49 S.W.2d 389 | Ark. | 1932
Appellants brought this suit in ejectment to recover from appellees the possession of a lot in the town of Van Buren. Mrs. Emma B. Crowell, who was the mother of appellants, took an estate for life in the lot under the will of her father, with remainder over to her children. After the life estate had vested in Mrs. Crowell, she attempted to convey the fee title to B. J. Brown, and, by mesne conveyances, the title passed to the father of appellees, from whom they inherited the lot.
It is conceded that Mrs. Crowell owned only a life estate, and that appellees acquired such title as she owned. The cause was transferred to equity for an accounting, where the chancellor found that Mrs. Crowell's successors in title had acquired her title in good faith, and that, believing themselves to be the true owners thereof, they had improved the property. Without discussing the testimony, we announce our concurrence in the finding of the court below that appellees and their predecessors in title had color of title to the lot, and, believing themselves to be the owners thereof, had peaceably improved it, thereby enhancing its value, and they are therefore entitled to recover this enhanced value, pursuant to the provisions of 3703, Crawford Moses' Digest.
As has been said, the cause was transferred to equity for an accounting as to the value of the rents, on the one hand, and as to the amount of taxes and insurance paid and as to the enhanced value, on the other, and, without making special findings on any of these questions, the court found that appellants were entitled to judgment for the possession of the land, but rendered judgment against them for $959.27, and ordered that no writ should issue for the possession of the lot until this sum had been paid pursuant to 3704, Crawford Moses' Digest, and this appeal is from that decree.
The excellent briefs of opposing counsel review many of the cases which have dealt with the legal questions here involved, and which have definitely settled those *771 questions, except only those relating to proper credits to be allowed for improvement taxes paid.
As we understand the decree, the court allowed appellees credit, not only for the enhanced value of the property, but also for the cost of certain repairs made for the convenience of a tenant who occupied the building which a predecessor of appellees in the title had built, and also allowed credit for certain insurance premiums paid by appellees, and also refused to charge appellees for certain rents for the reason that they had failed to collect them.
In the case of McDonald v. Kenney,
The same case also held that, while the cost of making the improvements may be taken into consideration in arriving at their value, yet the cost is not necessarily controlling. The thing to be ascertained is value, and not cost. This subject was exhaustively considered in the opinion in the case of McDonald v. Rankin,
In that case it was said that the allowance for improvements was made upon the ground that they passed into the hands of the person recovering them as a new acquisition, and are only a new acquisition by him to the *772
extent of their value at the time he recovers or obtains possession of them, and their value at that time is to be allowed, and nothing more. Summers v. Howard,
The cost of the repairs should not therefore have been allowed as a separate item, but should have been considered in conjunction with other testimony tending to show the extent to which the cost of these repairs had enhanced the value of the land.
In the case of McDonald v. Kenney,
The case of McDonald v. Rankin, supra, is decisive of appellees' claim for insurance paid. It was there held (to quote a headnote) that: "Where the purchaser of the land at a judicial sale which was subsequently held void insured improvements thereon and collected the insurance money after the property was destroyed by fire, she will not be held to account therefor to the owner of the land, as the insurance contract was a personal one." In the instant case no fire occurred, and the insured buildings stand undamaged by fire, but that fact does not affect the legal principles which control. The insurance contract for which appellees paid was a personal contract for their own benefit, and they therefore have no right to charge the premiums paid to appellants. See also Roesch v. Johnson,
The most difficult question presented on this appeal is that of the allowance to be made appellees on account of improvement district taxes paid. The property is in several different improvement districts, in all of which the betterment assessments were distributed over a period of years payable in annual installments.
In the case of Hicks v. Norsworthy,
We are therefore of the opinion that, when the payments for the improvement are distributed over a considerable number of years, as we understand the facts to be in the instant case, a ratable and equitable distribution of this burden requires the life tenant to discharge the annual assessments during each year of his occupancy. A case might arise where, under facts peculiar to it, this would not be equitable, but, in the absence of special equities, we announce this as the rule to be generally applied. This rule appears to us to be equitable in ordinary cases, and possesses the quality of simplicity. There should be a general rule for the determination of such questions, and we think the rule announced will work justice in ordinary cases.
The recognition of the necessity for a general rule to determine the relative rights of the true owner of land and those of an occupant who, believing himself to be the owner thereof and having color of title thereto, has improved it, and thereafter been evicted, led to the enactment of the Betterment Statute under which this case arose. This statute has been referred to in cases construing it as arbitrary, yet it has been consistently upheld and enforced as a fair means of determining conflicting interests of parties litigant, under the conditions stated to which the statute applies, depriving no one of any constitutional rights. *775
The decree of the court below will therefore be reversed, and the cause will be remanded, with directions to state the account between the parties in accordance with the views herein expressed.
HART, C.J., dissents in part; KIRBY, J., dissents.