Beard v. McLain

78 So. 184, 117 Miss. 316
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 78 So. 184 (Beard v. McLain) 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
Beard v. McLain, 78 So. 184, 117 Miss. 316 (Mich. 1918).

Opinions

SteveNS, J.,

delivered the opinion of the conrt.

Appellee, H. M. McLain, hy his father and nest friend, instituted this suit in equity against appellant, to cancel a certain deed executed hy complainant to defendant for eighty acres of land, upon the alleged claim that the complainant, at the time of the execution of said deed, was insane and incapable, therefore, of making the deed. The original bill was filed in July, 1915. A general demurrer was interposed hy the defendant, and the court, at a regular term, on November 15, 1915, sustained the demurrer and granted the complainant twenty days within which to file an amended bill. An amended bill was subsequently filed by the complainant, but not within the time allowed by the court, and, at a special term of the court convened in June, 1916, the defendant moved the court to strike the amended bill from the files and to dismiss the complainant’s suit because the amended bill was filed out of time, without leave of the court. This motion was sustained by the chancellor, and a decree was entered June 7, 1916, dismissing the suit. The decree of June 7th, among other things, recites that the motion of the defendant “be and the same is hereby sustained and said bill and cause is dismissed,” and, further, that the complainant “pay all costs of this proceeding. ’ ’ At another term of the court, designated by counsel for appellee as an “adjourned term,” convened for the Second district of Jones county, August 16, 1916, the complainant moved the court to vacate or set aside the decree rendered on June 7, 1916, dismissing this cause, and to reinstate the case and grant the defendant time in which to answer the amended bill. This motion was sustained, and a decree ren-ered Agust 18, 1916, undertaking to set aside the decree rendered at the June term, dismissing the suit, and granting the defendant until the October term of the court in which to answer the bill. Thereafter the bill [318]*318was answered, and the cause submitted for trial upon the amended bill, answer, and cross-bill, and proof ; and on January 6, 1917, final decree was rendered, granting the complainant the relief prayed for. From this decree,, appellant, as defendant in the court below, prosecutes this appeal.

In the presentation of tbe case on appeal, appellant contends, among other things, that the court erred in rendering the decree of August 18, 1916, undertaking to set aside the decree rendered at the June term, 1916, dismissing the suit and reinstating the cause; that the court was without jurisdiction to render any decree at the August term. There are other points raised in reference to the merits of the case; but, inasmuch as- a decision of - the case turns upon the jurisdictional question mentioned, it is unnecessary to give a statement of the facts or to deal with the merits of the case. The jurisdictional question lies at the very threshold of this case, and our view of this question precludes any analysis of the facts or the real merits of complainant’s cause. In order fully to understand the point argued,, we here set out- the orders of the court pertinent to the main inquiry. The order of the court calling a special term for the Second district of Jones county is as-follows:

“To the Attorneys, Litigants, Witnesses, and All Other Parties Interested: You are hereby notified that the April term of the chancery court for the Second district of Jones county, said state, is pretermitted, and a special term of said court is called for Wednesday the 7th day of' June, 1916, and will continue during the-remainder of that week. Ordered and decreed at Hickory on this 12th day of April, 1916.
“G-. C. TaNN, Chancellor.”

The order adjourning the special June term is as. follows:

[319]*319“Ordered that court adjourn until second Monday in August, A. D. 1916.
“G. C. -TaNN, Chancellor.”

The minutes of the August term have the following' caption :■

“Be it remembered that a special term of the chan.cery court of the Second district in said state, was begun and held in the city of Laurel, Mississippi, on the 16th day of August, A. I). 1916, same being the time and place designated by law for the holding of said court . . . When the following proceedings were had and done.”

Did the chancellor retain control and jurisdiction over the minutes and orders of court rendered at the special June, 1916, term of court, to the extent of authorizing him to set aside, at the August meeting of the court, a decree theretofore rendered at the June term, dismissing this cause 1 This question, thus sharply and directly presented, must be answered in the negative. Unquestionably, the decree rendered at the June term, dismissing the amended bill and taxing the complainant with costs, was a final decree. The order calling the June term fixed Wednesday, the 7th day of June, as the day for convening the court, and expressly stated that the special term would continue “during the remainder of that week.” In adjourning the special term, the chancellor undertook to adjourn his court until the second Monday in August, 1916. It is contended by counselFirst, that the August term, whether properly designated an adjourned or special term of the court, was in deed and in fact a separate and distinct term from the special June term, and that when the court adjourned the special June term, it lost jurisdiction of final decrees rendered at that term; and, secondly, that the August term of court, so far as this record reflects, was held without authority of law. It is settled law that:

[320]*320“All final decrees made"in term time.remain in tlie breast of tbe chancellor until tbe adjournment, and may be amended or vacated at any time during tbe term, but not afterwards.” Ex parte Stanfield, 98 Miss. 214, 55 So. 538.

In tbe case of Wiggle et ux. v. Owen, 45 Miss. 691, our court, by Simeall, J., referred to tbe old case of Sagory v. Bayless et al., 13 Smedes & M. 153, a chancery' case in which tbe final decree rendered at the previous term was set aside, and stated tbe correct rule to be:

“After tbe term had elapsed tbe power of tbe court over final decrees rendered at that term ceases. Tbe only further remedy is by bill of review, or appeal, or .writ of error.”

Our court, in Hardy v. Gholson, 26 Miss. 72, extended tbe principle to probate courts. In tbe Wiggle Case, supra, tbe court further states:

“Any other doctrine applied to tbe chancery, tbe circuit, and tbe probate courts would overturn settled practice. It could not be predicated of a judgment or decree, when it became final.”

So here, tbe decree rendered at tbe special June term was a final, decree that put the complainant out of court, and bis only remedy, after tbe adjournment of tbe special June term, was by appeal to tbe Supreme Court. In the case of American Burial Case Co. v. Shaughnessy, 59 Miss. 398, tbe case was dismissed at a regular term of tbe court, upon tbe double ground that no legal representative bad appeared and become a party to tbe suit after tbe suggestion of death of tbe plaintiff, and, also, because “no docket fee bad been paid,” as prescribed by law. Two terms after tbe suit bad been thus dismissed, tbe executor appeared in court and secured an order reviving the suit in bis name; and this court, by Chalmeks, C.

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Bluebook (online)
78 So. 184, 117 Miss. 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beard-v-mclain-miss-1918.