Court Opinion

ID: 6546210
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 22:19:46.026658+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:58.431731
License: Public Domain

Hire, C. J. In 1859 Oscar Turner, the first of the name in this record, purchased of the State the land in controversy, a tract of nearly two thousand acres of wild and unoccupied lands. It is alleged that the State conveyed it imder the swamp land act, and for the purpose of this case it may be taken that it was properly -selected and listed to -the State as swamp lands under the act of -Congress. Oscar Turner, the first, conveyed to Oscar Turner, Jr., his son, who was-for a time -a member of Congress from Kentucky, and was in Washington during the time the judgment hereinafter referred to was rendered against him. This Oscar Turner died in 1902, and by will left his property to the appellants, his wife and infant son, Oscar. Turner, the third. This was a suit to remove the clouds from the title and to quiet it in appellants, who were plaintiffs in the chancery court, and was brought in 1904. Plaintiffs offered -to pay taxes and interest thereon, and attacked the overdue tax decrees upon which defendant’s titles rested. The bill was dismissed, and the plaintiffs brought the case here. The Turners did not pay any taxes at any time since 1859, and -the land was forfeited-for taxes a few years after the war. Dike most tax sales at that time they were void, but there is no evidence that -the taxes were illegal. All of the lands were sold under overdue tax decrees in 1883. Some of of it was sold to -parties at said sales, and various defendants, claiming several of the tracts in controversy, deraign- -the title directly to the purchase at such sales: Much of the land in controversy was not sold to individuals under the overdue tax decrees, but was struck off to the State, and different tracts wer-e purchased from the State by the various defendants. These purchases ranged from 1891 to 1902. All the tracts passed through the overdue tax decrees of 1883, and the only difference in them is some of the defendants deraign directly through the sales, and others through the State, the State’s title resting on the overdue tax decrees. About 1897 Oscar Turner, Jr., entered into a contract with S. B. Crowder, of Louisville, Ky., under which Crowder was authorized to represent his interests in these lands and clear the title for him, and'to receive fifty per cent, of the land recovered; Crowder to pay redemption charges and expenses. Crowder came to Phillips County, and investigated the situation, and found out the facts about the titles and the character of the'land, and ascertained the cost of redemption. He employed counsel in these matters, and had him call upon several darkies, who had donated some of. the Turner lands from the State, looking towards a settlement with them. No payment of taxes or redemptions were made. Later Turner himself came and investigated the situation- — -this was in 1898 — and decided that the lands were not worth the cost of redemption. In 1900 Mr Phillips, the attorney employed by Crowder, and with whom Turner had consulted, sued him for a fee, and attached all the land in controversy except a half section. This suit proceeded to judgment, and most, if not all, the defendants -have procured title from that sale, doubtless intending to fatten the -title based upon the overdue tax decrees. The evidence shows that up to 1899 the land was of little value, but since that time has rapidly risen in value, and at the institution of this suit was worth about $15 per acre. Just how much they were worth per acre when Oscar Turner, Jr., died in July, 1902, is not shown exactly, but it is shown that the rise was rapid after 1899, which made them worth many hundred per cent, more than when he decided not to redeem them in 1898. He had notice of the attachment suit against him in 1900. He was then a member of Congress, and a copy of the judgment was served upon him in Washington, but he declined to attend to it on account of an error of description of the land as shown in the copy served upon him. The gravamen of this bill is an attack upon the overdue tax decrees and upon the judgment in the attachment suit. To sustain appellant’s title, the overdue tax decrees must be held void, and as to most of the land also the judgment in the attachment suit must be declared void. The court, however, declines to go into the investigation of the grounds of the attack on' the overdue tax decrees, and it is not necessary to notice the attachment suit, as it is but a second hurdle for appellants to cross, and they have fallen before the first one is reached. The laches of the Turners, father and son, not including the infant of the third generation, barred these appellants of relief in equity. To escape laches, appellants appeal to Jackson v. Boyd, 75 Ark. 197, Williams v. Bennett, 75 Ark. 312, and Roselle v. Chicago Mill & Lumber Co., 76 Ark. 525. In Jackson v. Boyd there was no evidence of increased value of the land, no change in the status of any one towards the land, no evidence of an abandonment because of insufficient value to assume the burdens, against it; and it