lick Oil Co. v. Marburg, 91 U.S. 587, the court said:
"Property worth thousands today is worth nothing tomorrow; and that which today would sell for a thousand dollars at its fair value may, by the natural changes of a week or the energy and courage of desperate enterprise, in the same time be made to yield that much every day. The injustice therefore is obvious of permitting one holding the right to assert an ownership in such property to voluntarily await the event, and then decide, when the danger which is over has been at the risk of another, to come in and share the profit. While a much longer time might be allowed to assert the right in regard to real estate whose value is fixed, on which no outlay is made for improvement, and but little change in value, the class of property here considered, subject to the most rapid, pregnant, and violent fluctuations in value of anything known as property, requires prompt action in all to hold an option whether they will share its risks or stand clear of them."
From these citations it will be seen that this court, as well as the Supreme Court of the United States, has uniformly recognized that, on account of the fluctuating and uncertain values of oil and gas lands, parties asserting title thereto must act more promptly than in ordinary cases in which the values remain practically the same.
Of course, it is equally well settled that, when the question of laches is in issue, the plaintiff is chargeable with such knowledge as he might have obtained upon inquiry, provided the facts already known to him were such as to put the duty of inquiry upon a man of ordinary intelligence. Walker-Lucas-Hudson Oil Co. v. Hudson, 168 Ark. 1098,272 S.W. 836; and Johnson v. Standard Mining Co., 148 U.S. 360,13 S. Ct. 585. In the latter case the court said:
"While there is no direct or positive testimony that plaintiff had knowledge of what was taking place with *Page 309 
respect to the title or development of the property, the circumstances were such as to put him upon inquiry; and the law is well settled that, where the question of laches is in issue, the plaintiff is chargeable with such knowledge as he might have obtained upon inquiry, provided the facts already known by him were such as to put upon a man of ordinary intelligence the duty of inquiry."
Tested by this well-settled rule, we think the court properly held that appellants were guilty of laches. Some of them resided in the same vicinity in which the lands were located at the time of their father's death, and have continued to reside there ever since. The rest of the appellants either have resided in the same community ever since their father's death or have lived in the same locality. Although some of them stated that they had paid taxes during some of the years, the record shows that the purchasers at the foreclosure sale under the power contained in the deed of trust and their grantees have paid taxes on the land ever since 1907. Two of the appellants who executed the deed of trust lived on the land at the time of its sale under the power contained therein. They moved off of the land after the foreclosure, and, although they continued to live in the same vicinity, never exercised any other acts of ownership over the land, or attempted to do so. In 1922 appellants went to one of their attorneys in the present suit, who was then an abstracter of titles, but who had not yet been admitted to practice law, and stated facts under which they claimed the land to him. He advised them that he thought that they might recover the land. This shows at least that they had knowledge of the facts upon which they based their claim at that time. Notwithstanding this, they delayed bringing their suit until some time in 1925. During this time Mrs. Flenniken, who claimed title to the land under deed from the purchasers at the foreclosure sale, executed an oil lease as sole owner of the land. She thus bound herself to the lessees for the performance of the covenants in her lease, and upon faith of her ownership *Page 310 
they commenced extensive drilling on the land for oil and gas. They paid Mrs. Flenniken the sum of $20,000 under the lease, and also over $32,000 in royalties. Before the suit was commenced, in 1925, the original mortgagees and the trustees under the mortgage had died. Alymer Flenniken had also died. After the purchase of the land by the firm of Marsh  Flenniken, Flenniken alone looked after it, because he had been reared in that part of the county where the lands were situated. These persons might have shed light upon the question of appellants' claim of title. Alymer Flenniken died after 1922, and thus appellants waited until appellees could not prove any facts known by him with regard to the claim of title of appellants. It will be remembered that appellants admitted themselves that they knew in 1922 of the facts under which they claim title. The widow of Seaborn Sanders, from whom appellants claim to inherit the land, died in 1919.
Under these circumstances, appellants' claim should not in equity be enforced. After the changes of situation during all of these years, after the changes in title, after the execution of the oil lease and the subsequent discovery of oil, and after evidence of the facts upon which they base their title has been lost by the death of disinterested witnesses who best knew them, equity will not now enforce a claim which it seems would not likely have been asserted if oil had not been discovered on the land. The undisputed evidence shows that the land was comparatively worthless except for the mineral rights. They could not rest on their rights and see appellee expend great sums of money in exploring for oil and gas, and, after the land had suddenly and unexpectedly made a great increase in value on account of this, come into a court of equity, and demand the enforcement of their rights.
Therefore the chancellor properly held that they were barred of relief under the doctrine of laches, and the decree will be affirmed. *Page 311