(after stating the facts). This appeal involves separate and distinct controversies between Ruth Earle Nelms, the plaintiff below, and the several defendants, and they will be treated separately in this opinion, though there are some points in common between the various parties to the different controversies.
Ruth Earle Nelms v. W. N. Brown, Jr.
The first question presented, and one which is a common matter of concern to all the parties, is a construction of the last will and testament of Josiah F. Earle. Most of the lands purchased by Brown and Pickett at the sale by Swepston as administrator in succession to the estate of Louisa R. Earle were those inherited by Louisa R. Earle from her father; but Brown also purchased her half interest in one tract devised by the will of Josiah E. Earle.
It is contended on behalf of appellee Ruth Earle Nelms that the devises contained in the will of Josiah E. Earle were void, and that he died intestate because of the omission of the names of his children from the will.
The will purports to- devise one-half of the testator’s property to his wife and the other half to his children, without naming them. Is the provision for the children, as a class, a sufficient naming of them to comply with the statute concerning the execution of wills?
The statute is as follows: “Whenever a testator shall have a child -born after the making of his will, either in his lifetime or after death, and shall die, leaving such child, so after born,, unprovided for in any settlement, and neither provided for nor in any way mentioned in his will, every such child shall succeed to the same .portion of his father’s estate, real and personal, as would have descended or been distributed to such child if the father had died intestate, and shall be entitled to recover the same portion from the devisees and legatees in proportion to and out of the parts devised or bequeathed to them by such will.” Section 8019, Kirby’s Digest.
“When any person shall make his last will and testament, and omit to mention the name of a child, if living, or the legal represensatives of such child born and living at the time of the execution of such will, every such person, so far as regards such child, shall be deemed to have died intestate, and such child shall be entitled to such proportion, share and dividend of the estate, real and personal, of the testator as if he had died intestate; and such child shall be entitled to recover from the devisees and legatees in proportion to the amount of their respective shares, and the court exercising probate jurisdiction shall have power to decree a distribution of such estate according to the provisions of this and the preceding sections.” Section 8020, Kirby’s Digest.
This feature of the statute has not been passed upon by this court, though it was referred to in Bloom v. Strauss, 70 Ark. 483, and the court expressly declined to decide the question. In that case the will contained neither mention of the children’s names nor provision for them.
In the ‘present case the will of Josiah F. Earle contains a substantial provision for his children, naming tnem as a class, but does not mention their names individually.
Reliance is expressed by counsel in the case of Branton v. Branton, 23 Ark. 569, as sustaining the contention that making provision in a will for children as a class is not equivalent to naming them and does not constitute a valid testament as to the children whose names are omitted. We do not think the case sustains that contention, though the opinion contains dicta indicating that that was the construction to be placed on the statute. In that case the testator bequeathed all of his property to his wife, and made no reference in his will to his children, either by providing for them br by mentioning them by name Or as a class. It was contended in support of the validity of the will that the statute was intended only to provide for children whose names were accidentally omitted, either from oversight or forgetfulness, and that the terms of the will in question manifested an intention on the part of the testator to disinherit his children. The court rejected that contention, and held that the will was invalid. In disposing of the case, the court said in the opinion that the law makes compulsory provision for children, as in intestacy, unless the testator “shall express a contrary intention toward any child and its children by naming it, or them, in the will.” This construction of the statute would invalidate a bequest of practically all the property of a testator to his children because of a failure to mention the names of the children, individually, in the will. We cannot believe that the lawmakers intended any such construction to be placed on the language used, and we should not attribute to them an. intention to restrict the power of alienation by so technical a requirement, unless that intention plainly appears from the language used. We think it is manifest that what was intended by the statute was to declare intestacy as to children of a testator, and thus provide compulsory provisions for them, unless the testator expresses a contrary intention iq the will toward the children. Such an intention may be expressed by the testator in his will by providing for them as a class without naming them separately, or by naming them without providing for them. Either method is equivalent to the other, and either the one or the other clearly excludes any intention on the part of the testator to omit his children from the testament. It would, we think, be disregarding entirely the purpose of the statute, and • would be putting form over substance, to say that the names of children must be individually mentioned in a will which provides substantially for each and all of them.
A section of the Revised “Statutes declares that “all general provisions, terms, phrases and expressions used in any statute shall be liberally construed in order that the true intent and meaning of the General Assembly may be fully carried out.” Kirby’s Digest, § 7792.
It is therefore our duty to construe the terms of the statute under consideration consistent with a reasonable interpretation of the language used, so as to carry out the real intention of the Legislature.
“Wills,” said Judge Warker in Cockrill v. Armstrong, 31 Ark. 581, “ are always liberally construed, and every conclusion which may be legitimately indulged in order to reach a just and equitable conclusion is not only permissible but is required. Words and sentences are to be considered and construed so as to reach the real intention and purpose of the testator. So strong is the presumption that a father would not intentionally omit to provide for all his children that, in case the name of one or more of the children is left out of the will,.by statute it is held to be an unintentional oversight, and the law brings them within the provisions of the will, and makes them joint heirs in the inheritance.”
