The appellees instituted this action against the appellants in the Independence Chancery Court on the 8th day of July, 1919. They alleged that appellee, Ralph A. Allen, was the owner of certain tracts of land in Independence County, subject to the dower of his mother; that the other appellees were his tenants. The lands, including the land in controversy, are described in the complaint. The appellees deraigned title through mesne conveyances from the United States Government. Appellees alleged that appellants are committing numerous trespasses by cutting timber so near the river as to cause the land to wash; that appellants are insolvent, and, unless restrained, will cause appellees irreparable injury. The appellants answered denying all the allegations of the complaint and set up title in themselves to the land. They deraigned title through one John ITenry Engles. They alleged that the lands were forfeited for the nonpayment of taxes for the year 1866, and that Engles purchased the same at a sale for such taxes on the 2i3th of December, 1885; that Engles went into possession for two years before the commencement of the action, and that he and his successors in title for more than seven years had paid the taxes on the tract in controversy.
The appellees filed a reply in which they denied that there was any tract of land known to the public survey as that described in appellants’ answer and alleged that the tract of land in controversy was not subject to taxation at the time the same was forfeited, being swamp and overflow land belonging to the State. They alleged that the sale for taxes, under which appellants claimed, was null and void for various reasons unnecessary, in the view we have of the case, to set forth.
On the issue of title by adverse possession to the land in controversy, H. Underdown, a witness for the appellants, testified substantially as follows: • That he trapped on the lands in the years 1886 and 1887, and that Engles claimed the land and called witness’ attention to some yearlings he had thereon; that it was fenced with two and three strands of barbed wire attached to posts where the trees were too far apart. During this time he did not see the Allens on the land.
Witness Flynn testified that he saw Engles making a survey of the land in December, 1885, and later saw him fencing the land with barbed wire in February, 1886; that Engles had cattle on .the land in the years 1886-1887, and 1888; that Andy Allen offered him $10' an acre and board to clear up this land. Allen told witness that he didn’t own it — that Engles had bought it from the State. He stated that he wanted to get possession of the land and was trying to induce witness and another man to enter thereon, saying that “he had dollars where Engles had cents.” The first proposition by .Allen to witness was made in 1887 and repeated in 1888. Witness knew of J. H. Engles working on the land and having stock there in the years 1886 and 1887.
Another witness testified that he went with Engles to the land in controversy in 1888 or 18891. At that time Engles had several head of cattle and called them up and gave them salt. In 1901 witness was assisting Robert Engles, the guardian of J. H. Engles, in a survey of the land. He was guided most of the way in running the line by an old wire fence which had been partly destroyed by overflow. After that survey he was again on the land and found it enclosed by a fence.
Another witness testified that in 1886 he heard a conversation between Andy Allen and J. H. Engles in which Allen stated that he didn’t see why Engles did not give him (Allen) the same chance at the land that he did to one Egner, to whom Engles had sold the land, as witness thought. Engles had surveyed the land, as witness understood, and had put red paint on the trees where they had blazed it out, and they started to fence it, but witness couldn’t say that they ever finished it. Witness frequently saw Engles on the land, but never knew of any of the Allens cultivating it. No fence was placed around it by any of the Allens when he was there. In the year 1886 Andy Allen said that he knew of a small tract of government land lying near the land in controversy and said he guessed Engles would get it, so he (Allen) had some parties to take it up.
Another witness stated that he became acquainted with the land in the fall of 1892, and at that time it had a barbed wire fence around it on three sides; that he saw Engles repairing the fence which appeared to have been built two or three years. Lee Allen was helping Engles to repair the fence; that Engles sold a cow and calf out of the pasture on the land in controversy in 1892.
Mrs. Engles, the widow of J. H. Engles, testified that she saw the tract in controversy several times after 1902 and 1903; that there was a fence around it. She didn’t know who put up the fence, but she furnished the wire. She cultivated the land in 1913 and 1914. There was a fence around it the first year she cultivated it. Prom 1904 until 1913 she went over the land every few weeks to see that no one was trespassing on it. She knew that the Allens had been clearing the land all around it for three years, but they had never touched this land.
The testimony in behalf of the appellees was substantially as follows: Witness Sullivan testified that he had known the land since 1889; that he was in partnership with Lee Allen in the stock business “and for several years had used the land in controversy as a cane pasture, and he was over it more or less all the time. Andy Allen had a small portion of it in cultivation’ thirty-two or thirty-three years ago. There was a fence which separated the cleared land from the pasture. The Allens had held continuous possession by having it fenced as stated and by using it as a pasture from 1889 until the present time. No one else was ever in possession adverse to the Allens until 1904, when Pete Engles and some parties went in there and chopped off two or three acres. Witness informed the attorney of the Allens, and he instructed witness to tell them to get off, and they did so. Witness had farmed there all the time and never knew of J. H. Engles -having any stock in the cane pasture. There was no -fence on the east line of the tract in controversy, and none on the south line of the land as late as 1906.
