152 Ark. 452 | Ark. | 1922
Appellee instituted suit on the 9th day of October, 1919, in the chancery court of Franklin County, Ozark district thereof, against appellants to recover certain lands in survey No. 2348, in said county, and for an accounting of rents and profits and the value of coal removed from said lands. He alleged that he became the owner of said lands by inheritance, as the sole heir, from his mother, who died intestate, subject to the curtesy of his father, Allen H. Berry, therein; that his father died in January, 1919; that appellants claimed the lands from his father through mesne conveyances, beginning with a conveyance by R. J. Butts to Henry Russell.
Appellants filed an answer, denying appellee’s ownership of the lands by inheritance from his mother, alleging that his father and mother owned said lands in entirety, and that upon his mother’s death the entire fee vested by succession in his father, through whom appellants claim title under mesne conveyances. Appellants also interposed the defenses of limitations' and laches.
The cause was submitted upon the pleadings and evidence, which resulted in a finding and decree in favor of appellee, from which is this appeal. *
The findings of fact upon which the decree is based appear as recitals therein. The questions, therefore, presented on this appeal are determinable on the face of the record.
The court found that Jeremiah H. Roberts owned the lands in fee simple in survey 2348, and at his death his four children, one of them being Russella Berry, the mother of appellee, inherited same, subject to the dower interest of Martha J. Roberts, the surviving wife of the said Jeremiah H. Roberts; that subsequently the lands were partitioned,- and that portion inherited by Russella Berry was conveyed, with her consent, by a commissioner appointed for the purpose, to herself and her husband, Allen H. Berry, who was' the father of appellee; that after the death of Russella Berry the lands so conveyed to her and her husband were conveyed by Allen H. Berry to Butts & Russell, who are grantors in the chain of appellants’ title. It is insisted by appellants that the conveyance to Russella Berry and her husband, Allen H. Berry, vested an estate by the entirety in them, and that, upon the death of Russella Berry, Allen H. Berry succeeded to the fee, and that through mesne conveyances, originating with him, appellants are the owners of the lands. This must depend upon the legal effect of a deed in partition which includes the husband or wife of a co-tenant as a grantee at the co-tenant’s instance. According to the weight of authority, the rule is that such a conveyance does not create an estate by the entirety, its only effect being to designate or separate the share of the tenant. A deed in partition operates upon the possession of an estate, converting the common possession of each in the whole into a possession in severalty, and does not operate upon the title by investing each tenant with a new or different title from what the tenant had before. Whitset v. Wamack, 159 Mo. 14, 81 A. S. R. 339; Harrison v. Ray, 108 N. C. 215, 11 L. R. A. 722; Sprinkle v. Spainhour, 149 N. C. 223, 25 L. R. A. (N. S.) 167; Cottrell v. Griffiths, 108 Tenn. 191, 91 A. S. R. 748.
Again, appellants contend that if Allen H. Berry did not acquire an estate by entirety with his wife under the partition deed, he did acquire such estate under a deed from Martha J. Roberts and others, which was re-r corded on April 20, 1880. According to the face of the record, this deed was made during the pendency of a suit in the Franklin Chancery Court brought by Russella Berry, the mother1 of appellée, against Martha J. Roberts and others, to establish title to an undivided one-fourth interest in said real estate as an heir and child of Jeremiah H. Roberts, subject to the dower interest therein of Martha J. Roberts, the surviving wife of Jeremiah H. Roberts. A decree was rendered in that case on May 20, 1880, in which it was determined that Jeremiah H. Roberts died intestate, seized and possessed of said lands, leaving him surviving Martha J. Roberts, his widow, and four children, including Russella Berry, the mother of appellee, his sole and only heirs, who took said real estate by inheritance. The decree in partition above referred to was rendered at the November term, 1880, of the same court. In that decree it was ascertained and adjudged that the four children of Jeremiah H. Roberts, one of whom was appellee’s mother, owned the real estate in fee, subject to the dower interest of the said Martha J. Roberts. The insistence of appellants is that, under proper construction of certain deeds, the said Martha J. Roberts acquired the title in fee to said lands partly by inheritance from her uncle, William Russell, and partly by purchases from other nieces and nephews of the said William Bussell. It is unnecessary to construe the deeds referred to, for they antedate the decree of May 20, 1880, and must necessarily have been construed and given effect in that decree. It was adjudicated in that decree that Martha J. Boberts owned a dower interest only in the real estate. She and the other parties to the suit and all their privies were bound by the adjudication. Appellants are the privies in estate of the parties to that -suit and cannot again put in issue matters which were determined therein. One of the issues determined in that case was the interest owned by appellee’s mother in the real estate in question, as well as the interest owned by Martha J. Boberts.
