Court Opinion

ID: 6539119
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 22:14:09.082552+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:45.763145
License: Public Domain

Mr. Chief Justice English delivered the opinion of the Court. The State brought an action of ejectment against Richard and Reardon for possession of the west half of lots 1, 2, and 3 in block 81 west of the Quapaw line in the city of Little Rock, on which the banking house of the Bank of the State is situated. On motion, the administrator of Thomas W. Newton deceased, under whom the defendants held possession of the property as tenants, was made a co-defendant. On the trial the State proved that the Bank purchased the lots of Cross, in the year 1337, and obtained his deed therefor; that they were sold under execution against the Bank, and purchased by Wm. G. Thornton in 1348, who conveyed them to the State. The defendant introduced a deed executed by Lawson, as sheriff of Pulaski county, to Thomas W. Newton, on the 22d of April, 1345, reciting a sale of the lots under an execution against the Bank, and purchase by Newton. The State, by way of rebutting testimony, and to show that the deed from Lawson to Newton was wholly inoperative, and of no effect, offered to read in evidence a final decree of the Chancery Court of Pulaski county, rendered on the 18th of August, 1358, in a case wherein the Bank of the Stale was complainant and Albert Pike, and the administrator, widow and heirs of Thomas W. Newton, deceased, were defendants, by which decree it was adjudged that the sale of the lots in question by Lawson, as sheriff, to Newton, and the deed aforesaid were irregular and fraudulent, and that they be canceled and set aside, and that the defendants therein forthwith surrender the possession of the lots to the Bank, and that they be forever enjoined from settingup, or claiming title to the lots under said sale and deed. From which decree the defendants therein appealed to the Supreme Court, and entered into recognizance to stay' execution thereof, and the appeal was pending in the appellate court. The defendants objected to the introduction of the decree, on the ground that it was suspended and inoperative by virtue of the appeal, etc., and the court sustained the objection, and excluded the decree. A verdict and judgment were rendered against the State, and she appealed. The appeal from the decree of the Pulaski Chancery Court did not have the effect to vacate the decree. If the appellants had not entered into recognizance, the decree might have been executed after the appeal, and while it was pending in the appellate court. The effect of the recognizance entered into by the appellants was merely to stay the execution of the decree until the appeal was determined. Notwithstanding the appeal and recognizance, the decree continued to be a subsisting, valid and unvacated decree until reversed by the appellate court. Gould's Dig. ch. 28, sec. 18 of Art. II, and sec. 146-7-8, Art. I; Caldwell Ex parte, 5 Ark. 390; Dixon vs. Watkins, 4 Eng. 139; Fowler et al. vs. Scott, 6 Eng. 175; Thomason vs. Kircheval, 10 Humph. 322; 2 Sneed 1; 26 Barbour's S. C. Rep. 58. Such being the condition of the decree, it would seem, upon principle, that the State had the right to introduce it as evidence in this case to prove that the deed from Lawson to Newton had been adjudged to be invalid, and vacated. It is true that the admission of a decree as evidence from which an appeal is pending, might operate to the prejudice of the party against whom it is admitted, if it should afterwards be reversed; and so its exclusion might prejudice the legal rights of the party, offering it in evidence, if it should subsequently be affirmed. The safer practice would be for the court to continue the cause, upon the application of the party objecting to the admission of the decree, until the appeal is determined. Other questions have been raised and discussed in this case, but it is not deemed important to decide them. The judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded, etc.