Erving's Hatcheries, Inc. v. Garrott

168 So. 2d 52, 250 Miss. 701, 1964 Miss. LEXIS 490
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1964
DocketNo. 43166
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 168 So. 2d 52 (Erving's Hatcheries, Inc. v. Garrott) 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
Erving's Hatcheries, Inc. v. Garrott, 168 So. 2d 52, 250 Miss. 701, 1964 Miss. LEXIS 490 (Mich. 1964).

Opinion

Brady, Tom P., J.

This is an appeal from the Circuit Court of Quitman County, Mississippi, wherein a judgment was rendered in favor of William Johnson Garrott, the appellee, on the ground that the suit of the appellant, Erving’s Hatcheries, Inc., against appellee was barred by the Mississippi three year statute of limitations. The lawsuit was originally filed by the appellant on an open account in which the appellant alleged that the appellee purchased chickens from the appellant and had failed or neglected to pay for the same. The appellant was the supplier of chickens to the public for various purposes and the appellee was in the business of purchasing chickens and raising them to lay eggs for thé purpose of selling the eggs to the public. From a judgment of the said Circuit Court in favor of William Johnson Garrott, appellee, the appellant, Erving’s Hatcheries, Inc., prosecutes this appeal.

The appellee, William Johnson Garrott, hereinafter called Garrott, purchased from the appellant, Erving’s Hatcheries, Inc., hereinafter called Erving’s, five thousand pullets on or about June 25, 1959, at a total cost of $8,000. There was paid on the purchase and credited to Garrott’s account the sum of $5,500. Additional purchases were made by Garrott totaling $175, so that the balance due and owing was $2,675. Erving’s brought suit against Garrott for the balance of $2,675, which Erving’s charged had remained due and owing it by Garrott from July 1, 1959, together with interest at sis percent per annum. Erving’s, in its claim against Garrott, was originally represented by Hon. Eugene Thompson, an attorney 'of Marks, and on June 13, 1962, it appears that Mr. Thompson filed a suit for Erving’s against Garrott. At the time the suit was filed Thompson went to the circuit clerk’s office, but saw neither the circuit clerk, Mr. J. B. Eavenson, nor the deputy clerk, Mrs. Marie W. Eavenson. Mrs. Eavenson’s daugh-

[704]*704ter, Anne Eavenson, was there keeping the office open for her mother, the deputy clerk. Miss Anne Eavenson made the original entries on the court docket and marked an original and at least one copy of the declaration “Filed June 13, 1962”. Later on the same day Mrs. Marie W. Eavenson, deputy clerk, placed on the original and a copy as filed, the words, “ J. B. Eavenson, Circuit Clerk, by Marie W. Eavenson, D. C.”, to indicate their filing, and she also numbered the original and a copy of the declaration. The case was assigned number 3382. The record discloses that Mr. Thompson told Miss Eavenson not to issue process since she lacked the authority to do so. The deputy circuit clerk stated positively that Mr. Thompson, attorney for the appellant, directed her not to issue process but to hold it and wait. Thompson testified that he told Miss Eavenson not to issue process since he realized that she lacked the authority to do so, but he could not state positively that he did not make that statement to Mrs. Eavenson. He merely said that he did not recall making it. Mrs. Eavenson, however, is quite positive that Mr. Thompson told her not to issue the summons or process and she further testified that she always issued process when cases were filed in circuit court unless she was directed not to do so. Mr. Thompson’s testimony to the effect that he could not remember whether or not he told the circuit clerk not to issue process is of a negative nature when compared to the positive assertion of Mrs. Eavenson that she was told by Thompson not to issue process.

Over a year lapsed from the time of filing* the lawsuit on June 13, 1962, until the process was finally issued for the appellee on July 31, 1963. The record indicates that it was issued at the request of other attorneys who had been employed and who were representing* Erving’s at the time in lieu of attorney Thompson. The record further shows that this process was not served on the defendant until August 2, 1963. The record further [705]*705discloses that three terms of court actually passed during this period of time, although the May Term of court was not held. The September Term and the February Term, were held, the May Term being pretermitted. It appears further that this case was not called at each term of court for trial or disposition and the apparent reason is that someone, whom she thought was Mr. Thompson, had notified the deputy clerk, Mrs. Eavenson, that the case should not be on the docket after she had entered it, and therefore Mrs. Eavenson had scratched through the style and noted on the issue docket, “Erroneously on docket”. Mr. Thompson did state on the stand that it was his idea to give the defendant additional time, anticipating a better settlement offer, although he did not recall any such conversation as that which Mrs. Eavenson said took place.

After attorneys, Hon. Lomax B. Lamb, Jr., and Hon. E. C. Black, got into the case representing the appellant, they endeavored to find the original declaration, which could not be located, nor could any copy thereof be. located, so a subpoena duces tecum was issued for attorney Thompson to produce a copy of the original declaration. The record does not disclose what became of the original declaration and the court copy, but after process was issued at the instance of these two last named attorneys on July 31, 1963, and served on the defendant on August 2, 1963, an amended declaration, together with a copy, was filed on August 14, 1963.

On August 31, 1963, a motion to dismiss was filed by the appellee, and on September 9 a motion for subpoena duces tecum was filed by the appellant.

On September 11, the motion to dismiss was overruled and appellee was required to answer the declaration by September 14. Answer was filed on said date by appellee, who is represented by Hon. Ben M. Caldwell.

On September 16, 1963, a hearing was held in Quit-man County at Marks, Mississippi, on the answer to [706]*706the declaration, which simply asserted that there was no declaration filed in the above styled and numbered case at the time the process was served upon the appellee. The answer to the amended declaration set up the fact that the statute of limitations of three years on open accounts had barred the cause of action by the appellant. Therefore, the defendant denied that he owed the sum of $2,500, the amount demanded in the amended declaration, or any sums of money from July 1, 1959.

The lower court held, though reluctantly, that under these facts it was his opinion that the statute of limitations had barred the cause of action. The testimony of Mr. Thompson and Mrs. Eavenson, when carefully evaluated and weighed, showed sufficiently that there had been an instruction on the part of attorney Eugene Thompson, who represented the appellant, that the process not be served and, in accordance with this instruction, the clerk did not issue the process. The lower court held that he. had no alternative other than to sustain the motion and a judgment was prepared which the lower court executed on September 16, 1963, dismissing the case, because it has been barred by the operation of the statute of limitations.

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Bluebook (online)
168 So. 2d 52, 250 Miss. 701, 1964 Miss. LEXIS 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ervings-hatcheries-inc-v-garrott-miss-1964.