148 Ark. 380 | Ark. | 1921
This case is here now on a second appeal, the attitude of the parties being reversed, the present appellees having been the appellants on the former appeal, and the present appellants having been formerly the appellees. Barron v. Stuart, 136 Ark. 481. The facts in the case were stated more in detail in the opinion on the former appeal than need be stated again. Reference is made to that opinion, and it is only essential now to give an outline of the facts.
J. W. Stuart, a man sixty-eight years of age, residing in Greene County, Arkansas, died on July 28, 1916, the owner of a large estate consisting of improved farm lands, timber lands and personalty of various kinds'. He left surviving him his widow, five sons, two daughters and the children of three deceased daughters, and a few days before he died he executed his last will and testament by which on the face of the instrument he devised and bequeathed all of his property to his wife, M. R. E. Stuart. Appellees, who are the daughters and grandchildren of J. "W. Stuart, instituted this action to establish a trust in certain property devised and bequeathed to the widow. The chancellor in the first decree decided that there was no trust under the will and dismissed the complaint for want of equity. On the former appeal this court sustained the trust and reversed the cause for further proceedings.
In the original complaint it was alleged that the testator, J. W. Stuart, had directed a division of the property, giving to the widow the homestead and $10,000 in money and certain other items of personalty, and that the remainder was to go to his children and grandchildren, and that he devised and bequeathed the whole of his estate to his wife as trustee, with instructions to convey to each of the children and grandchildren, separately, a tract of improved land, which he described by name or location, and to divide the timber land and personal property equally between all the children and grandchildren; that the widow after the death of the testator had carried out said directions by conveying the improved farm lands to the parties in accordance with the directions of the testator, but that she had refused to deed to her daughters and grandchildren any of the timber lands or to divide the personal property equally between the children and grandchildren as directed. The prayer of the complaint was that a trust be declared, and that the widow be compelled to carry out its terms by an equal division of the timber lands and the personal property among all the children and grandchildren, according to the directions of the testator. On the remand of the case, the plaintiffs, the present appellees, filed a supplemental complaint in which they set forth certain defects in the deeds executed to them by the widow conveying the improved farm lands and asked that a correction be made by the cancellation of those deeds, and the execution of new deeds by the commissioner of the court conveying the property to the plaintiffs in fee simple. It was also alleged in the supplemental complaint that the widow and one of the sons of the testator, J. A. Stuart, had cut and moved a large quantity of timber from the wild lands and had sold a large quantity of the stock and matured crops of the testator, and had disposed of other personal property, and asked that a master be appointed with power to state an account between the parties in regard to their respective interests in the property. There was also a prayer for a partition of the timber lands. There was an answer to this supplemental complaint and also a cross-complaint by the widow in which she claimed the sum of $1,600 as her separate estate, in addition to the sum of $10,000 which was specified was to go to her under the trust.
On April 7, 1919, the court entered a decree on the mandate of this court and the supplemental pleadings, in which the court recited a finding “that the real estate belonging to J; W. Stuart at the time of his death is the common property of his widow, grandchildren and great grandchildren (naming them),” and that it would be necessary to have an appraisement and partition in kind of all the lands belonging to the said testator, and the court appointed commissioners to set aside the homestead to the widow and to appraise each of the forty-acre tracts of land separately and divide the same into ten equal parts. The court' also appointed a master to take testimony and to report a statement of the account between the parties. It appears from the account subsequently filed that the widow, prior to that time, had divided the cattle and mules and horses by giving to each of the children and grandchildren a mule or a horse and a cow and calf, and out of the cash on hand she had given to each of them a check for $2,000 except two of her daughters who joined in this suit against her. Testimony was taken before the master, who made a report to the court setting forth in detail his findings concerning the amount of property in the 'hands of the executor, J. A. Stuart, and the amount of disbursements. The commissioners also made a report of the values of the tracts of wild timber lands and reported a partition of those lands equally among the children and grandchildren, giving to the grandchildren the share of the parent. There were no exceptions to the report of the commissioners, nor is there any controversy here concerning the division of the wild lands. There were twenty-one separate tracts of wild lands, containing forty acres each, and these tracts were equally divided between the parties. Exceptions were filed to the master’s report, and these exceptions came on for hearing by the court on April 5,1920. There was an order entered by the court reciting the filing of the exceptions and the submission of the cause, which was to be argued at a later time to be fixed by the chancellor. The cause was heard by the chancellor in vacation, all the parties being present by their attorneys, on July 15, 1920, and a final decree was rendered, the entry of which contained a recital of the submission of the cause during the term time on April 5. Certain matters were reserved from the decree entered on July 15, and the hearing was resumed on July 20,1920. This was a final decree, except that there was a motion made on August 21, 1920, to reopen the decree, which motion the court overruled on September 25, 1920.