J. F. Shaver testified that he held the lands in controversy under a lease from the Allens and was in possession when the appellants put the fence around it in February, 1919. He had cleared six acres. Appellants cleared more and chopped too close to the river and made it liable to wash. Witness had been down there seven years. During that time the lands described in the complaint, including that in controversy, had been under one enclosure, and it was called the cane pasture. No one had attempted to take possession of the land hostile to the Allens till Crawford came there. Witness had no occasion to go out into the cane pasture in the summer, but there was no cleared land there. In 1904 there was a suit brought by the Engles to recover the land in controversy, which the Allens won. When witness first knew of the land it was in the possession of the Allens. The Engles made one or two efforts to squat and cut timber, but were always ousted.
Davis testified that he had the land in controversy leased from the Allens when the appellants entered upon it. Witness had been on the farm for the past eighteen years. The Allens had been in possession of the- tract in controversy for twenty years, and witness had never heard of any one claiming it except at the time of the suit in 1904. Engles did not fence it then, but cut off a little cane and piled it up. The land in controversy had been fenced away from the cultivated land for twenty years. The Allens used it for pasture, and Joe Cain cut some timber from it for the Allens, as witness understood. Some of the land in controversy was the old slough bed and river bed, which had filled in. The thirty-nine-acre tract is in cultivation. Witness cleared part of it. Hall did the first clearing on it, and at that time the fence went aronnd the high ground bank over to the river. It did not cross the thirty-nine acre tract.
It was admitted by the appellants that the appellees held a regular chain of record title from the government to the lands as described in the complaint, and under those descriptions had paid the taxes on the same to June 3, 1920, the date of the rendition of the decree. It was also admitted that the appellants held a chain of record title through John Engles to the lands described in their answer, who purchased the same at a sale for the taxes of the year 1868.
The court, among other things, found “that the plaintiffs were in possession of the lands claimed by the defendants when the defendants took possession thereof; that the defendants entered upon said lands unlawfully, and that they were committing numerous trespasses thereon; that they were insolvent, each of them, and that they were clearing up a portion of the land so close to the river that it was liable to cause great and.irreparable damage by the washing away of the soil, not only to the lands involved in this suit, but to other lands situated adjacent thereto.” The court declared the law to be “that the plaintiffs, Ralph A. Alíen and Maggie Hensley, are the owners of the lands of which the defendants took possession, and that they are entitled to a decree as prayed for in their complaint.” The court entered a decree to that effect, from which is this appeal.
The allegations of the complaint were sufficient to give the chancery court jurisdiction. Having acquired jurisdiction, the court did not err in retaining the same and in determining the issue of title as to the lands in controversy. The appellants admitted that the appellees and their predecessors in title had record title from the government to the lands in controversy, but they contend that they acquired the title by two years’ adverse possession of the lands under tax deed from the State. In the view we have of the evidence, it is wholly unnecessary to decide whether or not the tax deed, under which, appellants claimed, was a color of title. For, even if this be conceded, we can not say that the appellants had acquired title by adverse possession. On the contrary, we are convinced that a clear preponderance of the evidence shows that such is not the case. The evidence on this issue is in sharp conflict, and it could serve no useful purpose and would unduly extend this opinion to argue the same.
Our conclusion is that the preponderance of the evidence shows that the appellees had been in actual, open, continuous, exclusive and adverse possession of the tract of land in controversy for many years, holding the same under fence with other pasture lands, and were using same as a pasture, cutting timber and exercising other acts of ownership over it during all the time that the appellants were attempting to acquire possession; that the efforts of the appellants to acquire possession of the property were intermittent and fitful. These effort's were not sufficient to show such continuous and notorious occupation of, and dominion over, -the land as to indicate to the true owner an unequivocal intention on the part of appellants to own and exclusively appropiate the lands to their own use. See Brown v. Bocquin, 57 Ark. 97; John Henry Shoe Co. v. Williamson, 64 Ark. 100; Driver v. Martin, 68 Ark. 551; Boynton v. Ashabranner, 75 Ark. 415; Earle Improvement Co. v. Chatfield, 81 Ark. 296.
The decree is correct, and it is therefore affirmed. .