Cole v. Johnson

53 Miss. 94
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 53 Miss. 94 (Cole v. Johnson) 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
Cole v. Johnson, 53 Miss. 94 (Mich. 1876).

Opinion

Chalmers, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellee filed his bill to enjoin the prosecution of an action of ejectment which had been instituted by the heirs of John Cole, deceased, to recover from him certain lands which had been by him purchased at a sale made by the administrator of said John Cole, under decree of the Probate Court of Tippah County. The prayer of the bill was that the heirs of said Cole might be restrained from ejecting the complainant from the lands, until they should have repaid to him the purchase-money by him paid to the administrator, with interest, and the value of all permanent and useful improvements put by him on the land, or the balance remaining due thereon after deduction of the rental value of the land during the time the complainant had been in possession. A decree was rendered in accordance with the prayer, upon the report of a commissioner, showing that there was due the complainant $2,869.50; he being credited with the purchase-money with interest, and with his valuable improvements, and debited with the rents. The heirs appealed.

It is objected that the proof of publication as to non-residents was not in due form. This is cured by the demurrer filed in behalf of “ the defendants,” which must be taken to mean all the defendants. Schirling v. Scites, 41 Miss. 644. After the overruling of the demurrer, the defendants were allowed sixty days in which to answer; but, failing to do so, final decree was rendered, as it is said, without the entry of a pro confesso, and this is assigned for error. ■

The record shows no formal order pro confesso ; but in the order of reference there is this recital: “ It appearing to the satisfaction of the court that all the parties in interest have been duly served with process, and that judgment pro confesso has been duly and properly taken against the adult defendants in this cause,” &c.

[98]*98This sufficiently shows that, in fact, an order pro confesso had been taken, and warrants the belief that the failure to enter it was a clerical misprision. It has been several times held that a failure to enter a judgment by default would not vitiate a judgment at law where there had been a jury and verdict without issue joined. Rappleye v. Hill, 4 How. (Miss.) 295, 302; Garrett v. Felt, 32 Miss. 137; Hewett v. Cobb, 40 Miss. 61.

But it is objected that there were minor resident defendants, and that the decree was taken without proof. This is a mistake. The transcript of the administration proceedings from the Probate Court of Tippah County showed every thing, requisite to be shown in relation to the purchase of the land and the payment of the purchase-money, as well as the legal irregularities which vitiated the sale and invalidated the title.

The account as to rents, taxes, and improvements was stated by the commissioner upon proof taken after notice given to the parties, which proof was returned with his report. We cannot pass upon the correctness of his findings, no error of law having been committed, because no exceptions were filed to the report.

It is said that the court erred in appointing the same person guardian ad litem of the minors, and commissioner to state the account against them. It would seem that they ought not to complain that their guardian took the account; and we know of no principle or precedent which would warrant a reversal on this account. Inasmuch, however, as in such cases it might become the duty of the guardian to except to the account, we think it bad practice to appoint the same person to both positions. We are aware that it is quite commonly done in practice, the clerk of the court, as in this case, being usually assigned to both offices.

The bill is supposed to have been filed under the provisions of the act of Feb. 11, 1873, whereby it is declared that the purchaser of lands at a sale made under a void or voidable decree of the Probate Court, when sued in ejectment by the heirs, shall have a lien on the lands for the repayment of his purchase-money.

The demurrer raises the question whether this right can, under the statute, be asserted in the ejectment suit, and whethet [99]*99there is, therefore, any excuse for coining into chancery. We do not so understand the statute. It only declares that the heir “ shall hold the real estate subject to the payment of the purchase-money,” without indicating any method by which the purchaser’s right to repayment is to be enforced. Certainly, the most appropriate, if not the only adequate, method of securing it would be by a chancery proceeding. Independently of this statute, however, a court of equity has the right to charge the purchase-money on the land, where it is shown to have been applied in exoneration of the liabilities of the estate, as was decided, before the enactment of the statute, in Short v. Porter, 44 Miss. 533 ; and it is well settled that the bestowal of jurisdiction on a common-law court does not.divest the jurisdiction of a court of equity, unless it is expressly so enacted.

The claim for repayment- of the purchase-money, as well as for the value of the improvements, is resisted, upon the; ground that the first is only recoverable where it has been “ in good faith paid by the purchaser; ” and the second, where the person making the improvements “ shall claim the premises under some deed or contract of purchase made or acquired in good faith.” Acts of 1873, 41; Code of 1871, § 1557.

It is insisted that, inasmuch as the defects in the Probate Court proceedings under which the complainant purchased were patent upon the record, and could have been ascertained by inspection, the complainant cannot claim to have become a purchaser, or to have paid his money in good faith.

So far as the payment of the money is concerned, it seems quite manifest that all that is meant by the requirement of good faith is, that it shall have been genuinely paid, without any knowledge or suspicion of fraud either on the part of the purchaser or of the administrator. The term is used in contradistinction to bad faith, and not in the technical sense in which it is applied to conveyances of title, in which latter sense a party wholly free from moral mala fides is still frequently held not to be a Iona fide purchaser.

Does the requirement that' an occupant of real estate, demanding compensation for valuable improvements erected [100]*100thereon, shall “ claim the premises under some deed or contract of purchase, made or acquired in good faith,” import that such claim cannot be maintained, if the purchaser could by any possible research have discovered the invalidity of his title? It was so stated in Learned v. Corley, 43 Miss. 687, where it was held that the defendant in ejectment could not obtain compensation for his improvements, because an examination of the records of the county would have disclosed to him that, many years before his purchase, the Probate Court had failed to confirm a commissioners’ sale, upon which rested one of the links in his chain of title. Upon the familiar principle that a party is bound to take notice of all the recitals and imperfections contained in his chain of title, and, as against rights springing out of such recitals and imperfections, cannot be said to be a bona fide purchaser without notice, it was declared that the defendant was not entitled to his improvements.

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Bluebook (online)
53 Miss. 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-johnson-miss-1876.