Floreen v. Saucier

27 So. 2d 557, 200 Miss. 428, 1946 Miss. LEXIS 306
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 14, 1946
DocketNo. 36095.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 27 So. 2d 557 (Floreen v. Saucier) 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
Floreen v. Saucier, 27 So. 2d 557, 200 Miss. 428, 1946 Miss. LEXIS 306 (Mich. 1946).

Opinion

*431 L. A. Smith, Sr., J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellant filed in the Chancery Court of Harrison County his original bill of complaint against appellees, J. K. Saucier and W. B. Lundy, praying for a decree canceling *432 the forfeited land tax patent to certain lands obtained by the said J. K. Saucier, from the State of Mississippi, as a cloud upon his title to the lands in Harrison County; also for a writ of possession and an injunction against ‘ ‘ turpentining’ the trees thereon, or otherwise interfering with your complainant, in the full and complete enjoyment of said land. ’ ’ Appellant later amended the original bill by making appellee Saucier a party defendant as trustee for the heirs of Philip Saucier, to whom, it was averred, the United States Government issued a patent, “conveying said land in confirmation of a French or Spanish claim, ’ ’ said Philip Saucier having died in 1820.

This amendment also contained this averment: ‘ ‘ Complainant further shows unto the court, that he and his predecessors in title and right, have paid collectively, all of the taxes, which has been due and payable, lawfully, levied upon said land, from 1931 up to the present time, and that the total amount so paid for said taxes on said land, amount to more than Six Hundred ($600.00) Dollars, leaving out of consideration, the accrued interest, costs and damages arising thereby, which is however claimed, in the alternative, if title should be held invalid.” Appellant further amended his original bill, complaining that appellee Saucier procured a patent from the State Land Office to said lands, and was asserting a. pretended claim of title to said land thereunder; which patent was illegal and void, and cast a cloud on the title of complainant to said lands.

The other issues involving damages for cutting and turpentining trees by appellee Lundy, a grantee of Saucier, need not be discussed, as to do so would only unduly prolong this opinion. Saucier filed answer categorically denying the adverse averments of the complaint, and affirmatively setting out the various steps leading to the issuance to him, as an heir of Philip Saucier and as trustee for his heirs, of the forfeited land tax patent by the State of Mississippi on January 31,1941, pursuant to application and payment for same. The land involved *433 in this suit and granted by the challenged State patent, was sold to the State in 1933 for default in payment of the 1932 taxes thereon. The Chancery Court at the conclusion of the testimony offered on behalf of the appellant, rightfully sustained a motion by appellees to exclude it all and enter a decree for them. Additional discussion of that phase of the case would not be of general interest to the bench and bar, and we will, therefore, forego doing so.

However, there was an agreement in the record, as follows: “It is agreed by the complainant and parties defendant that the defendants, in their supplementary answer, have raised the question of lack of necessary parties defendant, and have given in their answer reference to the court records and books and pages of the deed records where these names may be obtained, and that by agreement that issue will be heard by the court in connection with the other issues involved in this suit, and that the defendants do not waive that question about proceeding to the hearing of the other issues, and that the court will rule on that question at the conclusion of the hearing of evidence on the other issues. ’ ’ Upon the court’s sustaining appellee’s (defendant’s) motion, supra, the appellees, defendants below, requested the court “to pass upon the question of whether the complainant should be permitted to proceed further until all of said Saucier heirs have been made parties hereto and are in court.” The further procedure, as we understand the record, concerned the refund of taxes and amounts paid for purchase of the land by appellant and his predecessors in title. In this connection, the Chancery Court embraced this provision in the final decree: “except as to complainant’s claim for amounts paid by the purchaser of the land involved at the tax sale referred to in the Bill of Complaint and sums paid as taxes on said land and expenses and interest; the court reserves jurisdiction of said cause for the purpose of hearing further evidence and adjudicating the amounts, if any, entitled to be recovered by complainant therefor. Whereupon the said defendants called upon *434 the court to rule upon their objection that complainant should not be allowed to proceed further with this suit until the heirs of Philip Saucier are made parties hereto and are properly served with process, as raised by defendants in their supplementary answer herein and upon which ruling was reserved by agreement of the parties dictated in the record at the commencement of the hearing hereof; and the court finding that said objection is well taken and should be sustained and that the said heirs of Philip Saucier are necessary and indispensable parties to any further proceedings herein; it is therefore Ordered, Adjudged And Decreed that complainant proceed .no further in this cause until the said heirs of Philip Saucier are made parties hereto and served with process as provided by statute.” This complainants refused to do, and were granted an appeal here

The record contains an affidavit by the solicitor of appellant, complainant below, sworn, however, in his personal capacity. This affidavit sets up, among other things, that the heirs of the original grantee, Philip Saucier, now number about 1500, a greater portion of whom were unknown to him or to appellant; and that approximately five hundred of them resided in Mississippi, but their names and post office addresses were unknown to affiant and complainant (appellant) after reasonable, diligent search therefor; that the signers of the agreement whereby Saucier was made trustee constituted only about a fourth of them; that some were minors, whose names, places of residence and guardians were unknown, and could not be ascertained except at large and unreasonable expense and cost; and that process upon the Mississippi ■heirs would cost approximately the value of the land in controversy- “leaving out of consideration the recovery of the taxes paid by complainant upon said land, and 'or his predecessors in title.” We think in ruling that 'complainant be not permitted to proceed further until -all the heirs of Philip Saucier, deceased, were brought ‘into court by process, the Chancery Court was in error *435 under the Numerous Party Rule. Since, in our judgment, the case must be reversed and remanded because of disregard of this rule, we will confine our discussion to it.

Griffith’s Mississippi Chancery Practice, Art. 106, treating the Numerous Party Rule, as an exception to the general-rule prescribing that all persons mutually interested ought to be made parties, said: “Another (exception to the general rule) is that occasionally the parties are so numerous if all were required to- be brought in it would be equivalent to denying the suit.” The author cites McPike v. Wells, 54 Miss. 136; Boisgerard v. Wall, Smedes & M. Ch. 404; and Coulson v. Harris, 43 Miss. 728.

21 C. J., Equity, sec. 293, page 292, 30 C. J. S., Equity, sec. 145, p.

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Bluebook (online)
27 So. 2d 557, 200 Miss. 428, 1946 Miss. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/floreen-v-saucier-miss-1946.