143 Ark. 543 | Ark. | 1920
On December 1, 1914, a day of the regular November, 1914, term of the Pope Circuit Court, Hon. Gr. O. Patterson, presiding as special judge, made and entered an order and judgment removing the disabilities of minority of Willie H. Baird, one of the heirs at law of W. A. Baird, deceased, for the specific purpose of enabling him to join with the adult heirs of the said W. A. Baird in the conveyance of certain real estate descended to them from said decedent. The judgment is defective in that it does not show the said Willie H. Baird to have been a resident of Pope County, and does not show that he was eighteen years of age when the order was made. Appellants became the purchasers of Willie H. Baird’s interest, and brought this proceeding to have the record amended by a mmc pro time order reciting tbe jurisdictional facts in regard to the age and residence of tbe petitioner. Tbe court beard tbe evidence in tbe whole case, and denied tbe prayer of appellants, from wbicb judgment comes tbis appeal.
Appellee Willie H. Baird resisted tbe prayer of appellants, and has raised several questions of pleading, wbicb we find it unnecessary to decide, as, in our opinion, tbe court below properly disposed of tbe motion on its merits.
A large number of witnesses testified in tbe court below, and tbe case is here on a voluminous record, and tbe property involved is shown to be very valuable. Young Baird wasted tbe proceeds of tbe sale of tbe property by tbe time be bad attained bis legal majority (as is usually done in such cases), and after becoming of lawful age repudiated bis deeds to appellants.
Tbe testimony shows very clearly that appellee was not eighteen years old when the order was made, yet that is not tbe controlling question in tbe case. The question is whether or not tbe testimony showed tbe petitioner to be eighteen years old when tbe petition was beard, and did tbe court find the fact so to be?
Tbe petition recited tbe residence of tbe petitioner to be Pope County, but alleged that petitioner was “............_ years old.” Mr. Patterson appears to have sworn and to have examined tbe witnesses at the original bearing, and there was in attendance at tbe time about the usual number of persons found in a circuit court room when court is in session without a jury. Several of these spectators testified at the bearing from wbicb tbis appeal comes, but as there was nothing out of tbe ordinary to impress that proceeding upon them their testimony is not as satisfactory as it might otherwise have been. No one of them testified that any particular witness bad stated what appellee’s age was at tbe time, although appellant Turnbow testified that be was present in court when tbe order was made, and be remembers that tbe testimony then beard showed appellee to be eighteen at the time. Several witnesses testified that appellee was present when the order was made, and that he was accompanied by his guardian. But the testimony in the record now before us appears to establish the fact that appellee was in Detroit, Michigan, at that time. This circumstance was not brought out as questioning the good faith of the persons who were acting for appellee, but was offered as showing the fallibility of the memory of the witnesses.
The strongest testimony for appellant is that of Mr. Patterson, who testified that he knew what the statutory requirements were, and that he would not have made the order unless those requirements had been met. He did not claim, however, to have any independent recollection on the subject, and he did not undertake to say that he remembered that any witness gave testimony concerning appellee’s age. He made the following notation upon the judge’s docket: “Order removing disabilities of minority for the purpose of selling certain interests in real estate, as per precedent. ’ ’ The deputy clerk who entered the order testified that no precedent was furnished.
Mr. Patterson testified that he became familiar with the statutory requirements from having assisted in briefing a case which involved the construction of a statute enacted in derogation of the common law. On his cross-examination he mentioned the case, and it is shown that the case referred to was finally disposed of in this court on appeal in 1909. At that time the statute imposed no limitation as to the age of the petitioner, and it was not until the passage of act 256 of the Acts of 1911 (Public Acts 1911, page 251) that the power of courts to remove disabilities of minority was limited to males over eighteen years of age and females above sixteen years of age. Under the law as it stood when Mr. Patterson briefed his case, the court might have made a valid order removing the disabilities of a boy seventeen years old, and the age of the petitioner would have been of importance only insofar as it influenced or controlled the discretion of the court.
It appears that upon the hearing of the matter two attorneys addressed Mr. Patterson, as judge, concerning the exercise of his judicial discretion in making the order, and that each attorney urged that the order be made; but neither of these attorneys testified at the hearing from which this appeal comes. There is testimony that appellee misrepresented his age both in getting into the army and in getting out of it and in negotiating the sale of his interest in the property after the order removing his disabilities had been made; but when all the testimony has been considered, we are unable to say that the court’s finding is without testimony legally sufficient to sustain it.
In the case of Midyett v. Kerby, 129 Ark. 304, we said: “Courts should be cautious in rendering nunc pro tunc orders and decrees. The power may be exercised upon parol testimony alone, but the evidence should be clear, decisive and unequivocal. It should be of sufficient character and weight to overcome the written memorial. Bobo v. State, 40 Ark. 224; Liddell v. Bodenheimer, 78 Ark. 364; Murphy v. Citizens Bank, 84 Ark. 100; Sloan v. Williams, 118 Ark. 593.”
In view of the rule quoted and the adverse finding of the court below, we are constrained to affirm the judgment, and it is so ordered.