117 S.W.2d 25 | Ark. | 1938
Although this suit was brought and tried in chancery without objection, it is really a suit at "law in ejectment. It involves the ownership and right to the possession of 100 acres of land in Randolph county. It is the second suit between two of the same appellants, Robinson and R. R. Reynolds, against the same appellees. In the former suit in ejectment in the circuit court wherein said Robinson and said Reynolds were plaintiffs, a demurrer was interposed and sustained to a complaint with like allegations as in the present suit, with leave to amend within thirty days, else the complaint would be dismissed. There was no amendment filed within the time or at all, so the complaint stood dismissed by the force and effect of said order on demurrer.
We are of the opinion that the demurrer went to the merits of the case, was a final order from which no *220
appeal was taken, and, whether right OF wrong, is a bar against said appellants from maintaining the present action. In McNeese v. Raines,
Of the other appellants, Ellen L. Ebberts is the widow and heir at law of A. M. Reynolds, deceased. The above named appellant, R. R. Reynolds, is a son of A. M. Reynolds, deceased, and Ulric and Curtis Reynolds are grandsons of A. M. Reynolds, deceased, whose father was Ulric H. Reynolds, also deceased. Mrs. Ebberts claims dower in an undivided one-third interest in said land and the other two appellants, Ulric and Curtis Reynolds, claim an undivided one-twelfth interest each. We do not undertake to detail the source of appellants' claim of title, but conceding that such claim of title is well founded, ejectment will not lie. In a decree rendered in 1888, concerning this same land, a lien, in the nature of a purchase money lien, was fixed thereon in favor of Martin and Pringle, appellees' predecessors in interest, for the proportionate part of the original purchase price which their grantor had paid. Limitations would not run against such lien, they and their grantees, or heirs being in possession at the time and have been for fifty years and still are in such possession. In such case, ejectment *221
does not lie. In Clark v. Whitney,
So here, a lien was fixed on this land in favor of appellees' grantors in 1888 which has never been discharged and they have the right to defend their possession under such title until it has been discharged.
It follows that the decree must be affirmed. It is so ordered.