41 Ark. 53 | Ark. | 1883
The honored citizen and gallant soldier, Archibald Yell, who fell at Buena Yista in 1846, left a will. It appears from its context, that he left five children; a daughter, Mary I., in Tennessee, and four other children at home in Arkansas, bo-wit: Clinton, Elizabeth, Jane and Artamisia. To the last four he divided a lot of ground in the town of Ozark which is the subject of this suit. Artamisia died in 1855 without issue, whereby each of her Arkansas co-devisees, became entitled to a fourth, each, of her share, the other fourth going to her Tennessee sister. In other words, Clinton became entitled to five-sixteenths. He died in 1861, whilst so in joint possession, leaving two children, one of whom soon afterwards died also. The survivor, Archibald 'Yell, Jun., ou the sixth of May, 1881, filed the complaint in this cause, for the recovery of his interest in the land, describing it as a third, against the defendants, who are shown to have obtained possession through Jane and Elizabeth, and to ■hold under them ; and who are admitted to have held the whole lot, adversely, since 1870.
It may be stated, once for all, that the evidence shows that plaintiff was not born later than in May, 1857 ; but was ¡probably born about the ninth day of that month.
The complaint, marked filed on the sixth of May 1881, ivas in time to save the statute of limitations if it were the beginning of the suit. There is no summons in the transcript ; nor appearance of defendants until the month of June 1881. The appearance was certainly too late to save-the operation of the statutes, if that be the beginning.
There is much in the pleadings, exhibits, proof and instructions which concerns the titles of the respective parties. What we have stated is the result of it all. The verdict was for defendants; and, with regard to that verdict, we have only to say that it coul,d not have been otherwise, if the suit was barred ; and must have been for the plaintiff if the suit was brought .in time. Whether or not the statute -had run,, is the only practical question presented. About the title, there is no difficulty whatever, legal or equitable. It was in the plaintiff if not barred. The adverse possession was-admitted of record. The court will therefore notice only such alleged errors as touch the matter of limitation. This was duly pleaded by defendants.
It is not shown that any motion was made during the trial for a continuance or suspension of the cause, until the sheriff might be ordered to return the writ; nor is it shown that the clerk, who is an officer of the court, could not have been examined at once. The court, in the exercise of a sound discretion might, in the furtherance of justice, have permitted one or the other, as it might deem most proper ■under the circumstances. The court had been in session for more than a month, and there had been several proceedings in the cause to call the attention of attorneys to the papers. The session began on the sixth of J une, and on that day this cause was set for trial on the twenty-seventh. That was the first appearance of the defendants by their attorneys, and the attorney for the plaintiff could not have relied on it to save the statute. The answer itself filed on the twenty-fifth of J une set up the statute and advised the plaintiff of the importance of showing, by means other than the appearance, that the action was begun early in May. There were divers intervening motions made and discussed in the cause between that time and the twenty-fifth of July, during which time the sheriff was in court, and might have been called on for his return, whibh was the proper evidence to sustain the issue on the plaintiff’s side. He left about two days before the trial- which was not until the twenty-seventh.
Homer himself sometimes nods, and the most diligent attorneys -are feelingly aware that at times they commit such oversights in the press of business. The Justice who delivers this opinion has no stones to throw at his brethren -of the bar, since as attorney he conducted the case of the plaintiff in Merrick v. Brittian, 26 Ark., 496, where a motion for a new trial on a similar ground of surprise was not allowed. That case is an authority in point, and the reasoning of the court was accepted by him then without a murmer. It is now cited in support of the opinion that we cannot say the court below erred in holding that ground of the motion insufficient.
Such applications are advanced to the sound legal discretion of the presiding judge, who is always cognizant of much, which, from its nature, cannot be imported into the record, but which he may himself judicialW notice, and which should guide his discretion. We can only act upon an abuse of it, or in plain furtherance of justice manifest to us.
Upon the case as made, the verdict of the jury could not without error have been otherwise, and it was not error to refuse a new trial. The judgment for defendants must be affirmed.