Board of Education of Calhoun County, Mississippi v. James Sidney Warner

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 2001
Docket2002-CA-00122-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Board of Education of Calhoun County, Mississippi v. James Sidney Warner (Board of Education of Calhoun County, Mississippi v. James Sidney Warner) 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
Board of Education of Calhoun County, Mississippi v. James Sidney Warner, (Mich. 2001).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2002-CA-00122-SCT

BOARD OF EDUCATION OF CALHOUN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

v.

JAMES SIDNEY WARNER, GWENDOLYN V. WARNER, OLIVER POE, EARNESTINE WINTER, NANCY POE AND LISA POE BAKER

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/20/2001 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. C. MICHAEL MALSKI COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: CALHOUN COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: ROBERT H. COMPTON CHARLES JIM BECKETT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: DAVID L. CALDER KENNETH A. RUTHERFORD NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - REAL PROPERTY DISPOSITION: REVERSED AND REMANDED - 06/26/2003 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE SMITH, P.J., WALLER AND COBB, JJ.

COBB, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. This suit involves a land title dispute between the Calhoun County Board of Education (the Board)

and various members of the Poe and Warner families (collectively, Poe and Warner). The Board brought

suit in the Calhoun County Chancery Court to quiet and confirm title to three tracts of Calhoun County 16th

section land in October 1991.1 Following a hearing on February 11, 1992, the original chancellor found

1 Weyerhauser Corporation, which originally claimed Tract 1 of the disputed land, was dismissed from the proceedings. The chancellor’s memorandum opinion of December 10, 1999, confirmed title to the Weyerhauser tract in the Board. Thus, the disposition of Tract 1 is not an issue in the present case. that the parties agreed that the matters before the court “primarily involve[ ] a question of law,” and that

a motion for summary judgment would thus be an appropriate action. In May 1998, when Poe and Warner

moved for summary judgment, the Board promptly filed a counter-motion for partial summary judgment

and responded to Poe and Warner’s motion. The case was transferred to a special chancellor,2 who heard

argument on the summary judgment motions on October 19, 1998, but no transcript of this hearing is

before the Court. The chancellor found for Poe and Warner in his judgment entered on March 6, 2000,

and denied the Board’s M.R.C.P. 52(b) and 59 motions.

¶2. The Board now appeals the chancellor’s award to Poe and Warner, listing thirteen assignments of

error which we have distilled into three: (1) whether the lands were adversely possessed during a period

when adverse possession against the State was legal; (2) whether the presumption of grant applies to the

present facts; and (3) whether the Secretary of State should have been joined as a necessary party. We

conclude the Secretary of State should have been joined as a necessary party, and we reverse and remand

for entry of an appropriate judgment consistent with this opinion.

FACTS

¶3. Tract 2, claimed by the Poes, and Tract 3, claimed by the Warners, are the disputed properties

in this appeal. Two underlying facts provide the foundation for the chancellor’s award of fee simple title

to Poe and Warner: (1) that the Calhoun County Courthouse burned down in 1922, destroying many

original records; and (2) that from 1871 to 1878 the State authorized the conveyance in fee simple of 16th

Section lands. See Miss. Code §§ 2015-19 (1871), repealed 1878 Miss. Laws ch. 14 § 64; Lambert

The remaining lands, being Tracts 2 and 3, are claimed by members of the Poe and Warner families, respectively. 2 The record is silent on when Judge Michael Malski was appointed, though various inferences support 1996.

2 v. State, 211 Miss. 129, 139-40, 51 So. 2d 201, 204-05 (1951) (discussing these statutes). Poe and

Warner claim, inter alia, that their title to the disputed tracts dates back to such a conveyance by the State.

A. EVIDENCE OF POE AND WARNER’S CLAIM

¶4. Tract 2, a plot of some 99.8 acres, is claimed by the Poe family and was conveyed in three

parcels, which are identified herein as 2(a), 2(b), and 2(c). The asserted chains of title to Tract 2 are not

complete, and no pre-1900 deeds to any of the parcels are found in the record, they having been

supposedly consumed by the 1922 courthouse fire. Rather, the Poes rely on abstracts of title and other

similar documents from the Secretary of State’s office and from the Calhoun County sheriff’s record of tax

sales, together with an affidavit by Larry Winter, a Poe descendant. Winter’s affidavit claims that “the L.F.

Poe Estate and its predecessors in title have been in continuous possession of the questioned land . . . since

1878,” making uses of it similar to those asserted by the Warners. Winter’s mother “continues to live on

the property in a house originally constructed before her birth in 1917.” Winter also asserts that ad valorem

taxes have been paid on the land since 1878.3

¶5. Tract 3, totaling some 167.8 acres, was conveyed in parcels identified as parcels 3(a-e). As with

the Poes’ claim to Tract 2, the Warners’ claim to Tract 3 is supported by abstracts of title for the late 19th-

century period which is of principal interest in this case, without any title deed in the record until 1938. The

Tract 3 chains of title are likewise incomplete even in abstract.

¶6. The Warners cite the same documents as the Poes, plus an affidavit by defendant James Sidney

Warner. Warner claims that 3(a) and 3(b) have “been in private possession and conveyed in fee simple

since the 1870’s” and that the Warners have “been in continuous possession of” 3(a) since 1890, and “in

3 No tax receipts for either Tract 2 or Tract 3 appear in the record.

3 possession of” 3(b) and 3(e) since 1938. The affidavit is silent on 3(c) and 3(d).4 Warner states that his

family had a house where they lived on the disputed land “for a considerable period of time” and that

several of his siblings “were born and reared on the challenged property,” although he does not state when

that was or whether anyone lives there now. Warner also attests that his family has long paid ad valorem

taxes to the county on the disputed land (although no tax receipts can be found in the record) and that they

have made various uses of it (cutting timber, leasing oil and gas rights, farming, making “improvements”).

¶7. The asserted chains of title are supported by Poe and Warner by way of photocopies of various

documents, characterized in their motion for summary judgment as follows:

Exhibit K “a compilation of conveyances from the records of the Chancery Court of Calhoun County, which was prepared by the clerk’s office in 1992.”

Exhibit L “documents evidencing tax sales from the Office of the State Auditor.”

Exhibit M “documents obtained from the Mississippi Secretary of State.”

Exhibit N “documents obtained from the archives of the State of Mississippi.”

None of these photocopies is notarized or accompanied by any affidavit attesting to its authenticity or origin,

except for those in Exhibit M, which are certified by the Secretary of State’s office.

¶8. The final evidence presented by Poe and Warner is the affidavit of Larry Winter, an heir to the Poe

estate. Winter’s affidavit claims that “the L.F. Poe Estate and its predecessors in title have been in

continuous possession of the questioned land . . . since 1878,” making uses of it similar to those asserted

by Warner. Winter’s mother “continues to live on the property in a house originally constructed before her

birth in 1917.” Winter also asserts that ad valorem taxes have been paid on the land since 1878.

B. EVIDENCE OF THE BOARD’S CLAIM

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