The statutes of this State declare, in general terms, what was already the inherent right of mankind, that all persons of sound mind.and of mature age may devise all of his or her property by last will and testament. The statute having reference to omitted children was designed to apply only to presumed intestacy, and to provide a rule whereby intestacy may be conclusively presumed. It would therefore be unreasonable to say that a testa-tor who has made substantial provision in his last will for hi.s children is presumed to have intended intestacy as to them because he failed to mention their names.
There is a paucity of authority on this precise question because of the dissimilarity of our statute in this particular from those of other States.
The view taken by the Missouri courts fully sustains the view we have expressed. A statute of that State concerning wills, enacted in 1815, was similar to our statute, and provided that “when any person shall make his or her last will and testament, and omit to mention the na'me of any child or children,” etc., the testator shall be deemed to die intestate as to such child or children. In 1825 the Legislature changed the statute so as to read that “if any person shall make his or her last will and testament, and die leaving a child or children, or the descendants of any such child or children (in case of their death), not provided for in such will, although such child or children be born after the death of the testator, every such testator, so far as regards any such child or children, or their descendants, not provided for as aforesaid, shall be deemed to die intestate.”
Construing the statute last quoted above, the Supreme Court of Missouri in Block v. Block, 3 Mo. 407, held that if a testator declares in his last will that'one of his children, stating the name of the child, shall take no part o.f his estate, that was a sufficient provision under the statute for the child, and that the testator would not be deemed to have died intestate as to such child. The court said that when the child was mentioned in the will and excluded that was a provision within the meaning of the statute.
The Legislature of Missouri subsequently changed the statute so as to read that “if any person make his last will and die leaving a child or children, or descendants of any such child or children (in case of their death) not named nor provided for in such will,” etc., “he shall be deemed to die intestate,” etc. In Beck v. Metz, 25 Mo. 70, the court had under consideration a will which, after a devise to the wife of the testator of all his property, contained the following clause: “In every other respect I leave it entirely to the will and judgment of my said wife, Catherine, how and in what manner she thinks proper to dispose of the estate, as well with reference to our child or children as with reference to the said Joseph Frederick Beck.” The testator left one child surviving whose name was not mentioned in the will except in the general terms quoted above; and the court held the language quoted above named the child within the meaning of the statute. The court, speaking through Judge Ryland, said: “The testator expressly mentions his child — ‘as well with reference to our child.’ They had but one, the daughter. The wife had one by a former husband; even he is named. Now, this mentioning his child and the giving the power to his wife to provide for this child by disposing of the estate according to her own judgment must be considered, within the spirit of our statute, as a naming or providing for his child. He can not be said to have omitted to mention his child. True, he did not name her by her name, but she is sufficiently designated, they having but a daughter.”
In Hockensmith v. Slusher, 26 Mo. 237, the court held that a bequest to a son-in-law, though he was not designated as such in the will, was a naming of the daughter of the testator within the meaning of the statute. The court said: “The statute extends only to a case of entire omission, and the mention of a child without a legacy or other provision for him is sufficient to cut him off from a distributive share of the estate; and whenever the mention of one person, by a natural association of ideas, suggests another, it may reasonably be inferred that the latter was in the mind of the testator and was not forgotten or unintentionally omitted.”
The same conclusion was reached in Woods v. Drake, 135 Mo. 393, where it was held that a bequest to children, naming them by name, of an adopted daughter, without mentioning her by name, was sufficient to amount to a mention of her name.
The Supreme Court of Oregon in Gerrish v. Gerrish, 8 Ore. 351, construing a statute of the State which was copied from the Missouri statute quoted herein, followed the construction laid down by the Missouri court, and held that the mention in a will of children as a class was sufficient naming of them within the meaning of the statute.
We do not have to go as far as the Missouri courts have gone in order to sustain the will in the present case. We hold that the provision in the will of Josiah F. Earle for his children was sufficient compliance with the statute, and that all the devises contained in the will were valid.
An attack is made upon the validity of the sales of land made by Swepston as administrator in succession of the estate of Louisa R. Earle on numerous grounds, some of which are not of sufficient importance to discuss. As shown in the foregoing statement of the facts, Ben R. Earle was appointed administrator of said estate in the year 1891, and in 1894 (more than three years thereafter) his letters were revoked, and Swepston was appointed administrator in succession.
The order of sale was made by the probate court upon the petition of the administrator, and it is contended that the order was void because not made within three years from the date the administration began. It is conceded that an order of sale may be made after three years on petition -of creditors, but not on petition of the administrator. We find no such distinction or limitation in the statute. The statute provides generally that, if the personal estate of a decedent shall be insufficient to pay the debts, it shall be the duty of the executor or administrator to apply to the probate court by petition for sale of real estate to raise funds for that purpose. There is no restriction as to time, but this court has repeatedly held that, in the absence of circumstances excusing the delay, seven years is the shortest period of delay which will bar the right to sell lands of a decedent for the payment of debts. Mayo v. Mayo, 79 Ark. 570, and cases cited therein.
No distinction is made in any of those cases between the power of the probate court to order sales on petition of the executor or administrator and on petition of creditors. The statutes further provide (Kirby’s Digest, § 204 et seq.) that any creditor may, after demand made upon the administrator and his refusal to comply, petition the probate court for sale of th| decedent’s lands for the payment of debts; but no time is specified within which this may be done, and no time is specified to elapse before it may be done.