On July 13, 1920, the attorneys then representing the parties (not including the present counsel representing appellants here who have succeeded former counsel in the case) joined in a written direction to the master, as follows:
“We hereby request that, in stating the final account for order of distribution in the case of Barron v. Stuart, that you take into account the difference in value of the so-called improved farms, the disposition of which were directed by J. W. Stuart on his death-bed, and absorb these differences in the final account, the value to be fixed as found by the commissioners, as under the decree of the Supreme Court all parties are to share equally by doing this, no liens will be retained against the respective tracts of lands on account of these differences and owelty awards.” It will be observed that this direction was given after the first decree on July 15, 1920, and pursuant to this direction the master reported the values of the improved farms conveyed to the different children and grandchildren, and in stating the account between the parties he equalized these differences so as to give each of the children an equal share in the whole estate. The court entered a decree in accordance with the report of the master, awarding to each of the children and grandchildren the amounts found to he the balance due to each of them out of the funds in the hands of the executor.
It is contended, in the first place, that the decree is void on account of being entered in vacation without having been previously submitted and taken under advisement by the court in term time. Conceding that the recitals of the record are not sufficient to bring the case within that feature of the statute (Crawford & Moses Digest, § 2190) which providés that the chancellor may “make and sign decrees in vacation in causes taken under advisement by him at a term of the court,” the record does show that the cause was heard in vacation by consent of the parties, all being present by attorneys before the chancellor. The statute just referred to expressly authorizes the trial and rendition of decrees in vacation by consent. Some of the plaintiffs were infants, but there is no exception in the statute as to infant parties. The statute provides that the parties themselves, or their solicitors of record, may consent to the hearing in vacation, and we find no reason for reading into the statute exceptions in favor of infants. This is a mere matter of procedure in trials of causes which involve no prejudice to the rights of infants by having the hearing in vacation before the chancellor if the counsel for both sides so agree.
The principal controversy arising on the present appeal relates to the decree of the court equalizing the differences between the values of the improved farm lands and compelling each of the parties to account in the final division of the estate for these differences in value. The contention- of appellants is that the improved farm lands were devised to the widow in trust for the several cestuis que trust, regardless of value, and that the differences in value, if any, are not to be taken into account in the division of the other property. The contention of appellees is that the whole of the estate was devised in trust to be equally divided between the parties, and that in carrying out this trust the differences in values of the separate specific tracts of improved farm lands must be equalized and the payment of owelty to he decreed in order to effectuate an equal division of the property. It is claimed on each side of the controversy that this question was adjudicated in the original opinion of this court which became the law of the case. Each side quotes statements from the opinion, which they claim support their respective contentions. The issues involved and the conclusions of this court are clearly stated in the former opinion and show for themselves. There is nothing, we think, in the language of that opinion itself which is decisive of the issue controverted on the present appeal, but we think the effect of the decision of the court upon the issues then involved was an adjudication that the trust had been performed in accordance with the terms, in so far as it related to the improved farm lands and that the remainder of the property was to be divided equally between the children and grandchildren. Appellees, as plaintiffs below, did not ask for an adjudication concerning those lands and it is clear that they treated the trust as being finally accomplished with respect to that portion of the testator’s property, and the relief which they asked for was that they be given an equal division in the remainder of the property. This court merely decreed to them what they asked for, and that necessarily resulted in establishing as the law of the case the decision that the remainder of the property was to be equally divided. Moreover, that is, according to the preponderance of the testimony in the case, what the testator intended in the creation of the trust. He was unable to complete the division of the property according to his wishes, but he selected one character of property which stood in a class by itself and divided that in accordance with his own wishes, and apparently upon his own estimate of the respective claims of his children and grandchildren upon his bounty. There is no conflict in the testimony that he called over the children name by name and specified the particular farms which they were to have. He directed that his crops he sold by his executor and the proceeds equally divided between the children and grandchildren, and that each one be given a mule-or a horse, and that the balance of his property be divided among the children and grandchildren, and repeated the saying in the presence of those assembled that they were to be treated alike — that “a child is a child, ” as he expressed it.