was pointed out that the absence of these or any other grounds causing the doctrine of laches to be invoked prevented the application in that case after a lapse of thirteen years. In Williams v. Bennett, supra, the doctrine of Jackson v. Boyd was reiterated, and it was held inapplicable where some of the well-known equitable causes for its invocation were present, and held the parties barred under such circumstances after a lapse of 35 years, during which time papers which were supposed to support a decree were lost. Rozelle v. Chicago Mill & Lumber Company merely decides that on a demurrer a complaint seeking to cancel a deed to wild and unoccupied land is not bad for failing to allege reasons for the delay where it did not appear that the rights of the defendants were prejudiced thereby. Here the defendants are prejudiced because the taxes refunded with interest do not meet the justice of the case, as it did in Jackson v. Boyd. The principles of these cases are against appellants, and Clay v. Bilby, 72 Ark. 101, is directly against them, where the following statement is as applicable to this case as to that: “The appellants failed to show that they had ány mérito rdous defense in the suit instituted under the overdue tax act. They do not allege that the taxes for which the land was sold were illegal or paid. Not a single ground for equitable interposition appears. State v. Hill, 50 Ark. 458. ,Without one palliating excuse, they show themselves guilty of the grossest negligence. They knew their land was subject to taxation, and liable to be sold if -the taxes were not paid, yet they waited thirty-eight years before they offered to pay taxes. There- is nothing in their case “to call forth a court of equity into activity.” Counsel point to the well known condition of civil war prevailing from 1861 to 1865, and say that the troublesome times extending thereafter until 1874 should be also treated as a period when the performance of duties to civil, government should be excused. If both these periods be excluded, it does not help appellants, for there is no excuse offered for omitting duties to the State after 1874, and all of this land could have been redeemed until after the -overdue tax decrees in 1883, and much of i-t thereafter from the State, and this suit could have been brought in X883 as well asl-n 1904. But the Turners have not contributed one mill to sustain the JState and county governments at any time. Oscar Tu-r-ner, Jr., was acquainted with the situation, and from his service in Congress was -doubtless familiar with the general condition and in touch with Representatives from the section where his land was located. He concluded that the lands were not worth their tribute to the State, but the appellees had more faith in their future and discharged the duty of landowners to the State, and whose equity is the stronger? The statement of the case answers it. The appellants are seeking to reap where they have not sown, and to gather where they have not strawed, and this is not the first time such conduct has caused loss. Matt. 25, 15-3°. Mr. Justice Brewer, speaking for the Supreme Court of the United States in Underwood v. Dugan, 139 U. S. 380, so aptly described the very situation here and the equitable viewpoint thereof that it is adopted as controlling: “And this doctrine of laches rests on no arbitrary or technical rule.. It is founded on the plainest principles of substantial justice. Ownership of property implies two things: First, attention to it; second, a discharge of all -obligations, of taxation or otherwise, to the State which protects it. When it appears' that one who now asserts a title to property, arising more than the lifetime of a generation ago, has during all these years neglected the property and made no claim of title thereto, a reasonable presumption is that, whatever may be apparent on the face of the instrument supposed to create the title, were the full facts known, facts which can not now be known by reason of the death of the parties to the transaction, it would be disclosed that no title was in fact obtained; or, if that be not true, that he considered the property of such little value that he abandoned it to the State which was protecting it. So, if, the title being beyond challenge, during these years he pays no taxes thereon, makes no effort to improve .or increase its value, and, by the labor and efforts of others, under the protecting powers of the State, large value has been given to to it, the State may properly say to him, as may also the individuals who have thus wrought this change in value: You abandoned this property when it was comparatively valueless; you have taken no share in the burdens of taxation or the support of the State; others have toiled, paid taxes, and made the property valuable; therefore, because of your shirking of the duties and obligations, you shall not, whatever may 'have been the nature of your title in the first instance, be permitted to appropriate the value thus produced by others.” For these reasons the court declines to investigate the matters urged to avoid the overdue tax decrees of 1883. Judgment affirmed. Mr. Justice McCurroch disqualified and not participating.