Dresser v. Hathorn

109 So. 23, 144 Miss. 24, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 338
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1926
DocketNo. 25388.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 109 So. 23 (Dresser v. Hathorn) 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
Dresser v. Hathorn, 109 So. 23, 144 Miss. 24, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 338 (Mich. 1926).

Opinion

Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant, Louisa E. Dresser, filed a bill in the chancery court of Pearl River county, claiming to be the owner of, and seeking to quiet and confirm her title to, the south half of the northwest quartei", and the east half of the southeast quarter of section 36, township 2. south, range 15 west, in Pearl River county, Miss., which lands were alleged to be worth approximately fifteen thousand dollars or twenty thousand dollars.

In the bill the appellant deraigned her title briefly as follows: That these lands were swamp and overflowed lands, donated by Act of Congress of September 28, 1850 (U. S. Comp. St., sections 4958-4960'), to the state of Mississippi; that thereafter, in accordance with an Act of the legislature of the state, approved on April 8, 1871 (Laws 1871Í, chapter 160), these lands, with others, were patented by the state of Mississippi to the Pearl River Improvement & Navigation Company on June 27, 1871; that the Pearl River Improvement & Navigation Company, on November 28'., 1872, for a valuable consideration, conveyed these lands, with others, to M. S. Baldwin; that thereafter, through mesne conveyances set out in the bill, but unnecessary to be here stated, the Edward Hines Yellow Pine Trustees became the owners of this land on January 1, 1918; and that on October 13, 1920, the Edward Hines Yellow Pine Trustees, by warranty deed, *35 conveyed it to the appellant; the consideration recited in this deed being one dollar and other good and valuable consideration.

The bill then deraigned the asserted title of the appellees, beginning with a patent issued by the state of Mississippi to one Mitchell on December 7, 1883, and thence by mesne conveyances to the appellees, and it is averred that the alleged title of the appellees is null and void because the state had parted with its title to these lands to the predecessors in title of the appellant long before the patent of the state was issued to the said Mitchell.

It was then particularly alleged that by virtue of the provisions of chapter .114 of the laws of the state of Mississippi of 1873, and especially by virtue of section 6 of said act, the deed of the said Pearl River Improvement & Navigation Company of November 20, 1872, by which these lands were conveyed to M. S. Baldwin, was legalized, ratified, and confirmed; that by this act the state legally and validly parted with all of its title to the land in controversy, and by virtue of its provisions the appellant had a valid and legal title to this 160 acres of land. The prayer of the bill is for a temporary injunction to prevent the cutting and removal of timber on the land, and for a final degree canceling the asserted claim of the appellees, and quieting and confirming the appellant’s title to the land.

The answer of the appellees to this bill of complaint is very long, and we shall not set out in detail the averments thereof. The answer denies that the appellant is the real owner of the land, denies the deraignment of her title, and deraigns the appellee’s title in full. It is further charged that the deed from the Edward Hines Yellow Pine Trustees to the appellant was not executed and delivered on October 13, 1920, but was executed in 1923; that the deed is feigned, fictitious, fraudulent, and void, and was not executed for the purpose of passing* the claim of title of the Edward Hines Yellow Pine Trustees to the appellant, but was executed for the fraudulent purpose *36 of relitigating, through the appellant, the title to these lands for the secret benefit of the said Yellow Pine Trustees. The answer then sets out the history of former litigation between the Edward Hines Yellow Pine Trustees and the appellees, in which the title to these same lands was involved, and charges that the appellant acquired her alleged title to the lands after the conclusion of said former litigation in the Federal courts; that, if she did acquire a deed to this land in 1920', then she purposely and by agreement with the Edward Hines Yellow Pine Trustees withheld her deed from record until her grantors could litigate the title to this land in the Federal court with the appellees; that the judgment of the Federal court in the former litigation involving the title to this land is res adjudicaba of the issues involved in this case; that the appellant is not the real complainant in the case, but that the Edward Hines Yellow Pine Trustees, for their own secret benefit, are now trying to relitigate, un7 der some secret arrangement with appellant, the issues already determined in the Federal court; that this secret arrangement constitutes a dishonest and unlawful conspiracy between) these trustees and the appellant, Louisa E. Dresser, whereby they are attempting to perpetrate a fraud upon the defendants and upon the court.; that the appellees are bona-fide purchasers of these lands without any notice or knowledge of the appellant’s claim of title; that, because of her failure to record her deed, the appellees are entitled to protection against said deed under the recording statutes; that this conduct of appellant in withholding her deed from record misled and deceived the appellees; and that appellant is now es-topped from claiming the land. The answer then invoked the “rule of property” doctrine under the decision in Hardy v. Hartman, 65 Miss. 504, 4 So. 545, in which the title of the Pearl River Improvement So Navigation Company was declared to be null and void; which decision has been reaffirmed and the doctrine of rule of property announced in the cases of Becker v. Columbia Bank, 112 *37 Miss. 819, 73 So. 798, Edward Hines Yellow Pine Trustees v. State, 134 Miss. 533, 98 So. 158, and Hines Yellow Pine Trustees v. Martin (Miss.), 99 So. 825. By a supplemental answer the appellees averred that over one hundred thousand acres of land were patented to the Pearl Eiver Improvement & Navigation Company; that thereafter, under the construction placed upon the statutes by this court and by state officers, the state had subsequently again sold these lands, and that the title to many thousands of acres of land would be overturned, should the court now hold the title of the appellant valid in this case.

This cause involves a reconsideration of the Pearl Eiver Improvement & Navigation Company’s titles which have been the subject of much litigation in both the courts of this state and the Federal courts, and in order that the manner in which the present suit arose, as well as the issues involved therein, may more fully appear, we shall set out briefly a history of this former litigation, all of which appears from the testimony of witnesses and the records of these former cases which were introduced at the trial of this cause.

In the case of Hardy v. Hartman, 65 Miss. 504, 4 So.

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Bluebook (online)
109 So. 23, 144 Miss. 24, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dresser-v-hathorn-miss-1926.