There was nothing- to indicate that his intention was that there be an appraisement of the farm lands and that the differences in values, if any, should be equalized. In other words, it is clear that he intended to make the division himself as far as he was physically able to do so at that time, and that the remainder of the property was to be equally divided. We are of the opinion that the original counsel in the case misconceived the effect of the former decision of this court and put the wrong interpretation on it in holding that the parties were liable for the payment of owelty in the equalization of the values of the improved farm lands. The fact that counsel who originally represented the appellants consented, under a misconception of the law, to an instruction to the master to make a finding as to the relative values of the different tracts of improved farm lands does not bar appellants from objecting to the decree on that account. This direction was not given by way of a compromise settlement of the controversy, but, as before stated, was made under a belief entertained by counsel that such was the effect of the former decree. The parties, notwithstanding that concession, during the further progress of the proceedings had a right to object to the findings of the master and the decree of the court awarding the payment of owelty. No prejudice resulted from this concession during the progress of the proceedings, as the court could and should have corrected the misconception entertained at the time and rendered a decree in accordance with what we find now to be the law of the case. But it is contended now that this was settled against the contention of appellants by the decree entered by the chancellor on April 7, 1919, and that the appeal from that decree was taken too late for this court to review the question. That decree, however, was not final. It merely declared the law with respect to the rights of the parties, but it did not award any particular property to any of the parties and left for future adjudication of the property to be awarded to the parties respectively. The case in that respect falls squarely within the rule announced by this court in Sennett v. Walker, 92 Ark. 607, and also within the rule announced in Branstetter v. Branstetter, 130 Ark. 301. There was no final decree concluding the rights of the parties without further judicial action until the decree of August 21, 1920, and the appeal was taken within six months after that time.
The widow, M. B». E. Stuart, who is one of the appellants, assigns as error the refusal of the court to allow her in the adjustment of the accounts the additional sum of $1,600 which she claims as her separate property in funds turned over to her in the lifetime of her husband in reimbursmeent for her inherited property which he had used for his own purposes. The chancellor found that these funds wore regarded as the property of the testator himself, and as a part of the funds out of which he bequeathed to her the sum of $10,000, in lieu of all other claims, and that conclusion is supported by the evidence.
The contention is also made, on behalf of the widow, that the court erred in failing to decree to her, as her separate property, the funds deposited in bank in the joint names of herself and the testator, and which she now claims by right of survivorship. There was no exception to the report of the master as to this item, and the conclusion is warranted from the proof that these funds were the property of the testator.
An appeal has been prosecuted on behalf of the infant plaintiffs from that part of the decree fixing the amount of the fees of their counsel. The court, in fixing the amount of the fees, seems to have properly taken into consideration the several amounts recovered by these infants under the decree, and, since the effect of our decision is to reduce the amounts recovered by them, it is proper to reverse this part of the decree so as to allow the chancellor to determine the proper amount of the fees based on the amount recovered.
The decree of the chancery court is therefore reversed and the cause remanded with directions, after ascertaining the amount of fees to be charged, to enter a decree in accordance with this opinion.
Hart and Smith, JJ., dissent.