The defenses of limitation and laches interposed by appellants have no application in this case, because, according to the face of the record, appellee’s father, Allen H. Berry, acquired an interest by curtesy in the lands upon the death of Bussella iBerry, his wife, and did not himself die until February, 1919. This suit was instituted in October, 1919, only a short time after appellee’s father died.
Appellee insists upon an affirmance of the decree because the oral and documentary testimony taken in open court was not preserved and incorporated in the record in the manner provided by law. Having determined the questions presented on this appeal upon the findings of fact incorporated in the decree itself, it is unnecessary to decide whether the oral and documentary testimony was properly brought into the record, but, as the question is in the case and involves a matter of practice, we will decide it. It appears from the decree that oral and documentary testimony was introduced in the trial of the cause. No attempt was made to bring the testimony into the record by bill of exceptions. Neither was it reduced to writing and embraced in the decree. The method adopted was to insert an order in the body of the decree, ordering the stenographer to transcribe the evidence and file the same as a part of the record within one hundred and twenty days. In corn eluding the decree the court made'the following order: “The taking of the testimony by the stenographer at the trial, by consent of the parties, is taxed as a part of the expense and costs of the suit.” It does not appear that the court made any order at the beginning of the trial for the court stenographer, or one specially designated by him for the purpose, to take down the evidence in shorthand. "What purports to be a copy of the oral and documentary testimony appears in the transcript, without identification other than the certificate of the clerk in the usual form at the end of the transcript, save an unattached certificate of Walter Myers, public court stenographer, certifying to this record in response to a writ of certiorari issued after the transcript had been lodged here and briefs in the case had been filed. In the case of Fletcher v. Simpson, 144 Ark. 436, this court said, with reference to making up records in chancery proceedings under the practice acts, that “a case in equity is heard de novo by the appellate court on the record made below. Under our practice, oral evidence introduced in chancery cases may be made a part of the record by having it taken down in writing in open court and filed with the papers in the case, by bill of exceptions, or by reducing the testimony to writing and embodying it as a recital in the record of the decree.” None of these methods was adopted in the instant case in making up the record. The method adopted was to order the stenographer, at the conclusion of the cause, to transcribe and file the evidence taken down by him in shorthand, within one hundred and twenty days. A majority of the court are of opinion that the practice act of 1915 contemplates that the court shall make an order, before the evidence is taken down, that the court stenographer, or one especially designated by the court for the purpose, shall take down the testimony in shorthand. Any other1 construction would prevent the parties from objecting to any particular stenographer, and would permit the court to adopt the -stenographic notes of any stenographer present who took down the evidence, and order the record made up from them. The court is also of the opinion that, in order for the transcribed stenographic notes to become a part of the record, under order of the court and without the consent of the parties, they must be transcribed and filed in court during the term at which the case is tried, and not at a time beyond the adjournment of the court. A majority of the court is also of opinion that the concluding order, taxing the stenographer’s fee as costs of the suit, by consent of the parties, did not amount to a consent by the parties that the stenographer might transcribe his stenographic notes and file same after adjournment of court as part of the record in the case. The purported oral and documentary testimony has not been brought into the record in accordance with our practice.
No error appearing, the decree is affirmed.