American Oil Co. v. Interstate Wholesale Grocers, Inc.

104 So. 70, 138 Miss. 801, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 98
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 6, 1925
DocketNo. 24670.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 104 So. 70 (American Oil Co. v. Interstate Wholesale Grocers, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Oil Co. v. Interstate Wholesale Grocers, Inc., 104 So. 70, 138 Miss. 801, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 98 (Mich. 1925).

Opinion

Ethridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Interstate Wholesale Grocers, Inc., filed a bill in the chancery court of Marion county seeking, to cancel a lease made by the board of supervisors to the defendants, the American Oil Company et al., and set out in said bill that the complainant is a corporation, under the laws of Louisiana, authorized to do business in Missis *816 sippi, and that it is engaged in the wholesale grocery business in the city of Columbia,; that the appellant the American Old Company is a corporation under the laws of Mississippi; that the defendant Hubbard is an adult resident citizen of Marion county; that defendant Robertson is also an adult resident citizen of Marion county; that the defendants Broom, Newsom, Daniels, Forbes, and Simmons are the duly elected, qualified, sworn, and acting members of the board of supervisors of Marion county, setting up the districts each member of the board represented.

It is further alleged that Marion county is the owner in its sovereign capacity, and for the use and benefit of the public, and especially of the resident citizens, inhabitants, and taxpayers of said county, of that certain plot or tract of land situated in the city of Columbia in said connty and and state known as “Courthouse square;” that said courthouse square is three hundred and forty feet north and south, and three hundred and thirty feet east and west, and is bounded on the north by Meek alley, on the east by Honey alley, on the south by Bone alley, and on the west by Beef alley; that said land was conveyed to the county on May 22, 1821. The bill further alleges that said courthouse square had been set aside, dedicated, owned, and used as the courthouse square for more' than one hundred years, an'd that during that period of time a courthouse and jail had been built thereon, and that said buildings had been thereon, and especially the courthouse building, for more than one hundred years.

It is further alleged that the courthouse square is not actually covered by the courthouse and jail buildings, and has been used during all these years as a public commons, where horses have been hitched by people coming to said town of Columbia on public business, and where people have been wont to gather for various and sundry public purposes, and where of recent years automobiles have been parked, and that said square has been used for *817 many other purposes, useful and beneficial to the general public, and that no part of said courthouse square has ever been set aside or dedicated by law or used for any private use or benefit, or for the private use or benefit of any individual or association of persons.

The bill then alleges that on the 5th day of September, 1923, and without authority of law, the board of supervisors of said county did attempt to lease for a period of twenty-five years to said Robertson that certain strip of land in the city of Columbia, Miss.,1 and east of the courthouse proper and west of Honey alley, and south of the traveled way from said Main street to Broad street, and south of Broad street, and being more particularly described as: Commencing1; at a point on the east margin of Honey alley one hundred and twenty feet north of Bone alley, the same being’ the point where the south margin of Broad street intersects the east margin of Honey alley, thence running west thirty feet, or to the west margin of Honey alley, the place of beginning, thence west forty feet, thence south sixty feet, thence east forty feet, thence north along said west margin of Hone}7- alley sixty feet to place of beginning; that on said date said board of supervisors pretended to pass or adopt an order or resolution authorizing and directing T. S. Lewis, the then acting president of said board, to execute a lease to the said premises on behalf of the board of supervisors, being a part of said courthouse square, for a period of twenty-five years to said Robertson, at and for the sum of five dollars per month, a copy of which order is made an exhibit to the bill.

It is then alleged that the board of supervisors, in pursuance of the said order, attempted to execute a lease for and on behalf of said Marion county to that part of the said courthouse square already described above to said Robertson, and that said Robertson attempted to convey a two-thirds interest in and to his pretended rights to the defendant Hubbard, and that said Robertson and Hubbard attempted to convey their pretended *818 rights in and to said lease to the defendant the American Oil Company; all of which instruments of conveyance being made exhibits to the bill. It is then alleged that said order and pretended lease are absolutely null and void because the board of supervisors did not have power to make a lease to the said property; that said lease was not made to the highest bidder, etc.

The bill then alleged that complainant was the owner of a certain lot of ground described in the bill which faces the courthouse square; that on said lot complainant has a large frame building, in which it conducts a grocery and grain business; that complainant is a large taxpayer of the county, and charges on information and belied that the American Oil Company contemplated immediately or in the near future the erection of a gasoline filling station on said premises, where it proposes to deal in gasoline, oil, etc., and other inflammable materials; and that, if the American Oil Company is permitted to erect the same, it will cause great financial injury to the complainant. It is further alleged that the erection of any kind of a building upon the described premises will increase complainant’s insurance rates and fire hazard, and that, if said American Oil Company is not enjoined from so doing, and if said pretended lease is not canceled and said property restored to Marion .county as a part of the courthouse square, unincumbered by such lease, complainant will suffer great and irreparable damage and injury. The bill then set forth that the petitioner had requested the board of supervisors for authority to bring suit on behalf of the county to cancel said lease, which authority the board of supervisors refused to give.

The defendant the American Oil Company answered the bill, and admitted the alleg'atiQns as to its lease and purpose to erect a building, but asserted the validity of said lease, and denied that' complainant would be injured or that its hazard or insurance rate would be increased, and challenges the power of the complainant to *819 substitute its judgment for that of the board of supervisors, and alleges that the order of the board of supervisors conclusively adjudicates the fact, and avers that said plot of ground so leased was not then being used for any public purpose, and avers that the board of supervisors of Marion county is authorized and permitted by law, in their discretion, to lease any lands belonging to said county, when and for the time the same may not be required or needed by said county for any public or governmental purpose, and denies the allegation of the inadequacy of the consideration of the lease, and denies that the bids were not properly let in accordance with law, etc. The board of supervisors passed an order refusing to recognize said suit, and paid no attention to it.

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Bluebook (online)
104 So. 70, 138 Miss. 801, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-oil-co-v-interstate-wholesale-grocers-inc-miss-1925.