Ball v. Martin

63 So. 2d 833, 217 Miss. 221, 27 Adv. S. 10, 1953 Miss. LEXIS 425
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 13, 1953
DocketNo. 38688
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 63 So. 2d 833 (Ball v. Martin) 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
Ball v. Martin, 63 So. 2d 833, 217 Miss. 221, 27 Adv. S. 10, 1953 Miss. LEXIS 425 (Mich. 1953).

Opinion

Lee, J.

Ethel C. Martin and others, as complainants, sought by their bill of complaint to be declared the true owners of a parcel of land therein described, and to have can-celled any and all claims thereto by E. A. Ball and others, who were made defendants. By their answer, the de[225]*225fendants asserted that they had obtained title to the land in question by adverse possession. At the conclusion of the hearing, the prayer of the hill was granted, and, from the decree entered, the defendants appeal.

The land in controversy consists of 20 acres, described as the E% of NE% of SW% of Section 19, Township 2 N, Range 14 E. The complainants are the successors in title to Southern Pine Company, a corporation, and are the owners of the record title.

To sustain their claim of title by adverse possession, the defendants offered proof to' the following effect: The residence of E. A. Ball, where he has lived with his family for many years, is situated in the NE% of the above described section on the west side of; and adjacent to, a public road running approximately north and south. In the late twenties or early thirties, more than 10 years before the institution of this suit, Ball erected a fence along and parallel with the public road. At the north end thereof, he built a fence in a westerly direction to the section line between sections 13 and 18, and ran it thence south to the right-of-way of the Gulf, Mobile & Ohio Railroad, where he tied it in with the railroad fence. Prom the south end of the fence along the public road, he erected another fence in a westerly direction and in a circuitous route and also tied it in with the railroad fence. Thus by erecting fences on three sides and using the railroad fence, he enclosed a large area, approximating several hundred acres. The 20 acres here in question was not separately fenced as such, but was embraced within the large enclosure. Ball pastured his cattle in the enclosure and permitted others to do so, and the cattle, of course, grazed on the 20 acres. He furnished the lumber and paid several workers to build a small house on the 20 acres, and it was occupied by his tenants, and was used for other purposes. He removed paper wood, oak timber for fire wood, sold pine stumps, and operated several charcoal kilns thereon. He built [226]*226and maintained a road running from Ms home in a westerly direction across tMs land to Saxon’s Spur on the railroad. At first there were gates at each end, but later, he substituted cattle gaps. In 1943 and subsequently, he executed mineral leases on this land. It was assessed to him and he paid the taxes thereon for the last year or two before the institution of this suit on September 10, 1948. Other minor acts of possession could also be enumerated, but it is deemed to be unnecessary.

Suffice it to say, the proof was ample to show that Ball exercised a number of acts of possession over this land for more than ten years before the filing of the suit.

To offset the effect of the foregoing acts of possession, and to show that Ball, in doing so, was not asserting a hostile and adverse claim against the owner and was not claiming to be the owner himself for that time, the complainants introduced proof as to his acts, conduct, declarations and statements as follows:

This land was acquired by Southern Pine Company in 1889, and it, and other lands, were assessed to that corporation in 1933. The taxes were not paid, and “30 A. NE of SW” of Section 19 was sold to the State. On July 28, 1939, at a time when the 20 acres in question had already been in the enclosure for a considerable period of time, Ball applied, under oath, to the Land Commissioner to purchase 30 acres in NE14 of SW1^ & SE!4 of SW14, Section 19, Township 2, Range 14 in the County of Marion. He gave the names of Mike Jones, Harry Owens, Arlee Johnson and E. A. Ball, as owners of land on the west, south, north and east, respectively. He gave Southern Pine Company as the owner, and the one to whom it was assessed, at the time of sale. To the inquiry under special information, “interest of applicant in land (owner, mortgagee, etc.) ” his answer was “None”. Thereafter on September 16, 1940, the patent [227]*227was issued. No doubt Ball, at the time, thought he was getting a parcel of land which embraced the 20 acres; but later, in another proceeding, the chancery court, by decree of date of June 30, 1945, held that the description was insufficient and cancelled the tax sale.

On August 8, 1938, Ball applied to the State for a patent to the W% of of the same section, giving, under oath, Southern Pine Company as owner and the one to whom it was assessed at the time of the sale to the State. Most of this land had been within the enclosure for many years. On June 7,1943, he applied to the State for patents to the NW% of NEy4 and the NW% of W4 of the same section, giving, under oath, Southern Pine Company as owner and the one to whom it was assessed at the time of the tax sale, and stating that his interest therein was “None”'. Most of this land had'been within the enclosure for a number of years. On July 6, 1944, he filed a disclaimer in the office of the Chancery Clerk of Marion County, in which he stated that H. L. Rankin, not he, owned the 15 acres therein described. A part of this acreage had been within the enclosure for a number of years.

Lee B. Agnew testified, in effect, that on July 15, 1948, while he was investigating the title, Ball and his son, Otis, went with him in his car to this land; that he went upon the land and pointed it out as the property that he was interested in; that Ball then told him that this land had belonged to a negro by the name of Jake Johnson; that Jake had cut the timber and sold it, and had burned charcoal off of it; that Jake had given Joe Skelvin permission to build the little house, and that he, Ball, had furnished the materials that went into it; and that he, Ball, had been claiming the land since it was conveyed to him, after the death of Jake Johnson, by Arlea Johnson. Otis Ball admitted that he and his father went with Agnew near this land but claimed that they stopped at the house where Jake had lived. He denied [228]*228that his father made the foregoing statement, and denied that the 20 acres was mentioned. The deed from Arlee Johnson to E. A. Ball, dated December 2,1939, conveyed the N% of NE% of SW% and other lands in the section, and manifestly embraced a part of this 20 acres; bnt a subsequent deed, with the same grantor and grantee, dated December 5, 1941, did not embrace any part of it.

In consequence of the proof as to Ball’s acts, conduct, declarations and statements subsequent to the enclosure of the area under fence and his exercising other pos-sessory acts thereover, the question arose as to his purpose and intention in so doing, that is, was he, in so doing, asserting a hostile and adverse claim against the real owner and claiming to be the owner himself for that time, or was his possession permissive or taken merely as a matter of convenience to him. Obviously he knew better than any other person what he purposed and intended. No one attempted to explain his declarations, under oath, of no interest in lands which he sought to patent, and which lands were wholly or partly within his enclosure. It seems unlikely that anyone else could have reconciled the discrepancies between those declarations and a claim of adverse possession. He did not testify as to those matters, nor did he deny the import of Agnew’s testimony.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 So. 2d 833, 217 Miss. 221, 27 Adv. S. 10, 1953 Miss. LEXIS 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ball-v-martin-miss-1953.