Executors and administrators are required by statute to make final settlement of their administration within three years from the date of letters (Kirby’s Digest, § 224) ; but this statute is only directory. It does not divest the probate court of jurisdiction to complete the administration of estates after that time and to make any necessary orders to that end for the disposition of assets of the estate.
The validity of the probate sales is also challenged on the ground that some of the claims against the estate were probated after the expiration of two years from commencement of 'administration. It cannot be denied that there were, when the order of sale was made by the court, valid and subsisting claims against the estate which had been duly probated within the'two years prescribed 'by law. The record shows this. Petition was made to the probate court by the administrator in succession for sale of the lands, the order was duly made, the sales were made and reported to the court, and the court confirmed them. Errors and irregularities in the allowance of claims did not vitiate the sale or deprive the court of jurisdiction to order the sale of lands. The act of 1891 (Kirby’s Digest, § 3793) providing that “all probate sales of real estate, made pursuant to proceedings not in substantial compliance with statutory provisions, shall be voidable,” whatever it may mean, does not mean tha'c defects in the allowance of claims against estates will avoid a sale of real estate. ' The proceedings referred to in that statute are those pertaining to the sale, and not to the allowance of claims whenever the court has acquired jurisdiction of the corpus of the estate. Jackson v. Gorman, 70 Ark. 88.
The order of sale was not invalid because made at a term of the probate court subsequent to the one at which the petition was first presented. The court acquired jurisdiction to hear and determine the prayer of the petition, and jurisdiction was not lost by lapse of the term. It was not even an irregularity to grant the prayer of the petition at a subsequent term.
It is contended that, before an order of sale could be made on petition of Swepston to pay debts probated during the administration of his predecessor, Ben R. Earle, the judgments of allowance must have been revived against Swepston as administrator in succession. Payment of claims against estates, once allowed by the probate court, can be enforced without revivor against a new administrator. Notwithstanding a change in the administration, they continue, until paid, as subsisting judgments against the estate, and can be enforced, as such, without revivor. Prior to the adoption of the Constitution of 1874 which abrogated it, there was a statute authorizing issuance of execution for the enforcement of judgments against executors and administrators as such. It was held under that statute that judgment against an administrator must be revived against his successor before execution could issue against the latter. Meredith v. Scallion, 51 Ark. 361; Adamson v. Cummins, 10 Ark. 541. But, as we have already said, the provision of the Constitution of 1874 conferring upon probate courts exclusive jurisdiction over' the estates of decedents (art. 7, § 34) abrogated that statute and vested in that court exclusive power to enforce claims established against estates of decedents. Meredith v. Scallion, supra.
The fact, if established, that Ben R. Earle, while acting as administrator, had wasted assets of the estate sufficient to pay the debts did not, as contended by appellee, deprive the creditors of the right to resort to the assets unadministered for the payment of their debts, and to procure sale of the land. Conger v. Cook, 56 Iowa, 117; In re Bingham, 127 N. Y. 296; Smith v. Brown, 99 N. C. 377.
The principal attack upon the probate sales to Brown and Pickett is grounded upon the fact that they were appraisers of the real estate to be sold.
The statute provides that, before an executor or administrator of an estate shall sell lands, he shall cause the same to be appraised by three disinterested householders of the county, and that the appraisers, before they enter upon their duties, shall make and subscribe an affidavit “that they will well and truly, according to the best of their abilities, view and appraise the lands.” Kirby’s Digest, § 196, 197. The statute further provides that the lands shall be reserved from sale unless sold for two-thirds of the appraised value thereof. Kirby’s Digest, § 199.
Nothing is found in the statute forbidding appraisers from' becoming purchasers at the sale; and if they are prohibited by any principle of law it must result from some inconsistency in their relations as appraiser and purchaser, and not from any positive statutory inhibition. Is there any such inconsistency? They have no duty to perform concerning the sale except to appraise the property, and that duty is fully performed before the sale occurs. But it is an important duty, and one which the statute requires shall be performed by wholly disinterested persons. The disqualifying interest which the statute forbids may be either in the sale or the purchase, and one who expects to become a purchaser at the sale has such an interest. It is true that an appraiser may at the time he performs his duty harbor no intention to become a purchaser at the sale, and may therefore be entirely disinterested at that time, and may conceive the design to purchase after he completes the appraisement; but, as that design may be hidden in his own breast, how can it be shown when he conceived it? In making the appraisement'he performs an important and substantial service for the protection of the estate, and we deem it to be the soundest policy to hold that when he accepts the office he disqualifies himself from becoming a purchaser. That rule works no hardship to the appraiser, and it shuts the door to opportunity for concealed fraud.
The rule which forbids one who has a duty to perform with reference to such a sale rests upon sound public policy, and not upon the actual perpetration of fraud. One of the forbidden class who purchases will not be heard to say that he intended no wrong and perpetrated no actual fraud.
