Gray v. Trapnall

23 Ark. 510 | Ark. | 1861

Mr. Justice Fairchild

delivered the opinion of the Court.' ■

Samson Gray, the father of the plaintiffs, in 1833, had a right to the west half of section eleven, township sixteen south, of range one west, by virtue of a location made by himself, of William Campbell’s donation claim, which was superior to all other claims, and, so far as the record of this suit discloses, was exclusive of every other, claim, till the land was sold for taxes in 1838, by the collector of Chicot county, where it lies, to Franklin Stewart. Under this sale, the infant defendant, Mary R. Trapnall, claims the land as having descended to her from her father,.Frederick W. Trapnall, who bought it at an execution sale against Stewart, in 1845.

The tax sale to Stewart is complained of by the plaintiffs as a void proceeding, but this is not important, if they are barred by the statute of limitations from asserting their title by this suit, which is a ground of defence taken for Mary E. Trapnall.

Samson Gray having died in 1835, his heirs brought this suit on the 20th of January, 1858; and though the youngest of the plaintiffs, Thomas "W. Gray, was more than twenty-five years old, the plaintiffs claim that, in consequence of a suit having been begun in Chicot county by them for this land, against the same defendants, within less than' three years after Thomas became twenty-one years old, its dismissal and the beginning of this suit within a year thereafter, all of the plaintiffs are entitled to an adjudication of their rights, free from the effect of the statute of limitations, llefore the beginning of the suit in Chicot county, two of the plaintiffs, Jacob S. Gray and Samuel E. Gray, had enjoyed the full time given by the statute in which to assert their right to the land by suit. Being infants at the death of their father, each of them had throe years alter becoming of age in which to sue, but after that time the interest of each was barred. The opinion of Soott J., in Jjytle vs. The State, IT Ark., has been adopted by this court, upon full consideration of the proper construction of our statute of limitations, in Wilder vs. Mayo, 23 Ark., and it follows that whatever were the rights of the heirs of Samson Gray to the land in controversy, the courts wore closed to the two older plaintiffs when they first made their claim by the bill filed in chancery in Chicot Circuit Court.

But at the filing of that bill, Thomas "VV. Gray, the other defendant, had not been of age throe years, and the suit was in time to save his interest from the bar of the statute set up against him in this case, if the Chicot county suit can be connected with this, so that both suits shall bo held to relate to the same matter, and to be prosecuted by and against the same parties. Mary E. Trapnall was not made a party to the first suit: that was against the other defendants to the present suit, and seems to imply an intention to have proceeded against the unknown heirs of Frederick ~W. Trapnall, from the statements of the bill, but no affidavit was filed with it necessary to procure an order of publication, which would have been a step in the prosecution of the suit against unknown heirs. Whether under the facts shown in this record, Mary R. Trapnall, born and always living in Pulaski county, in which Samson Gray died, and in which and in territory stricken from it, the plaintiffs have grown up and lived, was liable to be proceeded against as an unknown heir of Frederick W. Trapnall, we need not say; it is sufficient that no proceeding was prosecuted against her, and this suit is, therefore, the first one ever brought against her by Thomas W. Gray about the land in question, and not being brought within three years after his minority ceased, he was subject to the defense of limitations interposed against him.

Thus, without passing upon the rights of the heirs of Samson Gray, tiie effect of the tax sale to Stewart, or upon any other questions in the case, we hold that the plaintiffs have not presented a case that entitles them to relief against Mary R. Trapnall.

Martha F. Trapnall was but a nominal party, to the bill. Mary R. Trapnall, as the heir of Frederick W. Trapnall, has his right to the land, and if Martha F. Trapnall, as his administratrix, may have possession of the title papers, which we do not know and cannot infer, it would be idle as well as inequitable to require her to give up to the plaintiffs the evidences of a light that belongs to Mary R. Trapnall.

The decree of the court below is affirmed.

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