Cranford v. State Ex Rel. Knox

131 So. 638, 159 Miss. 32, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 11
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1931
DocketNo. 29014.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 131 So. 638 (Cranford v. State Ex Rel. Knox) 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
Cranford v. State Ex Rel. Knox, 131 So. 638, 159 Miss. 32, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 11 (Mich. 1931).

Opinion

*35 Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Prior to 1922, by a proper proceeding instituted therefor, certain lands located in a municipality in Harrison county, Mississippi, were escheated to the state. In the final decree in that proceeding it was provided that this land should be' surveyed and platted into lots, and a lien was impressed thereon for the payment of certain attorney’s fees and expenses incurred in the proceeding-. It was further provided that in the event the land commissioner did not within sixty days exercise his statutory authority to sell these lands, and pay out of the proceeds of sale these fees and expenses, then the chancery clerk, as commissioner, should sell the same for the purpose of paying these fees. These attorney’s fees and *36 costs were satisfied without a sale of the land for that purpose, and on November 1, 1922, for a consideration of five thousand dollars, the land commissioner sold lots three and four of said land to Dr. R. H. Cranford, and issued to him a patent conveying’ the land; and on March 23, 1923, for a consideration of five thousand dollars, he sold lots 1 and 2 of said land to C. J. Miller, and conveyed the same to him by patent. Thereafter, by mesne conveyances, lot 2 and a part of lot 1 were conveyed to V. A. Anderson and W. W. Weatherly.

0.n July 25, 1923, suits were filed in the chancery court of Harrison county hy the state of Mississippi, on relation of the attorney-general, against the said Cranford and Miller, and their successors in title, including Y. A. Anderson and W. W. Weatherly, seeking to cancel the patents issued to Cranford and Miller, on the ground, among others, that the land commissioner was without power to sell said land and issue patents therefor, because the land in question consisted of city lots, valuable chiefly for urban purposes. These two suits were consolidated and heard upon pleadings and evidence submitted by the parties, and a decree was entered denying the relief prayed for and dismissing the hills of complaint. On appeal to this court it was held that the existence of a statutory power in the land commissioner to sell the land was not foreclosed by the decree in the escheat proceeding’s, and that since the land consisted of city lots, valuable chiefly for urban and not rural purposes, under the authority of Huber v. Freret, 138 Miss. 238, 103 So. 3, the land commissioner had no authority to sell, and issue patents for, such public lands, and the decree of the conrt below was reversed, and the cause remanded generally. State ex rel. Knox v. Miller, 149 Miss. 29, 115 So. 42.

On March 10’, 1926, the legislature enacted chapter 185, Laws of 1926, authorizing the state land commissioner, *37 under certain circumstances, to sell lands owned by the state in municipalities, which had been subdivided into lots, blocks, divisions, or otherwise, and escheat to the state by such description, and providing a method of fixing a price therefor, and also providing that such lands alieady attempted to be sold by the land commissioner might be conveyed to the original holder of such patent, or his vendees, at such price as the governor, attorney-general, and land commissioner might fix. Section 2 of this act provides, in part, as follows:

“All sales of such lands situated within municipalities, which lands have heretofore escheated to or title thereto become vested in the state, and which have been sold by the land commissioner of the state at a fair and reasonable price not less than that prescribed for the swamp and overflowed lands, may be conveyed to the original holder of the patents, or if he has sold same to his vendee at such reasonable price as the state land commissioner, the governor, and the attorney-general shall fix, and such purchaser shall be allowed as credit on such price the amount heretofore paid therefor, with six per cent (6%) interest, compounded annually, on the same, not to exceed the present value as fixed by such officers. And no land heretofore sold, or attempted to be sold, shall be sold until notice by registered mail is given to the original buyer, or his vendee, if his post office address is known, and within a period of thirty days after the mailing of such notice. Such notice shall inform such buyer or his vendee of his rights hereunder. . . . No deed shall be made to such buyer or his vendee until such person shall make affidavit that he bought the same in good faith and has not since sold his interest therein. Provided nothing in this act shall be construed to in any wise affect any litigation now pending with reference to or concerning any land in which the state may have or claim title. ’

*38 After the enactment of this statute, and .while this suit was still pending, in pursuance of the said statute, the state land commissioner, on the 20th day of February, 1929, for a recited consideration of one dollar, issued to R. H. Cranford and G. J. Miller patents conveying to them the same lands attempted to be conveyed, and which were described, in the former patents, these patents reciting on the face thereof that they were issued under the said chapter 185, Laws of 1926, and were in addition to the former patents issued by the state to Cranford and Miller.

Thereafter, on March 4, 1929, but before the two patents last above-mentioned were filed for record in the chancery clerk’s office of Harrison county, V. A. Anderson and W. W. Weatherly, original defendants in this suit, who had filed answers therein, obtained leave of the court to file, and filed, a cross-bill against R. H. Cranford and. C. J. Miller, and certain intervening vendors in the chain of title, by which a portion of' the lands involved were attempted to be conveyed to the cross-complainants, to recover for a breach of warranty of the title of the land attempted to be conveyed to them; the charges of the cross-bill being, in substance, that the cross-complainants, appellees herein, were the owners of certain of the lands attempted to be conveyed by the said original patents issued by the state to Cranford and Miller on November 1, 1922, and March 23, 1923; that the patents were void, and the property attempted to be conveyed therefore remained the property of the state; and consequently their title, acquired through mesne conveyances from Cranford and Miller, had failed; and that they were entitled to recover from their several grantors, among whom were these appellants, the pro rata part of the consideration for which the grantors were liable. Thereafter the appellants and the other cross-defendants answered the cross-bill, and in substance denied the *39 alleged failure of title; denied that appellees were evicted from said lands, or disturbed in tbeir possession thereof; and denied that there was a breach of warranty entitling appellees to recover from them. In this answer, in addition to the original patents issued to them by the state, the appellants, in support of their title, set up the two additional patents issued to them by the state under date of February 20, 1929, by virtue of the above-mentioned statute, conveying the same property as was conveyed in the original patents.

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Bluebook (online)
131 So. 638, 159 Miss. 32, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cranford-v-state-ex-rel-knox-miss-1931.