The only authority which we find directly in point is a decision of the Supreme Court of Ohio, and the reasons therein stated are, we think, unanswerable:
“The disability of the appraisers in the present case, if it exists,” says the court, “arises under those general principles of equity which prevent those from acquiring a title to whose discretion or agency the management of a sale is confided. The application of the doctrine to trustees, executors, attorneys, and agents is familiar in all the books. A majority of the court unite in the opinion that the principle of exclusion attaches to every person to whose integrity and judgment is committed the execution of any step needful in making the sale. Where' the law creates fiduciary relations, it seeks to prevent the abuse of confidence by insuring the disinterestedness of its agents. It holds the relation of judge and party, of buyer and seller, to be inconsistent. The temptation to abuse power for selfish purposes is so great that nothing less than that incapacity is effectual, and thus a disqualification is wrought by the mere .necessity of the case. Fullness of price, absence of fraud, and fairness of purchase are not sufficient to countervail this rule of policy. To give it effect, ic is necessary to recognize a right in the former owner to set the sale aside in all cases on repayment of the money advanced * * * The appraiser of land is interposed between the buyer and seller in judicial sales to prevent sacrifices, at undue prices, to the detriment of those interested in its value. If he were permitted to profit by his position, the law would lose its strongest security for his integrity.” Armstrong v. Heirs of Huston, 8 Ohio, 552.
It has been decided by this court that a confirmed sale of land by an administrator or executor is valid without any appraisement at all having been made (Bell v. Green, 38 Ark. 78) ; but the confirmation does not heal the incapacity of the purchaser. The sale is voidable at the instance of the heirs, and may be avoided after confirmation. This must ordinarily be done, of course, within a reasonable time; but the plaintiff was an infant at the time of the sale, and she commenced this suit to set aside the sale within a reasonable time after she attained her age of majority, and she is entitled to do so as to her interest in the land which she inherited from her mother. She inherited one-half of her mother’s land, and Ben R. Earle inherited the other half. She claims, and the chancery court decreed to her, a lien on the Ben R. Earle interest, by subrogation to the' rights of his mortgagees, the sureties on his bond as her guardian and as administrator of the Louisa R. Earle estate, for the amount found to be due by him as such guardian and administrator.
The defendants pleaded the five-year statute of limitation under the probate (judicial) sale. Ben R. Earle, as well as the mortgagees themselves, were barred at the time of the commencement of this suit. Was Ruth Earle Nelms, the infant, also barred of her right to subrogation? We hold that she was barred.
It is said that the right of subrogation is peculiarly a doctrine of equity jurisprudence, and is founded on natural justice and the facts and circumstances of each particular case. 27 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, p. 203; 4 Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, § 1419. The doctrine is variously applied: to sureties who pay debts of their principal and may be subrogated to the securities, liens, etc., held by the creditor; to creditors who may be subrogated to securities and liens held by sureties; to persons interested in incumbered estates who pay off the incumbrances; and to persons paying or advancing money to discharge incumbrances on other’s property, under an agreement that he may hold the discharged incumbrance as security for repayment. One entitled to subrogation is substituted in the place of the original holder of the right, with no greater rights or equities than he had. Rodman v. Sanders, 44 Ark. 504. “The rights acquired by a party entitled to subrogation cannot be extended beyond the rights of a party under whom subrogation is claimed. Subrogation contemplates some original privilege on the part of him to whose place substitution is claimed; and where no such privilege exists, or where it has been waived by the creditor, there is nothing on which the right can be based. While a surety who pays the debt of his principal is subrogated to the rights of the holder of the claim, he takes such rights subject to all disqualifications and limitations which attached to them in the hands of his predecessor.” 27 Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law, p. 206.
A surety who pays the debt of his principal and seeks subrogation to the securities held by the creditor, or a creditor who seeks subrogation to the lien of securities held by a surety, must take steps to enforce his right of subrogation within the period of limitation which would have barred the right of enforcement while in 'the hands of the original holder of the securities. There can be no subrogation to a lien, the enforcement of which is barred by limitations. Rodman v. Sanders, supra; Sheldon on Subrogation, § 176.
• The subrogated right to enforce a lien is a derivative right, and must be exercised within the period of limitation allowed to the original holder of the lien. Exceptions may take a case out of that rule, as in Neff v. Elder, 84 Ark. 277, where one who purchased land in ignorance of a defect in the title and whose money was used in paying off a valid incumbrance was held to be entitled to be subrogated to the lien on discovering the defect in his title, and that the statute did not bar his right before he discovered the defect. The plaintiff could not be subrogated to greater rights under the mortgage executed by her brother, Ben R. Earle, than the mortgagees themselves. Her minority does not enlarge her right over those possessed by those to whom she seeks to be subrogated.
The validity of the levee tax sales to • Pickett and Brown under decree of court is attacked on the alleged ground that Ben R. Earle, whose interest in the land was sold, was a resident of the county, and occupied the land, but was not personally served with process. Van Etten v. Daugherty, 83 Ark. 534. Ruth Earle Nelms also claims a lien on the land by right of subrogation. The five years’ statute of limitation is pleaded as to these lands, and for the reasons already indicated we hold the statute bar to be complete.
