Gaddis & McLaurin, Inc. v. Nichols

105 So. 2d 459, 234 Miss. 155, 1958 Miss. LEXIS 477
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1958
DocketNo. 40837
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 105 So. 2d 459 (Gaddis & McLaurin, Inc. v. Nichols) 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
Gaddis & McLaurin, Inc. v. Nichols, 105 So. 2d 459, 234 Miss. 155, 1958 Miss. LEXIS 477 (Mich. 1958).

Opinions

Kyle, J.

This case is before us again on direct appeal by Gaddis & McLaurin, Incorporated, complainant in the court below, and cross-appeal by James W. Nichols and others, defendants in the court below, from a decree of the Chancery Court of the Second Judicial District of Hinds County removing clouds, adjudicating the interests and confirming the title of the respective parties in the 100-acre tract of land described as that part of the SEI4 of Section 3, Township 5, Eange 2 West, in the Second Judicial District of Hinds County, which lies south of Baker’s Creek, and establishing a right of way easement in favor of Gaddis & McLaurin, Incorporated, over and across an adjoining 19-acre tract of land in the SW% of said Section 3 owned by the defendants. This is the third time the case has been before us on appeal. See Nichols v. Gaddis & McLaurin (1954), 222 Miss. 207, 75 So. 2d 625; Nichols v. Gaddis & McLaurin, Inc., (1956), 228 Miss. 1, 87 So. 2d 673. The records before this Court on the two former appeals have been incorporated in and made a part of the record on this appeal.

[160]*160The questions presented for our decision on this appeal are inseparably connected with the issues which the Court had under consideration on the two former appeals. It is therefore necessary that we state briefly the facts underlying the claims of each of the respective parties, as set forth in the pleadings which the Court had before it on the first appeal, and that we give a brief summary of the new matters set forth in the amended pleadings filed by the respective parties after the rendition of the judgment of this Court on the first appeal.

As stated by this Court on the first appeal, the record shows that the 100-acre tract of land was conveyed by Annie L. McNeill and D. A. McNeill to Jim Nichols, who was also known as “ J. N.” Nichols, Matt Nichols, M. C. Nichols, Willie Nichols and Lem Nichols by warranty deed dated December 22, 1897. Matt Nichols was the father of the other four above named grantees, and each of the five grantees became vested with an undivided one-fifth interest in the property.

The record shows that Matt Nichols died in 1900, and left surviving him his widow, Abbie Nichols, and eight children, including the four who were named as grantees in the above mentioned deed. M. C. Nichols died in 1910, and left surviving him his widow, “Roberta”, who never lived on the Nichols place after her husband’s death. Abbie Nichols, Matt Nichols’ widow, died in 1912. Lem Nichols left the Nichols place in 1916 and went to the Delta. He remained there until 1927, when he and his wife, Henrietta, returned to the Nichols place to help his brother J. N. with his farm work. Lem died in 1930, and Henrietta went to Louisiana to live with some of her own people. Willie Nichols left the Nichols place in 1916 and went to Jackson. He never lived on the Nichols place thereafter. It thus appears that Jim or “J. N.” Nichols was the only one of the five grantees named in the 1897 deed who remained on the land after 1916. The other children of Matt and Abbie, who were not named [161]*161as grantees in the deed of 1897, were Charlie, Engene, Mattie and Ethel. Mattie died in 1915; and Ethel died in 1918. Charlie left the Nichols place with Lem in 1916 and went to the Delta, bnt returned to the Nichols place with Lem in 1927, and died there in 1946. Eugene went to Greenville in 1916, and died there in 1942.

J. N. Nichols and his family continued to live in the old log house on the 100-acre tract until 1924, when he moved into a house on the above mentioned 19-acre tract of land which fronted on the public road. J. N. Nichols had purchased the 19-acre tract in 1906, taking title thereto in his own name. In 1915 the 100-acre tract of land was assessed to J. N. Nichols for taxes and continued to be so assessed to him through the year 1932. J. N. Nichols borrowed money on the 100-acres and executed mortgage deeds of trust thereon, and appears to have exercised exclusive control over the 100 acres and the 19 acres, treating the same as one farm unit, until his death. J. N. Nichols died in 1930, and left surviving him his widod, Mary Nichols, and eight children, namely: James W. Nichols, Matthew Nichols, Welborn Nichols, K. B. Nichols, Willie B. Robinson, Selman Nichols, and Lillie Nichols Williams.

As stated in the opinion rendered on the first appeal, Gaddis & McLaurin claimed title to the 100-acre tract of land by virtue of the attempted foreclosure of a mortgage deed of trust executed by J. N. Nichols and his wife to H. B. Gillespie, as trustee, on February 3, 1928, to secure the payment of an indebtedness of $1527.77 due and owing to Mrs. Sallie Y. Herring and evidenced by a promissory note of even date therewith, due December 1, 1928, and by virtue of its adverse possession of the land under color of title for a period of 19 years after the date of the foreclosure of the mortgage deed of trust on March 7, 1932. The deed of trust executed by J. N. Nichols and his wife to H. B. Gillespie, as trustee, on February 3, 1928, purported to convey and warrant to [162]*162the trustee the entire fee simple title to the land. It was properly signed and acknowledged and was filed for record three days after its execution. It vested in Mrs. Herring power to appoint another trustee in the place of the trustee therein named, if from any cause said trustee should not he present, able and willing to execute the trust. But the power to appoint a substitute trustee was conferred upon Mrs. Herring only, and not upon her legal representatives or assignees, of any subsequent holder of the indebtedness.

The facts relating to the foreclosure of the mortgage deed of trust and Gaddis & McLaurin’s purchase of the land at the foreclosure sale, and the facts relating to Gaddis & McLaurin’s possession of the land under claim of title during the next succeeding twenty years, as shown by the record, are substantially as follows:

On February 6, 1929, W. Y. Herring and Mrs. Sallie Y. Herring, being indebted to Gaddis & McLaurin, of Bolton, Mississippi, a partnership consisting of J. L. Gaddis and George C. McLaurin in a large sum of money, executed a deed of trust to M. Ney Williams, trustee, to secure said indebtedness. In that deed of trust the grantors conveyed to said trustee several hundred acres of land, and also livestock and other personal property, including the above mentioned note of J. N. Nichols for the sum of $1527.77, payable to Mrs. Herring, and “secured by first deed of trust on 100 acres of land.” Default was made in the payment of the indebtedness owing by the Herrings to Gaddis & McLaurin, and the deed of trust executed by them to Gaddis & McLaurin was foreclosed by a trustee’s sale of the property on January 28, 1932. Gaddis & McLaurin became the purchasers of the property at the foreclosure sale, and the trustee executed a deed of conveyance of the property to Gaddis & McLaurin, including the J. N. Nichols’ note for the sum of $1527.77, “secured by deed of trust on 100 acres of land.”

J. N. Nichols having died during the latter part of 1930, and the J. N. Nichols’ note being past due and un[163]*163paid, on February 2, 1932, J. L. Gaddis, Sr., and George C. McLaurin executed an instrument of writing for the appointment of M. Ney Williams as substitute trustee in the J. N. Nichols deed of trust in the place of H. B.

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Bluebook (online)
105 So. 2d 459, 234 Miss. 155, 1958 Miss. LEXIS 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaddis-mclaurin-inc-v-nichols-miss-1958.