Court Opinion

ID: 7813060
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-07 17:15:02.389618+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:30:31.597615
License: Public Domain

Humphreys, J. This suit was brought in the second division of the chancery court of Ouachita County by appellant against appellee to quiet and confirm title to 200 acres of land in said county in himself. He alleged that he acquired title to said land by oral gift from Ins wife, Lula Lynn, who was appellee’s sister; that he immediately entered into possession thereof -and had made valuable improvements thereon; that Lula Lynn died in the year 1921, and that appellee was claiming title to said tract of land by inheritance from his'wife. Appellee filed an answer denying that her sister had made an oral gift and put appellant in possession of the land in her lifetime, and that pursuant thereto he had made valuable improvements thereon. She alleged that her sister died intestate, leaving appellee as her sole and only heir, and, by way of further defense to the alleged oral gift, pleaded the statute of frauds in bar of appellant’s alleged cause of action. - Appellee also filed a cross-bill as administratrix of the estate of her deceased sister, claiming rents upon the land for the year 1922 and thereafter. 'The cause was submitted to the court upon the pleadings and testimony adduced by the parties, which resulted in a finding that Lula Lynn, in' her lifetime, gave the lands to appellant for and during his life, and a decree dismissing the bill of appellant and the cross-bill of appellee. From the finding and decree both appellant and appellee have prosecuted an appeal to this court. In determining the issues presented by this appeal it will not be necessary to set out the testimony at length. A summary thereof will suffice. Some time prior to 1915, the father of appellee and appellant’s wife, John .Dunlap, died, leaving his widow, Clara Dunlap, and his two daughters, Lula Lynn and Cora- Martin, surviving him, who were the legatees in his will. He devised his home place, consisting of about 600 acres of land* to his two daughters, subject to a life estate therein to their mother, Clara Dunlap. Appellant and his wife moved to the Dunlap homestead for the purpose of taking care of Clara Dunlap.' Appellant assumed the management of the place, and appropriated the income to the use of himself and family. Mrs. Dunlap subsequently died, and the farm was divided in kind between Lula Lynn and appellee. In the division appellee got the house and Lula Lynn 360 acres on the west end of the tract-. Immediately thereafter Cora Martin moved into the old home, and appellant rented the Carter place, near by, until he could build a house on the lands awarded to his wife. They were in debt, and borrowed $500 on 160 acres of the land, which was used to pay the debts and conduct the farm. Appellant took charge and managed the land assigned to his wife just as he had done before the division. He testified that,-while living on the Carter place, his wife gave him the 200-acre tract with the understanding that he would improve and reside upon it, retaining for herself the other 160 acres; that he bought a house for $100, moved it in sections, and put it up on the 200-acre tract which his wife had given him, and, when it had been completed, he and his wife moved . to and resided upon the farm; that, during the time they resided upon it, he expended about $900 in making permanent improvements thereon. In the management of the farm' appellant appropriated the income from the 360-acre tract to the use of himself and family, rendering no separate account to his wife for the income off of the 160-acre tract. Later on they mortgaged the’ 160-acre tract to the Federal Land Bank for $1,250, out of which they paid the $500 mortgage. The balance of the money was used by appellant in conducting the farm "and in making the necessary repairs and improvements thereon. The 360-acre tract remained upon the taxbooks in the name of Lula Lynn, and the taxes were paid by appellant in her name, out of the income from the farm. Appellant testified that he never asked his wife for a deed to the 200-acre tract because he felt a delicacy in-doing so. A number of witnesses testified to diverse statements concerning the land made by Lula Lynn to them during the time she and appellant resided upon the farm.; Some of them testified that she said she intended to will¿ appellant a life estate in the tract, others that ’she hád' given him a life estate therein, and still others that she had given the land outright to him. Objection was made by appellant to the introduction of statements made by her in his absence reflecting upon his title. We think the evidence was properly admitted, as she was residing upon the land at the time she made the statements. We shall refrain from analyzing this testimony, because, in our opinion, the plea of the statute of frauds is applicable and controlling in this case. The record reflects that appellant and his wife moved upon the 200-acre tract as soon as the house was ready for occupancy. They moved there at the same time and occupied the premises as husband and wife until her death.- It was a joint possession of husiband and wife, and not an exclusive possession by appellant. In the cáse of Young v. Crawford, 82 Ark. 33, this court adopted the following rule with reference to the sufficiency of a parol gift of lands, announced by Prof. Pomeroy in his work oh Specific Performance of Contracts (2d ed.) § 130: “A parol gift of land will not be enforced unless followed by possession and valuable improvements made by the donee, or unless there are some very special facts which would render the failure to complete the donation peculiarly inequitable and unjust.” - The possession referred to in this rule means an exclusive possession, for it was said, in the case of Rugen v. Vaughan, 142 Ark. 176, that “the court has held that possession, to have the effect to take the case out of th¿ statute, must be exclusive, evincing the birth of a new estate, and distinguished from the continuation of an old one; and must not be referable to an antecedent right.” In view of this well settled principle of law, the court erred in finding that appellant had obtained a life estate in the 200:acre tract of land by parol gift from his wife and in dismissing appellee’s' cross-bill for an accounting of rents and profits, after appellee made a d'einahd for the possession of the land. It is not disclosed’just’when this demand was made. The' court properly dismissed appellant’s bill to quiet'his title, and to that extent the decree is affirmed. In all other respects the decree is reversed, and the canse remanded with directions to quiet the'title to the 200 acres in appellee and to place her in possession thereof. Also to ascertain the rental value of the tract after appellee demanded possession of the land from appellant, or,- if she did not demand possession, from the date of the institution of this suit to date, and to render a personal judgment against appellant for the amount.