It results from the views herein expressed, that the chancery court erred in its decree in so far as a lien in favor of Ruth Earle Nelms is declared on the interest of Ben R. Earle in the lands purchased by Pickett and Brown at the probate sale of Swepston, administrator, and to that extent must be reversed. In all other respects the decree settling the controversies between the plaintiff and W. N. Brown, Jr., and the Southwestern. Improvement Company is correct, and will be affirmed.
Ruth Earle Nelms v. Stone & Tyler.
J. M. Williams as trustee for Stone & Tyler, who were creditors of the Louisa R. Earle estate, purchased at Swepston’s sale as administrator the interest devised to Louisa R. Earle under the will of Josiah E. Earle in certain tracts of land.
The sale is attacked on all the grounds set forth in the attack on the sales to Pickett and Brown except as to the appraisement made by those parties; and in addition thereto the validity of the sale is attacked on the ground that the claim of Stone & Tyler against the estate was improperly allowed, and that Stone & Tyler paid the purchase price by crediting the same on their judgment, instead of paying the money according to orders of the court.
The allowance of the claims of Stone & Tyler against the estate can not be drawn in question collaterally in the attack on the validity of the sale by the administrator, there being valid claims duly allowed against the estate and the probate court having jurisdiction to order the sale. Jackson v. Gorman, 70 Ark. 88. Nor did the fact that payment was made by credit on the probated -claim of the purchasers, instead of payment in money, .invalidate the sale. Only creditors who were prevented from obtaining satisfaction of their probated claims on account of the excessive payment to Stone & Tyler could com-, plain of this, and their remedy, if any, was against the administrator. The sale was reported to the probate court and duly confirmed, and it does not -appear that the interests of any other creditor were prejudiced by this method of accounting for the purchase price of the land.
The lands purchased by Stone & Tyler in part constituted the homestead of Josiah E. Earle, and it is claimed that the sale of the Louisa R. Earle interest in the land was void on this account. The land, it will be noted, was not sold to pay debts of the' J. E. Earle estate, but the half interest devised to Louisa R. Earle under the will was sold by her administrator.
The Constitution provides that the homestead left by a decedent shall be exempt from sale for debts of the decedent, and that the rents and profits thereof shall vest in the widow for life and children during minority. Const. 1874, art. 9, § 3. This provision of the Constitution does not, however, prohibit the original owner of the homestead from dismembering it by grant or devise — at least, so far as his' children are concerned. Whether or not he can do so in so far as it affects the homestead rights of the widow we need not decide, as that question is not involved. The homestead right of children is a transmitted or wholly derivative one, and may be cut off by grant or devise of the parent. There is some conflict, we are aware, in the authorities on this question, but -the previous decisions of this court lead to the conclusion herein expressed.
The Supreme Court of Mississippi held that the provision in the exemption laws for the enjoyment by the widow of exempted property did not interfere with the husband’s right to dispose of the property by will. Turner v. Turner, 30 Miss. 428. The same court in Morton v. McCanless, 68 Miss. 810, said: “The whole object of the exemption laws of 1865 was to preserve the property from creditors, and not to affect the power of the courts to deal with the property as that of the children and heirs of the exemptionist.”
This court in Merrill v. Harris, 65 Ark. 357, quoted with approval the above language, and said: “Such is the view we take of it. The Mississippi law on the subject, while different from ours in some particulars, yet is so far like ours as to render the same principles applicable in all essential particulars.”
In Merrill v. Harris, the question was as to the power of. the probate court to order the sale of the homestead for the benefit of a minor on petition of the guardian. This court held that the language of the Constitution exempting the homestead during minority of the children did not forbid the sale of it under' orders of the probate court for their benefit. Chief Justice Bunn, in the opinion, said: “The Constitution does not, in terms, seek to do more than protect from the grasp of the creditor. There is neither expressly nor by implication a restriction upon the powers of the probate court in respect to this class of the property of minors.”
We think the same principle controls in the present case. The framers of the Constitution manifestly had in mind only the exemption of the homestead from sale for debt either during the lifetime of the owner or after his death during the lifetime of his widow or minority of his children. There is no purpose manifested to restrict the power of alienation, and only by virtue of supplementary legislation is it that any restriction is placed on the right of alienation, and this reached only to the requirement that the wife must join in and acknowledge the execution of a conveyance by the husband of a homestead. Kirby’s Digest, § 3901. It would be engrafting upon the constitutional provision with reference to exempt property something which the framers thereof did not intend, and which the language does not warrant, to hold that it prevented the parent from disposing of the homestead by will. The statutes of this State have ever given unlimited power of alienation by last will and testament except as to marital rights of the spouse; and it requires clear language in subsequent enactments in order to restrict the right. We do not find anything in the Constitution inconsistent with the power of alienation.
The decree of the chancellor as to Stone & Tyler is correct and will be affirmed.
Ruth Earle Nelms v. John F. Rhodes.
Rhodes purchased lands at Swepston’s sale as administrator, and there is an attempt to show collusion between him and Pickett and Brown, but the chancellor found against that contention, and we think that the evidence supports the finding. The decree in favor of Rhodes will therefore be affirmed .
Ruth Earle Nelms v. Edgewood Distilling Company and George P. Diehl.
