53 Ark. 418 | Ark. | 1890
The appellant seeks to reverse a judgment against him for the recovery of lands claimed by him •under a donation deed from the State.
As to the material facts there was no controversy, and the court below found them correctly.
The lands in controversy were forfeited to the State for the non-payment of taxes in 1875 and 1876. There was no newspaper published in the county in which the lands were situate, and the notice of sale was published in another county, not the nearest in which a paper was published.
The appellant obtained a donation certificate on the 24th of March, 1880, entered upon the land and held possession continually thereafter. He received a donation deed on 27th of August, 1881. At the time of the forfeiture and entry the appellees owned an estate in remainder in the lands expectant upon the death of one Green Cumby, who died in 1883. On the several dates of the forfeiture of the land, the entry upon it by appellant and the death of Green Cumby, the appellees were minors, and so continued until the bringing of the suit on the 23d of May, 1887.
Whether the forfeiture was void or not, and whether the appellees had a vested or contingent remainder in the land, are questions discussed by counsel which we need not decide. For if we assume that the contention most favorable to appellees in that regard be correct, the appellant pleads his adverse possession of the land for more than two years before the' bringing of the suit, and the conclusion we have reached upon that plea controls in the decision of the cause. The court below found the fact of possession in favor of appellant, but upon the whole case rendered judgment againt him. ,
In determining the validity of the defense it is essential that we decide (x) whether section 4475 of Mansfield’s Digest governs this cause? and, if it does, (2) whether the rights of the appellees are saved by reason of their minority?
1. The statute relied upon is section one of an act approved January 10, 1857, entitled “An act to quiet land titles in this State.’’ It provides that no action for the recovery of any land against any person, his heirs or assigns who may hold such lands under a donation deed from the State, shall be maintained, unless it appear that the plaintiff, his ancestor or grantor was seized or possessed of the lands within two years next before the commencement of such suit or action. The appellant claimed title under a donation deed from the State in proper form, purporting to convey title. If for any reason it failed to convey title, this fact was not manifest from the face of the deed. As the appellant had held adverse possession for more than two years under a donation deed from the State, his defense comes within the letter of the statute, and must be tested by it.
That such exceptions are commendable, and evince a ' proper, just and humane regard for the rights and interests of a large and helpless class of land owners, cannot be controverted. But they are within the power of the legislature to grant or withhold, and its exercise of the power cannot be restrained dr varied by the courts to subserve principles of justice and humanity. In the case of Erwin v. Turner, 6 Ark., 14, decided in 1846, this court held, that where the legislature made no exceptions from the provisions of a statute •of limitations, none could be made by the courts in favor of infants and married women, and of this the legislature was advised in the enactment of the statute under consideration. This rule has been stated and affirmed in many subsequent cases, and never even questioned. State Bank v. Morris, 13 Ark., 291; Pryor v. Ryburn, 16 Ark., 671; Smith v. Macon, 20 Ark., 18; Machín v. Thompson, 17 Ark., 199; Walker v. Peay, 22 Ark., 104; Chandler v. Chandler, 21 Ark., 95; Pearce v. Elliott, 20 Ark., 508; Cofer v. Brooks, 20 Ark., 542; Vaughan v. Parr, 20 Ark., 600.
Such was expressly held as to an act passed in 1846, limiting the time within which an action of replevin for shares could be brought, and which contained no exceptions in favor of married women. Pryor v. Ryburn, 16 Ark., 671.
An examination of the cases cited will discover that the general saving clause in the act of 1844 has been held inap-r plicable to other statutes of limitations subsequently enacted, and we know of no case in which it has been held to apply to any statute subsequently enacted. It follows that, upon the findings of the court in regard to appellant’s plea of limitations, the judgment should have been in his favor, and this, whether the statute began to run at the date of his entry or at the death of the life-tenant.
This case has caused us the gravest concern, and we have reached the conclusion announced after long and careful consideration. We fully realize the hardships and injustice of the act, an'd would gladly, if in our power, avert the evils that it threatens. * But the legislature has enacted it in plain terms, and we cannot modify or annul it by construction. The appellees, being minors when the suit was brought, may, if they are so advised, amend this pleading, and convert the proceedings into a suit to redeem.
Reverse and remand.