Eden Drainage District v. Swaim

54 So. 2d 547, 212 Miss. 386, 1951 Miss. LEXIS 461
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1951
DocketNo. 38068
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 54 So. 2d 547 (Eden Drainage District v. Swaim) 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
Eden Drainage District v. Swaim, 54 So. 2d 547, 212 Miss. 386, 1951 Miss. LEXIS 461 (Mich. 1951).

Opinion

Ethridge, C.

This case involves a question of whether a drainage district with local commissioners has the power to buy an undivided interest in lands from private individuals, not for drainage purposes, and thereby to assume the correlative rights and duties of a cotenant. The matter is' here from a decree overruling appellant’s demurrer [395]*395to cross-bill and motion to strike the answer of appellees. Hence appellant admits all material facts well pleaded by appellees, so the averments of the pleadings will be outlined in some detail. Griffith, Miss. Chancery Practice (2d ed. 1951), Secs. 288, 367.

The Eden Drainage District of Yazoo County, Mississippi, appellant, filed a bill of complaint in the Chancery Court of Yazoo County against Mary Flancis Swaim and several other defendants, appellees. It charged that it was the owner of 960 described acres of land in Yazoo County; that the lands were validly sold on April 5, 1943 to the State for delinquent ad valorem property taxes, and that the District purchased the same from the State by a forfeited tax patent on October 15, 1946; that on December 11, 1946, the District obtained a chancery decree confirming its patent against the State; and that the defendants claimed, some unknown interest in the lands. The complaint.asked that the District’s title be confirmed and quieted against the defendants, appellees herein.

Defendants answered and claimed that they were vested with title to a one-half interest in the lands. They admitted that the lands were legally sold to the State for delinquent taxes on April 5,1943, and asserted that at that time they owned a one-half interest; that on July 18, 1944, prior to the expiration of the two-year period of redemption, the predecessors in title of D. H. Dew conveyed to him a one-half interest in the lands, and that on October 7, 1944, Dew, for a valuable consideration, conveyed to the District his one-half interest in the 960 acres. Defendants charged that as a result of the deed' from Dew to the District, the District became a cotenant with defendants in the land, and that when the District obtained its patent from the State, it redeemed the property as a cotenant, and title to one-half of the lands thereby revested in the defendants. The answer averred that the District’s application for patent failed to show that the District was a former owner of an interest in [396]*396the land, and that the District paid for the patent $2,565.05, of which $2,362.15 was refunded to the District by the State Treasurer as its lawful share of the delinquent taxes. Defendants stated that they were ready and willing to pay their one-half of the purchase price paid to the State by the District.

The answer further charged that sometime in the year 1944, the District contracted and conspired with Dew for the cutting of all merchantable timber upon the lands, under which contract the District would receive from Dew $5 for each one thousand board feet of timber cut; that at or about the time of that contract, the District accepted delivery of the deed from Dew, dated October 7, 1944; that despite the District’s knowledge that Dew owned an undivided one-half interest only and that was all the District had obtained, the District wrongfully secured the services of Dew in cutting the timber from the land and fraudulently appropriating to the District the sum paid to it by Dew for the timber. The answer averred that the District, in furtherance of this fraudulent plan to appropriate defendants’ properties and to secure title to the lands, patented the lands from the State, and that the District paid to the State, for the patent, funds secured through its wrongful and fraudulent contract with Dew; that the application for the patent described the lands as “cut-over” lands but failed to show that the District had wrongfully cut over the lands prior to the expiration of the two-year period of redemption. The answer denied that the District obtained any rights to the defendants’ one-half interest. In a cross-bill, the defendants and cross-complainants adopted the allegations of the answer, offered to pay their one-half of the costs of the patent and of the taxes subsequent to the date of the patent, asked the Court to adjudicate that the District held the title to one-half of the lands as trustee for the cross-complainants, and to require the District to execute the trust by deeding such interest to them, [397]*397and to account for funds paid by Dew to the District for the timber which had been cut.

The District made a motion to strike the answer, and filed a general demurrer to the cross-bill. The motion and demurrer were overruled, and from that action of the chancery court, the District takes this appeal.

Appellant is a drainage district with local commissioners, organized under the provisions of Chapter 195, Miss. Laws of 1912, as amended, Miss. Code of 1942, Secs. 4674-4755. The question is whether the District under these facts had the power to buy the deed from Dew, dated October 7, 1944;' and thereby to become a tenant in common with the appellees. If this power existed, then when the District bought a forfeited tax land patent from the State to the lands, it held in trust for its cotenants, the appellees, their undivided one-half interest. Cohea v. Hemmingway, 1893, 71- Miss. 22, 14 So. 734. On the other hand, if the District had no power to buy a one-half interest in these lands from Dew and to assume the obligations of a cotenant, then that deed was void and its purchase of the lands from the State, expressly authorized by Code Séc. 4085, vested the entire title in the District, and appellees have no claims to the land under the facts alleged in the answer and cross-bill.

A drainage district with local commissioners, such as appellant, is a subdivision of the State government with limited jurisdiction and powers. 'It has only such powers as are expressly granted to it by statute or as may be necessarily implied from such legislation. Moorhead Drainage District v. Pedigo, 1950, 210 Miss. 284, 49 So. (2d) 378; Stephens v. Beaver Dam Drainage District, 1920, 123 Miss. 884, 86 So. 641; 28 C. J. S., Drains, Sec. 12.

Appellant is given the power by statute to buy lands within the District at tax sales, Sec. 4714; to buy lands within the District by forfeited tax land patent from the State, Sec. 4085; and to buy “in fee simple, within [398]*398the confines of such district, all necessary rights of way for floodways, by-passes, ditches, canals, levees, and other necessary work or improvements, by purchase or condemnation * * Secs. 4741, 4742, 4694, 4652-4656, 4690-4694. The District has the power “to contract and be contracted with, to sue and be sued, to plead and be impleaded, and to do and perform in the name of such district all such acts and things for the accomplishment of the purpose for which it was organized.” Code Sec. 4676. Under Sec. 4681, the District “may do all acts and things not inconsistent with this article and with the laws of the state, and proper to effect the purpose and objects of this article.” The supplementary power provisions of Secs. 4676 and 4681 do not grant new or additional powers to the District, but authorize only those which are necessarily supplemental to the powers expressly granted it.

Hence the District is expressly given the power to buy lands within the district (a) at tax sales, (b) by forfeited tax land patent from the State, and (c) for “necessary rights of way for floodways, by-passes, ditches, canals, levees, and other necessary work or improvements” within the District. Code Secs. 4741, 4690, 4692, 4694.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 So. 2d 547, 212 Miss. 386, 1951 Miss. LEXIS 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eden-drainage-district-v-swaim-miss-1951.