Ben R. Earle mortgaged his interest in certain tracts of the lands to the Edgewood Distilling Company. The same lands were afterwards sold under execution against, him, and were purchased by Martin and Williford, the sureties on his stay-bond. He also conveyed the lands by quitclaim deed to Martin and Williford. Martin subsequently conveyed his interest to Williford, and Williford in turn conveyed to Diehl, who was agent for Edgewood Distilling Company. The last-mencioned deed contained a special warranty of the grantor against any incumbrances on the land done or suffered by her.
It is shown that the deed from Ben R. Earle to Martin and Williford, though absolute in form, was executed either as security for repayment of the amount which they were required to pay for him in satisfaction of .the stay bond, or under an agreement that the lands should be reconveyed to him on repayment of that amount.. We need not determine whether the deed was intended to be a mortgage or conditional sale, under the doctrine announced by this court in Hays v. Emerson, 75 Ark. 551. We dispose of this branch of the case on other grounds. It is undisputed in the evidence that Diehl and the Edgewood Distilling Company had no actual notice of the secret agreement between Ben R. Earle and Martin and Williford concerning the conveyance of the land, and no facts are shown to have been brought to their attention from which they would be chargeable with notice of that agreement. The price paid by Edgewood Distilling Company, when added to their mortgage debt, to which the land was subject, is not shown to be so grossly inadequate as to put them upon notice of any frailty in the title conveyed. The fact that a deed in the chain of title was only a quitclaim did not, of itself, give notice of defects in the title or secret equities of the grantor. Miller v. Fraley, 23 Ark. 735; Bagley v. Fletcher, 44 Ark. 153; Chapman v. Sims, 53 Miss. 154; Moelle v. Sherwood, 148 U. S. 21; United States v. Cal. & Oregon Land Co., 148 U. S. 31.
The mortgage executed by .Ben R. Earle to the sureties on his bond as administrator and guardian, to the lien of which Ruth Earle Nelms claims the right of subrogation, was not filed for record until after the execution of his deed to Martin and WillL ford. Therefore the title conveyed by the latter takes precedence over the mortgage.
The decree against Edgewood Distilling Company and George P. Diehl'was erroneous, and must be reversed.
Ruth Earle Nelms v. William R. Barksdale.
Louisa R. Earle conveyed a quarter section of the J. E. Earle . lands to Barksdale, and the plaintiff seeks to have this conveyance set aside in so far as it affects her interest in the land.
Learned counsel have not, in their brief, favored us with an assignment of the grounds of their attack upon this conveyance, but we assume that it is because the deed of conveyance does not expressly refer to the powers contained in the will of J. F. Earle, and that the grantor undertook to convey as executrix, and hot as trustee under the will. The grantor, Louisa R. Earle, purports to convey in her individual right and as executrix of the will of J. F. Earle; and it recites that the purchase price is to be used in the purchase of a home for herself and her children. She was not named in the will as' executrix, but the will authorized her to control the property and to sell it for re-investment or to provide a home for herself and children. It is well settled now that a conveyance containing no reference to a power should, when necessary to give full effect to the conveyance, be construed as an execution of the power. Lanigan v. Sweany, 53 Ark. 185; Martindale on Conveyancing, § 135; 1 Sugden on Powers, pp. 247, 367; 4 Kent’s Com. p. 335; Campbell v. Johnson, 65 Mo. 439. The only exception is “where there is an interest and a power existing together in the same person over the same subject, and the act be done without reference to the power, it will be applied to the.interest and not to the power, unless an interest to execute the power may be found.” Martindale on Conveyancing, § 135. This court in Lanigan v. Sweany, supra, even limited this exception by laying down the rule that if such a conveyance “would have some effect if referred to an interest, but would not have full effect without reference to a power, it should have effect by virtue of the power.”
The deed in this instance shows an intention to execute the power, but the grantor made the mistake of describing herself as executrix, and not as trustee. It is manifest, from the language of the deed, that she intended to execute the power contained in the will, and the deed should be so executed.
The decree on this branch of the case should be affirmed.
Ruth Earle Nelms v. W. W. Swepston et al.
The complaint against Swepston and the sureties on his bond as administrator, and C. L. Lewis as guardian and his sureties, involves an investigation of their respective settlement accounts filed in the probate court and the various records, papers and accounts in that court relating to the administration and guardianship.
The parties, before the trial below, entered into the following written agreement, which was filed as a part of the record in the case: .“It is further agreed that the record of the administration of the estate of Louisa R. Earle, by W. W. Sw.epston, as administrator, remaining in the probate court of Crittenden County, including the bonds given, the inventories filed, appraisements, accouncs of sales, settlements, the allow^ anees and classification of claims against, the estate, and all orders of the probate court, and as to all other matters, or any part of such record, may be read in evidence by or on behalf of either party without filing copies in this suit, and that where copies have been filed by either party of said records, or any portion of the same, such copies shall be taken to-be true, subject, however, to the right of either party to produce the original in evidence, or show the copy filed to be incorrect.”
