Eubanks v. W. H. Hodges & Co.

207 So. 2d 640, 1968 Miss. LEXIS 1626
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 1968
DocketNo. 44630
StatusPublished

This text of 207 So. 2d 640 (Eubanks v. W. H. Hodges & Co.) 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
Eubanks v. W. H. Hodges & Co., 207 So. 2d 640, 1968 Miss. LEXIS 1626 (Mich. 1968).

Opinion

INZER, Justice:

This is an appeal by P. T. Eubanks from a decree of the Chancery Court of Lamar County dissolving a temporary injunction which restrained appellees, W. H. Hodges & Company and Dewitt Clyde Bilbo, Sheriff of Lamar County, from selling certain [641]*641lands levied on by the sheriff under a writ of execution issued at the instance of Hodges.

This is the second appearance of this case in this Court. On former appeal we affirmed a decree of the Chancery Court awarding appellee, Hodges & Company, $8,150.31 damages. Eubanks v. Hodges, 254 Miss. 376, 180 So.2d 922 (1965).

Execution was issued on this judgment and certain lands belonging to appellant were levied on by the sheriff. The sheriff advertised the lands for sale but prior to the execution sale appellant obtained a temporary injunction restraining the sheriff from making the sale.

Appellant alleged in his petition for a prohibitory injunction that the decree of the Chancery Court of Lamar County rendered at the February, 1964, term of that court was void for the reason that the minutes of that term were not' signed by the chancellor. The petition was presented to the circuit judge of the district without notice, and the circuit judge issued a fiat to the chancery court directing that a temporary injunction issue upon the execution of a bond. The bond was executed and the temporary injunction was issued.

Appellees answered the petition and admitted that by inadvertence the minutes of the February, 1964, term of the court were not signed by the chancellor, but denied that the failure of the chancellor to sign the minutes rendered the decree void. The answer alleged that after the case was tried and the decree signed by the chancellor, appellant gave notice of appeal wherein he stated that a final decree had been rendered. Appellant then executed an appeal bond wherein he again stated that a final decree had been entered. His counsel then filed an assignment of error and brief in this Court but raised no question as to the validity of the decree because the minutes were not signed. Appellee alleged that appellant’s failure to raise this question was a waiver of any defect in the decree, that appellant was thus estopped from denying the validity of the decree, and in addition that he was guilty of laches.

A motion to dissolve the temporary decree was heard by the court at the regular September, 1966, term. The chancellor presiding was the same who tried the case originally and who inadvertently failed to sign the minutes. He rendered the written opinion and among other things said:

That said cause was submitted to the undersigned Chancellor upon the pleadings filed herein and upon agreement of the parties by and through their attorneys that said matter be heard by the undersigned Chancellor on said motion and that all material allegations of fact contained in all of the pleadings are admitted by the respective parties. That said matter constitutes solely a question of law as shown by the pleadings herein. After due consideration of all of said pleadings and exhibits and after argument of the counsel the Court finds that a final decree was entered in the Chancery Court of Lamar County, Mississippi, on the 19th day of March, 1964, that an appeal was taken by the petitioner herein from said final decree to the Supreme Court of the State of Mississippi, that the Supreme Court heard said appeal and on December 13, 1965, rendered a final judgment in said cause affirming the decision of the lower court. That petitioner, P. T. Eubanks, in his appeal to the Supreme Court of the State of Mississippi did not assign as error or raise objection to the failure of the Chancellor of the Chancery Court of Lamar County, Mississippi, to sign his minutes during and at the end of the March 1964 term of Court. That the petitioner, P. T. Eubanks, did not exercise his right to file a suggestion of error following the adverse decision of the Supreme Court of the State of Mississippi assigning as error the failure of the Chancellor of the Chancery Court of Lamar County, Mississippi, to sign said minutes as indicated above within the time authorized by law for the filing of [642]*642said suggestion of error. That the said P. T. Eubanks did thereby waive his rights and is now estopped to raise for the first time the failure of the Chancellor to sign the minutes of the March 1964 term of the Chancery Court of Lamar County, Mississippi. That no objection being made by suggestion of error to the final decision of the Supreme Court, as aforesaid, that the judgment of the Supreme Court became final and is and constitutes a binding judgment in favor of the defendant in that cause based upon the judgment rendered at the March 1964 term of the Chancery Court of Lamar County, Mississippi, and is and constitutes a valid final decree and judgment according to the terms of the decree rendered in said term. That the motion to dissolve should be sustained.

Appellant assigns as error the action of the trial court in sustaining the motion to dissolve the temporary injunction. It is urged that the decree rendered at the February, 1964 term of Court was void because the chancellor did not sign the minutes, and that the action of this Court in affirming did not cure the defect because the decree was not a final judgment from which an appeal could properly be taken.

The gist of appellant’s argument is that the decree which this Court affirmed on former appeal was void, that our affirmance of it did not impart any validity to it, and further that being void, it was subject to collateral attack. It is also argued that this Court had no jurisdiction of the former appeal because the ostensible decree in the former case was not in reality a final decree.

In support of this argument appellant cites a number of cases decided by this Court and also Griffith, Mississippi Chancery Practice section 97a (2d ed. 1950), wherein the author states the rule, based upon the statute and the cases decided by this Court, as follows:

§ 97a. Signing the minutes. — The statute provides that “the minutes of the proceedings of the supreme, circuit, chancery and county courts, shall be entered by the clerk of each, respectively, in the minute book of the court, against the next sitting of the court, if practicable, when the same shall be read in open court; and when corrected shall be signed, — the minutes of * * * the chancery court by the chancellor; * * * and on the last day of the term the minutes shall be drawn up, read and signed on the same day or before the adjournment of the court.” Of this statute the court has said that while it is good practice to sign the minutes for each day of the court term as the several days have each closed, it is valid for the chancellor, or judge, to sign all the minutes on the closing day, but it is mandatory that the minutes be signed before adjournment of the term, and unless so done all the decretal proceedings taken at the term will be invalid; * * *

The statute quoted from in the foregoing section is Mississippi Code 1942 Annotated section 1665 (1956), and the author correctly states the rule as to this statute as it was then written. However, at the 1962 Regular Session of the Mississippi Legislature this statute was amended by the following paragraph:

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Bluebook (online)
207 So. 2d 640, 1968 Miss. LEXIS 1626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eubanks-v-w-h-hodges-co-miss-1968.