Downes v. Crosby Chemicals, Inc.

234 So. 2d 916, 1970 Miss. LEXIS 1428
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 4, 1970
Docket45761
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 234 So. 2d 916 (Downes v. Crosby Chemicals, Inc.) 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
Downes v. Crosby Chemicals, Inc., 234 So. 2d 916, 1970 Miss. LEXIS 1428 (Mich. 1970).

Opinion

234 So.2d 916 (1970)

Mansfield L. DOWNES et al.
v.
CROSBY CHEMICALS, INC., et al.

No. 45761.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

May 4, 1970.

*917 Broom & Singley, Columbia, for appellants.

Hall, Callender & Dantin, Columbia, for appellees.

SMITH, Justice:

Mansfield L. Downes, David S. Gordon, J.D. Herrin, Rufus L. Lumpkin, Elton McCraney, Melvin West, Fred E. Lumpkin, R.H. McElhinny, Iris W. Taylor, Franklin S. Gordon, A.O. Biggs and C.R. Burge have appealed from a decree of the Chancery Court of Pearl River County adjudging appellees, R.H. Crosby and his wife, Mrs. Virginia Ethel Crosby, and Crosby Chemicals, Inc., a Mississippi corporation, to be the owners of a certain tract of land, including both banks and the bed of Hobolochitto Creek, as it traverses such tract, cancelling the claims of appellants with respect thereto and permanently enjoining them from trespassing or entering upon the same.

Appellees, R.H. Crosby and his wife, Mrs. Virginia Ethel Crosby, and Crosby Chemicals, Inc., were complainants in five bills of complaint of similar import, language and purpose, the bills together having brought in all of the appellants as defendants. By agreement the cases were consolidated and tried as one.

Complainants in their bills sought cancellation of all claims of the defendants to any right, title or interest in or to the tract of land described in the bill. It was alleged that complainants were the "sole, true, legal and equitable" owners of such land by purchase and conveyance, having acquired title thereto in 1937 by deed from Lamont Rowlands and his wife, Mrs. Josephine Goodyear Rowlands. A deraignment of their record title was attached to the bill. Complainants charged further that they were at the time of filing suit, and had been since 1937, "in the full, open, adverse, obvious, notorious, uninterrupted and continuous possession and occupancy of all of said property." The bill further stated that said tract had been enclosed for many years by a "cyclone fence" and "legally posted against all trespassing." It was charged that none of the defendants had any right, title or interest in the land but were contending that "they had the right to enter upon said property at will." That appellants had, on specified dates, made unlawful entries thereon, and were asserting the right to make further entries thereon, that such claims of right were *918 spurious and without foundation but nevertheless cast a doubt, cloud or suspicion upon complainants' title which they were entitled to have cancelled. The bills contained a further prayer that such defendants be permanently enjoined from asserting such false claims and from further trespassing upon complainants' property.

The defendants, appellants here, in their answer as finally amended, after denying most of the material allegations of the bill, admitted that they were "asserting certain rights and privileges in and to that certain stream known as Hobolochitto Creek which may traverse said property including the right to enter upon said stream without permits or consent of complainants." A further claim, asserted in a cross-bill filed by appellants, went out when it was developed that it was based upon a mistaken premise as to the location of a certain dam. And while in their amended answer appellants had denied it, during the course of the trial it was stipulated that "on the dates and at the times set out in the bills of complaint, the defendants entered upon Hobolochitto Creek by use of boats * * * and that said entries so made by defendants were made under claim of right."

Upon the trial, the evidence showed that following their purchase of the land in 1937, Mr. and Mrs. Crosby had moved upon it and had since made it their home, had reared their children there, and that their dwelling was situated only 90 feet from the south bank of Hobolochitto Creek.

In addition to the fact that the uncontradicted evidence showed that Mr. and Mrs. Crosby had lived upon the land since 1937, it was shown that it had been kept closed to the public and posted against trespassing all these years, that it was enclosed by an ordinary wire fence until 1954, when this fence had been replaced with an 8 foot cyclone fence. Moreover, personnel employed by the Crosbys patrolled the land against trespassing. Taxes upon the land were also paid by the Crosbys. It was made abundantly clear that appellants had no rights with respect thereto, except such, if any, as were held by the general public.

At the conclusion of the trial, after hearing a great deal of testimony, the chancellor found that appellees owned the property, Hobolochitto Creek was not a navigable stream, appellants had no right, title or interest therein, their claim of right should be cancelled as a cloud upon appellants' title, and that appellants should be permanently enjoined from trespassing further upon the property. A decree was entered accordingly.

While not expressly conceded, it is obvious that the "right" sought to be asserted by appellants to enter the Crosby land against the will of its owners is a right they claim to share with the general public and is based upon a contention that Hobolochitto Creek is a navigable stream. In appellants' brief the issue is stated thus:

The issue is whether or not the appellants have a right to go by boats upon the waters of Hobolochitto Creek so long as they do not touch the banks or bed of the stream. This issue involves the question of whether or not said stream is navigable or public waters by reason of either of Sections 686, 8413, 8414, or 5956-01 through 5956-376 of the Mississippi Code of 1942 as amended, or by reason of its usage in years gone by.

It is also implicit in the arguments advanced by counsel for the respective parties that the fundamental issue turns upon whether or not the chancellor was manifestly wrong in his finding that Hobolochitto Creek was not a navigable stream to which appellants, as members of the general public, were entitled to enter upon at will.

We have examined each of the statutes cited by the appellants in their statement of the issue. We are unable to agree that all are relevant.

*919 Mississippi Code 1942 Annotated section 8413 (1956) is as follows:

All bays, inlets, and rivers, and such of the lakes, bayous, and other watercourses as shall have been, or may be, declared to be navigable by act of the legislature or by the board of supervisors of the county in which the same may be, shall be public highways. (Emphasis added).

Neither the Legislature nor the Board of Supervisors of Pearl River County has declared Hobolochitto Creek to be navigable.

The following section, section 8414, provides:

All rivers, creeks and bayous in this state, twenty-five miles in length, that have sufficient depth and width of water for thirty consecutive days in the year, for floating a steamboat with carrying capacity of two hundred bales of cotton, are hereby declared to be navigable waters of this state.

It will be observed that section 8414 provides several factors to be considered in determining what streams shall be "navigable waters." To be "navigable waters" under the statute a stream must be at least 25 miles in length, and it must have sufficient depth and width of water for 30 consecutive days in the year for floating a steam boat with a carrying capacity of 200 bales of cotton.

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Bluebook (online)
234 So. 2d 916, 1970 Miss. LEXIS 1428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/downes-v-crosby-chemicals-inc-miss-1970.