The final decree recites that the cause was heard upon “the agreements of counsel on file and the several records, deed and writings therein mentioned, consisting of'parts of the original records of the probate court of this county * * * and the original tax sale records of this county, which said original probate and tax sale records were brought into open court, and orders and judgments and parts thereof and extracts therefrom read orally in open court without filing copies thereof, under the agreement of counsel above mentioned,” etc. No bill of exceptions appears in the record identifying and bringing upon the record the various records and documents read orally in court and upon which the chancellor based his decree. The clerk had no authority to copy into the transcript records and documents read to the chancellor at the trial, but which had not been made a part of the record in the case either by bill of exceptions or by filing copies. We are, therefore, unable to determine from the transcript whether the decree is right or wrong, as we have not before us the evidence which the chancellor had. We must, until it is shown to the contrary, assume that the decree was warranted by the evidence.
Opinion delivered June 15, 1908.It is therefore ordered that the decree against the widow, administratrix and heirs of W. N. Brown, Jr., deceased, and the Southwestern Improvement Company, to the extent indicated in this opinion, and against the Edgewood Distilling Company and George P. Diehl, be reversed with directions to enter a decree in accordance with this opinion. In all other particulars the decree of the chancery court is affirmed.
Mr. Justice Battle dissents from so much of- the opinion ■and judgment as holds that the will of Josiah E. Earle was valid as to his children without having named them, and also as holds that the devise by Josiah F. Earle of the homestead was valid. He agrees to the opinion on all other questions, and concurs in all of the judgment not affected by the questions stated above.
ON PETITION TO MODIFY JUDGMENT.
McCulloch, J.We are now asked to consider certain questions incidental to the main issues in the case which escaped our attention on the former consideration but which were briefly called to our attention in the argument.
The principal one is that as to the amount chargeable against the estate and heirs of W. N. Brown, Jr., and the Southwestern Improvement Company of the rents and profits of the lands decreed to Mrs. Nelms. The chancery court decreed an undivided half of the lands to her and the rents and profits thereof for five years before the commencement of the suit. We held that she was entitled only to an undivided one-fourth of the lands, and remanded the case with directions to enter a decree for that interest only. This necessarily calls for a change in the decree for rents, reducing it from one-half to one-fourth of the rents of the land.
Shall the decree for rents and profits be confined to a period of- three years and before the commencement of 'the suit ?
The provisions of the statute known as the betterment act (Act March 8, 1883, Kirby’s Dig. secs. 2754-7) restricting the right of recovery to three years’ rent are invoked; and, on the other hand, it is contended that Mrs. Nelms, on account of her minority, is not barred by this statute.
The title of the statute is “An act for the better quieting of titles,” and the sections essential to a determination of the present question read as follows:
“Section i. That if any person, believing himself to be the owner, either in law or equity, under color of title, has peaceably improved, or shall peaceably improve, any land which, upon judicial investigation, shall b,e decided to belong to another, the value of the improvement made as aforesaid and the amount of all taxes which may have been paid on said land by such person and those under whom he claims shall be paid by the successful party to such occupant, or the person under whom, or from whom, •he entered and holds before the court rendering judgment in such proceeding shall cause possession to be delivered to such successful party.
“Sec. 2. That the court or jury trying such cause shall assess the value of such improvements in the same action in which the title to said lands is adjudicated; and on such trial the damages sustained by the owner of the lands from waste and such mesne profits as may be allowed by law shall also be assessed, and if the value of the improvements made by the occupants and the taxes paid as aforesaid shall exceed the amount of said damages and mesne profits combined, the court shall enter an order as a part of the final judgment providing that no writ shall issue for the possession of the lands in favor of the successful party until payment has been made to such occupant of the balance due him for such improvements and the taxes paid; and such amount shall be a lien on the said lands, which may be enforced by equitable proceedings at any time within three years after the date of such judgment.
“Sec 3. That in recoveries against such occupants no account for any mesne profits shall be allowed unless the same shall have accrued within three years next before the commencement of the suit in which they may be claimed.”,
It will be seen that none of the provisions of the statute are applicable except in favor of an occupant such as is described therein, that is to say, a “person believing himself to be the owner, either in law or equity, under color of title.” The question which first engages our attention is whether or not Brown’s occupancy was of the character described in the statute. He was one of the appraisers of the property sold by the administrator and purchased it at the sale. He had knowledge, of course, of the fact which disqualified him from becoming a purchaser and which rendered his purchase voidable. We conclude, however, from the testimony in the case that he was innocent of any actual intention to defraud in the appraisement and purchase, and that the charges in this respect against him were unfounded. He manifestly purchased in good faith, believing that he had the legal and moral right to do so. This court had never before decided that being an appraiser disqualified a person from purchasing at a judicial sale of land. The question was one of grave doubt, and gave us.much difficulty in solving it. We were able to find only one reported case on the question from the courts of the country — the decision referred to in our former opinion.
The statute says that the occupant who, “believing himself to be the owner, either in law or equity, under color of title, has peaceably improved or shall peaceably improve any land,” etc. This means that he must be, in fact, a bona fide occupant, and this court, in a case decided soon after the passage of the statute, quoted with approval the following definition of the term “bona ■ fide occupant” given ■ by Mr. Justice Washington in Green v. Biddle, 8 Wheat. 79: “He is one who not only supposes himself to be the true proprietor of the land, but who is ignorant that his title is questioned by some other person claiming a better right to it.” Fee v. Cowdry, 45 Ark. 410.
