Crawford v. BROWN

61 So. 2d 344, 215 Miss. 489, 10 Adv. S. 1, 1952 Miss. LEXIS 591
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 1, 1952
Docket38534
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 61 So. 2d 344 (Crawford v. BROWN) 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
Crawford v. BROWN, 61 So. 2d 344, 215 Miss. 489, 10 Adv. S. 1, 1952 Miss. LEXIS 591 (Mich. 1952).

Opinion

*492 McG-ehee, C. J.

This is a suit to reform a deed which was executed by the complainant, Andrew Crawford, and his wife, on November 4, 1941, and duly recorded on that day, in favor of T. M. Keeton, the ground for relief being that a mutual mistake had been made by the parties as to the description of a parcel of land ■ therein described, assuming that the description is not applicable to the parcel of land actually intended by both the grantor and the grantee to be conveyed; also, to cancel as clouds upon the complainant’s title a deed of conveyance of January 4, 1945, from the said T. M. Keeton in favor of O. C. Pruitt; and a deed from the latter to the defendant Clarence M. Brown, of March 26, 1951. All three of these deeds were alleged to contain the same erroneous description, if applicable to the tract of land in question. The bill of complaint also contained a prayer for general relief.

The cancellation of the two last mentioned conveyances was sought on the ground that the deed from Keeton to Pruitt was taken with sufficient notice on the part of Pruitt to put him on inquiry such as would have led a reasonably prudent person to information and knowledge of the location of the tract of land intended by the description in the conveyance from the complainant Crawford to the grantee; Keeton, who was the grantor of Pruitt as aforesaid, and is also sought because the subsequent deed from Pruitt to the defendant Brown was taken by the latter with sufficient notice to put him on inquiry such as would have led a reasonably prudent person to information and knowledge of the location of the tract described in the deed from Crawford to Keeton, since he knew that his own grantor, Pruitt, was not in possession of the land in question, and saw while on the premises, prior to his purchase, that the complain *493 ant, Crawford, was in actual possession of the tract of land in question and had continued to keep the same in his common enclosure near his residence, at all times from and after the date of his conveyance to Keeton on November 4, 1941, and was then at the time of defendant Brown’s purchase still using the same.

The proof discloses that the Hyatt Estate had been in actual, open, notorious, continuous, and exclusive possession, for a period of from forty to sixty years prior to December 23, 1940, of the ~Wy2 of the of Block 27, and all of Block 36 of Terry’s Survey of the town of Iuka, and that said Block 36 was immediately ■ south of Block 27 and completely enclosed by the Hyatt Estate as a tract of land 250 feet wide east and west, and 427 feet in depth north and south, extending to and along Indian Creek on the south side thereof; that Block 36 was bounded on the east side by a street; that the complainant Crawford was a tenant of the Hyatt Estate and in possession of the tract of land in Block 27, and all of Block 36 of Terry’s Survey of the town of Iuka, prior to his purchase of said tracts of land from the Chancery Clerk, J. C. Jourdan, Jr., as special commissioner, on December 23, 1940; that one Bill Pyle, who was one of the heirs of the Hyatt Estate, when undertaking to represent the other heirs of the estate, all of whom were adults, and whether with or without proper authority from them to do so, had proposed to sell the land to the complainant Crawford at the price of $675.00, and with the understanding that Block 36 extended south a depth of 427 feet to Indian Creek as the southern boundary thereof, and all of which had been and was then under fence; that they thereupon learned that it would be necessary that the land in Block 27 and all of Block 36 of Terry’s Survey should be sold for partition through the chancery court on account of one of the heirs being non compos mentis; that the sale was made by the special commissioner to the complainant Crawford on December 23, 1940, and both tracts were turned *494 over to Mm as purchaser and owner thereof, and he went into possession of same as such purchaser and owner while the enclosure of Block 36 still continued to be an area of 250 feet in width east and west and 427 feet in depth north and south; and that he continued in the possession of all of the said area and kept the same under enclosure until the defendant Pruitt, who is one of the appellees on this appeal, acquired his deed from the defendant T. M. Keeton on January 4, 1945, containing the following description: “Part of Block thirty-six (36) Terry’s Survey of the town of Iuka, Tishomingo County, Mississippi, described as beginning at the southeast corner of said block, run thence north along the east line 135 feet, thence west parallel to the south line 150 feet, thence south parallel to the east line 135 feet, thence east on the south line 150 feet to the point of beginning * * *, ” the tract of land being thus described by the identical description as that contained in the deed from the complainant Crawford to the said T. M. Keeton on November 4, 1941.

The precise question is whether the foregoing description should be applied to a lot of the dimensions last above stated in the southeast corner of the 250-by-427 foot area beginning at a point on the north side of the creek bank for the southeast corner thereof, or should be applied to a lot of such dimension farther north in the southeast corner of Block 36 on the theory 'Lhat Block 36 is only 250 feet square.

The defendant introduced as a witness the chancery clerk, who had sold part of Block 27 and all of Block 36 to the complainant Crawford on December 23, 1940, while acting as special commissioner in the partition of this property on behalf of the heirs of Captain Hyatt, as aforesaid, and the clerk testified that the official plat of Terry’s Survey of the town of Iuka had been lost or destroyed, without stating the approximate year or decade within which this occurred, and he identified the original plat thereof from which he understood the *495 official one had been copied. The original plat of this survey, as identified by the clerk, and which he said was the one from which the lost official plat had been copied “according to the story that come to me,” but as to which the witness further said “I don’t know what it is,” fails to show the dimensions of any block in the survey, or the location of Indian Creek thereon. This original plat, does not appear to have ever been signed or to have ever been on file. But it was presented in open court by agreement of counsel, and a photostatic copy thereof is contained in the record on this appeal. Blocks 27 and 36 are shown thereon, without any dimensions thereof being given, as aforesaid, and there are 12 blocks directly to the .west and 9 directly to the east thereof, none of which are shown to contain any numbers or dimensions. Apparently the blocks in Terry’s Survey are of irregular size, and the clerk so testified. There are other blocks therein than those above mentioned. The defendant Pruitt owns Block 37 directly across the street from Block 36, and he claims down to the creek on the south and has been in possession down to the creek for 26 years, and has his cotton gin within 100 feet of the creek.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 So. 2d 344, 215 Miss. 489, 10 Adv. S. 1, 1952 Miss. LEXIS 591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-v-brown-miss-1952.