"{\"id\": \"1609164\", \"name\": \"Harvey v. Ledbetter\", \"name_abbreviation\": \"Harvey v. Ledbetter\", \"decision_date\": \"1951-06-04\", \"docket_number\": \"4-9457\", \"first_page\": \"27\", \"last_page\": \"35\", \"citations\": \"219 Ark. 27\", \"volume\": \"219\", \"reporter\": \"Arkansas Reports\", \"court\": \"Arkansas Supreme Court\", \"jurisdiction\": \"Arkansas\", \"last_updated\": \"2021-08-11T00:29:21.630692+00:00\", \"provenance\": \"CAP\", \"judges\": \"\", \"parties\": \"Harvey v. Ledbetter.\", \"head_matter\": \"Harvey v. Ledbetter.\\n4-9457\\n240 S. W. 2d 18\\nOpinion delivered June 4, 1951.\\nRehearing denied June 25, 1951.\\nMoore, Burrow, Chowning & Mitchell, for appellant.\\nCarl Langston and Philip DeSalvo, for appellee.\", \"word_count\": \"2314\", \"char_count\": \"13088\", \"text\": \"Ed. F. McFaddin, Justice.\\nThis is a suit filed on behalf of the appellee, Clifford Paul Ledbetter, a minor, seeking, inter alia, to redeem from tax sale a tract of 2% acres, hereinafter called \\\"the property.\\\" From a decree of the Chancery Court allowing the minor to redeem, appellants bring this appeal in which they claim, inter alia, that the minor had no title on which to base a redemption.\\nIn 1925 the Twin City Bank conveyed the property to C. W. Letbetter and Flora B. Letbetter, his wife. In December, 1932, C. W. Letbetter- and Flora B. Letbetter executed, acknowledged and delivered a deed of the property to their son, J. Clifford Ledbetter. Appellants claim that J. Clifford Ledbetter and Lois Ledbetter, his wife, contemporaneously executed and delivered an undated and unacknowledged deed of reconveyance of the same property to C. W. Letbetter and Flora B. Letbetter, his wife. Appellees deny the execution, as well as the delivery, of the said deed of reconveyance; and\\u2014as we see it\\u2014 the decision in this case turns on the fact question, whether such deed of reconveyance was actually executed and delivered.\\nJ. Clifford Ledbetter died intestate in 1935, survived by his wife, Lois Ledbetter, and one son, Clifford Paul Ledbetter. The said widow and minor are the appellees. The property forfeited to the State for nonpayment of 1938 taxes; and the tax title is now held by the appellants, Y. T. Harvey and Kichard H. Burleson. Mrs. Plora B. Letbetter died in 1948; and thereafter her husband, C. W. Letbetter (also one of the appellants), conveyed all his interest in the property to V. T. Harvey.\\nThe appellees' theory of the case is: (a) that J. Clifford Ledbetter was the owner of the property at the time of his death in 1935; (b) that the property forfeited for taxes in 1938; and (c) that the minor, Clifford Paul Led-better, has a right, under \\u00a7 84-1201, Ark. Stats., to redeem from the tax sale, even if the forfeiture for taxes was valid. The appellants' theory is: (a) that J. Clifford Ledbetter and wife executed and delivered the deed of reconveyance to C. W. Letbetter and Flora B. Letbetter; (b) that J. Clifford Ledbetter thereby conveyed all interest in the property, and his minor son, Clifford Paul Led-better, has no title on which to base the redemption from the tax sale ; (c) that C. W. Letbetter, as surviving spouse and owner of the estate of entirety, conveyed the property to the appellant, Harvey, who also has the tax title; and (d) that appellees have no interest in the property.\\nThe foregoing are the main and salient facts. There are other matters which cloud the issues. One is the void appointment by the Pulaski Probate Court of Mrs. Flora B. Letbetter, as administratrix of the estate of J. Clifford Ledbetter, and her attempted private sale of the property to V. T. Harvey. This void appointment and private sale are explained by the attorney who handled the matter and he is not an attorney of record in this Court. The attorney was not fully informed as to the facts. Another matter is the testimony of Mrs'. Lois Ledbetter and one of her relatives, that J. Clifford Ledbetter paid $2,500 in cash to his parents for the deed to the property. There is also the testimony of Mrs. Lois Ledbetter that her signature on the deed of reconveyance is a forgery. This testimony will be discussed hereinafter.\\nIn addition to insisting that there was execution and delivery of the said deed of reconveyance, the appellants have also argued the effect of Act 423 of 1941 on \\u00a7 84-1201, Ark. Stats.: that is to say, (a) appellants urge that the minor, Clifford Paul Ledbetter, cannot redeem from the tax sale because the tax sale proceedings were confirmed by the Chancery Court under \\u00a7 84-1315, el seq., Ark. Stats., in 1947; and (b) the appellants contend that such confirmation decree cut off the minor's right to redeem. In making these contentions, appellants necessarily contend that Act 423 of 1941\\u2014which amended \\u00a7 8719, Pope's Digest\\u2014had the effect of impliedly cancelling the minor's right to redeem, as allowed by \\u00a7 84-1201, Ark. Stats. Mr. Justice Holt agrees with the appellants in the contentions stated in this paragraph; and for those reasons only, he votes to reverse the Chancery decree.\\nWe of the majority hold that a minor's right to redeem under \\u00a7 84-1201, Ark. Stats., was not cut off by said Act 423 of 1941; but we have reached the conclusion that the deed of reconveyance to C. W. Letbetter and Flora B. Letbetter was actually signed by J. Clifford Ledbetter and Lois Ledbetter and was actually delivered to the grantees, C. W. and Flora B. Letbetter; and that such execution and delivery of the deed of reconveyance left the minor appellee no title with which to maintain this suit. For these reasons we hold that the Chancery decree should be reversed.\\nHere are some of the reasons impelling the conclusions reached:\\n(1)\\u2014In 1932 J. Clifford Ledbetter lived in Little Rock and was engaged in the business of making bonds for persons arrested and charged with crimes. He had no real estate in his own name, and he persuaded his mother and father to deed to him the property here in dispute, in order that he could be shown as an owner of real property in Pulaski County. Carlos Letbetter, a brother of J. Clifford Ledbetter, and a son of C. W. and Flora B. Letbetter, testified by deposition:\\n' ' Q. Now, did your mother and father, do you know, convey this property to your brother, J. Clifford?\\n\\\"A. Yes, I was present the day my brother made her a proposition of deeding the property to him so he could make additional bonds, and he in turn made a deed back to mother, and that this was for their protection, he said they could record the deed at any time.\\n\\\"Q. Did you see the deed in your mother's possession?\\n\\u00a3