This court, in defining the meaning of the words declaring in what cases the statute applied, said: “Good faith, in its moral sense, as contradistinguished from bad faith, and not in the technical sense in which it is applied to conveyance of title, as when we speak of a bona fide purchaser, meaning thereby a purchaser without notice, actual or constructive, is implied in the requirement that he must believe himself the true proprietor. It must be an honest belief and an ignorance that any other person claims a better right to the land.” Beard v. Dansby, 48 Ark. 183.
In Bloom v. Strauss, 70 Ark. 483, the court held that a last will and testament, defective on its face, is color of title, within the meaning of the betterment act, and that a bona fide occupant thereunder could claim the benefit of the statute. Mr. Justice Riddicic, speaking for the court in chat case, said: “Now, though the defect in this will appeared on its face, still its invalidity is not so obvious as must necessarily have been noticed by a person of ordinary information not skilled in the law; and Strauss, while holding under it, was holding under color of title, within the meaning of the betterment statute.”
Chief Justice Cockriuu in delivering the opinion of the court in Shepherd v. Jernigan, 51 Ark. 275, concerning the provision of this statute said: “If, however, the defendant' has improved the land in good faith under the belief that he was the sole owner, he is entitled to pay for his improvements by the terms of the bettermenc act. Constructive notice of the title, such as is implied from the registry of the deed, is not of itself sufficient to preclude an occupant from its benefits.”
The statute contemplates actual good faith in order to invoke its benefits. An occupant cannot, on the one hand, “shut his eyes, and say he believed in good faith that he had title, when he was informed that he did not- have” (White v. Stokes, 67 Ark. 184) ; nor, on the other hand, will constructive notice of the infirmity of his title cut off his assertion of good faith and deny him the benefits of the statute.
We are of the opinion that the facts of this case bring it within the terms of the statute.
The statute has been held to apply to those under, the disability of infancy as well as to adults. Beard v. Dansby, 48 Ark. 183; Shirey v. Clark, 72 Ark. 539; Tobin v. Spann, 85 Ark. 556.
In Tobin v. Spann, supra, being a suit brought to disaffirm a conveyance made during infancy and recover the land conveyed, we held that there could be no recovery of rents which accrued before disaffirmance, but that three years’ rent could, under the betterment statute, be set-off against the claim of the occupant for improvements. The present case is somewhat different, as Mrs. Nelms is entitled to recover rents and profits prior to commencement of her suit.
It is contended that the statute, as far as the restriction upon recovery of rents is concerned, is a statute of limitation, and that it falls within the general statute excepting infants, while laboring under that disability, from the operation of statutes of limitation. Act April 17, 1899, Kirby’s Digest, § 5075.
We are of the opinion, however, that this is not a statute of limitation with which we are now dealing. It is one to adjust the equities between the owners of lands and persons who have occupied the same under color of title, believing themselves to be the owners — bona tide occupants. The Legislature, in the title to the act, declared it to be, “An act for the better quieting of titles.” It does not purport to fix a period of limitations within which actions to recover lands or the rents and profits thereof may be brought, but it provides that one who occupies land in good faith under color of title shall be paid the value of improvements and amount of taxes paid on the lands, less three years’ mesne profits. In other words, that when the occupant holds in good faith under color of title the owner can recover the land and 'mesne profits for three years, and the occupant can recover the value of his improvements and amount of taxes paid. This is the theory upon which the constitutionality of the act was upheld. Fee v. Cowdry, 45 Ark. 410. In the case just cited, the court said: “Upon the principle that the Legislature may interfere with the private rights for the purpose of adjusting ‘the equities of the parties as near as possible according to natural justice,’ the betterment laws of many States have been sustained.” The Legislature could undoubtedly pass a statute of this character containing no exceptions as to infants. “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 landowners, cannot be controverted. But they are within the powers of the Legislature to grant or withhold, and its exercise of the power cannot be restrained or varied by the court to subserve principles of justice and humanity.” Sims v. Cumby, 53 Ark. 418.
The statute applies in the present case, and the chancery court erred in allowing for rents which accrued more than three years before the commencement of the suit.
Taxes paid by the occupant and also the amount of purchase price paid for the land at the administrator’s sale, together with interest thereon, should be credited to the occupant. But, in-; asmuch as the right of the occupant to have credit for said purchase price results from the fact that the payment contributed to the assets of the estate and is .not covered by or dependent upon the terms of the betterment act, mesne profits for the full period of occupancy, without restriction as to him, may be set-off against the purchaser’s claim for reimbursement. This, upon the principle that where the occupant has been reimbursed out of the profits of the land he can not make further claim for the same payment.
Mrs. Nelms obtained a substantial recovery by the suit, and was entitled to decree for costs in the court below. We will not disturb the adjustment of cost made by the chancellor between her and the Brown interest, as it is not shown to be an unjust distribution of the cost.
The former judgment of this court having been set aside for the purpose of considering the petition to modify the judgment^ the judgment heretofore rendered will now be re-entered, but with further directions to render a decree concerning improvements; taxes, etc., and rents in accordance with this opinion.