Jacobs v. Knox, 204 Ark. 969, 166 S.W.2d 7 (1942)

Nov. 30, 1942 · Arkansas Supreme Court · 4-6872
204 Ark. 969, 166 S.W.2d 7

Jacobs v. Knox

4-6872

166 S. W. 2d 7

Opinion delivered November 30, 1942.

Wade Kitchens, for appellant.

Jaclc Machen, for appellee.

*970Griffin Smith, O. J.

May 20, 1937, there was foreclosure of a mortgage executed in 1919 by Brooks Jacobs and Ms wife, Lilian.1 The decree recites that default occurred October 1, 1933, and thereafter only $21.41 was paid, leaving a balance of $1,838.22. It was also contended that taxes were not paid after 1932, and that the land bank had expended $192.53 to protect its interests. Sale June 28, 1937, was to John G. Knox.2

There is testimony that Knox, after bidding the property in for $2,530 on Saturday, told the clerk of the chancery court he had the money and was ready to close the transaction. The clerk suggested that he return.

When Knox endeavored the following Monday to consummate his bid, he was met by a federal conciliator’s intervention, filed by O. M. Martin, attorney for the Jacobs heirs. The chancery court thereupon ordered all proceedings stayed.3 While jurisdiction of the state court was in suspense, pine timber on the 252 acres included in the mortgage was sold for $1,000, the amount being applied on the land bank’s debt.

May 27, 1941, without notice to Knox, the commissioner’s sale of 1937 was set aside. Knox intervened July 5, 1941, in consequence of which chancery court vacated its decree of May 27.

Bankruptcy proceedings were dismissed November 10, 1941, whereupon certified copy of the federal court order was filed in chancery court. Knox immediately left with the clerk the personal check of a third party. The Clerk testified he considered the check an equiva*971lent of money, in view of the known responsibility and' integrity of its maker, Joe K. Mahony.

November 29, 1941, the court heard argument on the question of confirming of vacating the sale of 1937. The decree recites that Knox was purchaser at a reasonable price; that no other person made a substantial bid, and found that the deed should be approved.

This appeal is from the order of confirmation.4

In dismissing the intervention filed with the conciliator, the federal court was of opinion that the administrator of the estate of Brooks Jacobs was not authorized under the Frazier-Lemke Act, or any other statute, to place the Jacobs estate in bankruptcy.

There was no appeal from the holding that the entire proceeding, which resulted in delaying confirmation of the sale more than four years, was illegal (perhaps ‘ ‘ unlegal ’ ’ would be a better word) for want of jurisdiction.

*972The result is that a valid hid was made by Knox in 1937. He was willing to pay, but could not do so because the clerk'thought Martin’s petition on behalf of the heirs superseded state processes, and in consequence confirmation was defeated, and possession was withheld from the purchaser because of what was later found to be a mistaken belief upon the part of heirs that certain legal rights were available to them.

The sale was confirmed by a chancellor who has since died. His record on the bench is an enviable one. He was trusted, respected, beloved, honored — even revered — by those who knew him. .Much testimony appears- to have been given orally rather than by depositions. The Chancellor was familiar with transactions from initial steps in 1937 until the decree of confirmation was rendered in 1941. He had heard hundreds of cases involving land and mineral values in Columbia county. Based upon a record which does not show that the Jacobs tract sold for a sum inadequate in 1937, Judge Walker Smith thought substantial justice would be done by permitting the Knox bid to stand.

The question is,' Did the court abuse its discretion1? Our answer is that it did not. The transcript does not contain all of the record incident to Federal Land Bank’s foreclosure procedure. According to the decree, minor heirs were represented by a guardian ad litem, while defense was made for them by an attorney ad litem. Heirs sui juris did not defend. It must be presumed, therefore, that the defense made for minors was because of legal necessity, the logical inference being that none of the defendants thought there was substantial equity in the property.

In Martin v. Kelley et al., 190 Ark. 863, 81 S. W. 2d 933, it was held that in considering exceptions to confirmation in circumstances somewhat similar to those presented by the instant case, the pertinent inquiry should be whether, if the property should be resold within a reasonable time, it would bring a price substantially higher than the amount offered at the former sale; or, Is there *973a prospective bidder who at resale will make a substantially higher offer?

While counsel for appellants stated, and no doubt honestly believed, that a better bid could be obtained, there is no testimony to this effect. But even if such testimony had been offered we would be unwilling to say the chancellor abused his discretion. Certainly there is no showing that the price proffered in 1937 was not reasonable. Following that offer the defendants for fifty-three months hindered Knox in his bid. If it be argued that they had a right to take advantage of the FrazierLemke Act, answer is that the federal court held the Act gave them no such right.

Affirmed.