119 Ark. 413 | Ark. | 1915
This is an ejectment suit, the plaintiff Jimmerson claiming title under a patent issued to him from the general land office of the United States pursuant to a homestead entry made April 4, 1905. The defendant pleads a former adjudication in ¡another action between the parties in bar of the right of the plaintiff to recover in this action.
It appears from the pleadings that the defendant asserted title to the lands in controversy under an entry made with the register .and receiver of the land office of the United 'States anterior to the date of plaintiff’s homestead entry. Plaintiff took possession under his entry, and in the year 1907, defendant instituted an action against him in the eárcuit court of the county where the land is situated to recover possession thereof, claiming title under said entry made with the United States land office. There was a jury trial of that case which resulted in a judgment in favor of the defendant in the present case. No appeal was prosecuted from that judgment, and it stands unreversed and in -full force. Plaintiff remained in possession of the land until the year 1913, when the defendant sought to enforce the judgment against him by issuance of process thereon, and he instituted an action in the chancery court to enjoin the defendant from causing the judgment to be executed.- The chancery court decided the cause in favor of the defendant, and on appeal, this court affirmed the judgment. We decided that the circuit court had jurisdiction in the ejectment suit, and that the plaintiff could not “set up in a court of equity, as a ground for enjoining the enforcement of the judgment at law, matters which he might have, but neglected to interpose in the defense of the suit at law. ’ ’ At the conclusion of the opinion, the following was added: “Appellant, however, alleges in his complaint that since the determination of the ejectment suit against him, the Interior Department of the United States has issued to him a patent to the land, and we do not in this opinion wish to be understood as denying him his right to assert his title in a proper suit in the proper forum.” 106 Ark. 127.
The plaintiff then instituted the present action to recover possession, ,and insists that the language quoted above is decisive of his right to assert his title in this suit. We are of the opinion, however, that it was only meant to exclude from the opinion in that case any determination of what the plaintiff’s rights would be in an action at law asserting his title. We did not mean to decide a question which was not then before us, and did not attempt to do so. In fact, the judgment in the ejectment suit was not in the record of the case then under consideration.
There is no question involved here of jurisdiction of the court to determine the rights of rival claimants while a controversy was pending between them before the proper officer of the Interior Department, for, as we said when the case that was here before (106 Ark. 127), there is no controversy pending* there.
Judgment affirmed.