Galloway v. Inglis

103 So. 147, 138 Miss. 350, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 56
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1925
DocketNo. 24710.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 103 So. 147 (Galloway v. Inglis) 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
Galloway v. Inglis, 103 So. 147, 138 Miss. 350, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 56 (Mich. 1925).

Opinion

Ethridge, J.,

delivered tbe opinion of the court.

The appellee, R. Inglis, was complainant and filed a bill in the chancery court alleging that he was the owner in fee simple of certain lands described in the bill, the bill covering two separate tracts of land, and deraigns his title thereto. It is further alleged that the defendants are making some sort of pretense or claim to both tracts of land by virtue of a deed from certain parties named therein to B. B. Galloway, one of the defendants, and also a purported lease from B. B. Galloway to Mary A. Galloway, the wife of O. D. Galloway, which last conveyance operates as a cloud, doubt, and suspicion on the title of complainant, and that the defendants have no title or interest in said property. It is further alleged-that complainant had been in the open, notorious possession of said lands for more than thirty years. It is further alleged that the complainant is now in the possession of the first of said named tracts, and that he is entitled to the possession of the second-named tract upon which were growing certain orange trees, and that the defendant C. D. Galloway was cutting large branches off of said orange trees and practically destroying such trees, and would continue to do so unless restrained; said acts being against the will and consent of complainant. It is further alleged that the defendant C. D. Galloway is insolvent and cannot be made to respond in damages for the cutting of the orange trees, and prayed for an injunction against the defendants restraining them from further cutting said trees, and for a final decree canceling the deeds to B. B. Galloway, and for a writ of possession, and for general relief.

The defendant B. B. Galloway denied that the com-plainant was the owner of said tracts of land, and denied that the property claimed and occupied by the defend *355 ant was the property of the complainant or that the complainant had any right, title, or interest therein. The defendant admits that he acquired possession and title to the land under the deeds which his answer sets forth, but denied that such lands were the lands owned by the complainant. The defendant B. B. Galloway denied further that the deeds set forth in the deraignment of title in complainant’s bill vested any right, title, or interest in the complainant to the property occupied and claimed by the defendants. The defendant B. B. Galloway admits that he is in possession through the lease to Mrs. Mary A. Galloway as alleged in the bill. The answer then sets forth the description of the property claimed and owned by the defendant and deraigns his title thereto. The defendant B. B. Galloway also admits that the complainant is in the possession of the first of the described tracts of land, but denies his title thereto or his interest therein. The defendant B. B. Galloway further alleged that the defendant also had title by adverse possession of himself and his predecessors in title-claiming to be the owner thereof both under record color of title and by actual possession. Defendant B. B. Galloway also denied that the complainant had been in possession‘of such property or had any possession for such time as would confer title on him, and further denied that complainant is entitled to an injunction to prevent the cutting of the orange trees which he alleges are situated on the property of the defendant, and denies complainant’s right to have a writ of possession for said tract of land, and denies that complainant is entitled to any relief whatsoever.

The defendants C. D. Galloway and Mary A. Galloway, wife of C. D. Galloway, adopt the answer of B. B. Galloway as their answer in all respects. The defendant C. D. Galloway, further answering, denies that he is cutting off large branches of said orange trees and practically" destroying them and will continue to do so unless restrained, etc.; and said defendant, C. D. Galloway, says *356 that he cut and removed a few small branches from said orange trees under the advice and instruction of the United States Government Plant Inspectors, and that such cutting was done to protect and preserve said orange trees and not to injure them; that such trimming was necessary in order-to properly preserve, protect, and cultivate said orange trees; and denies that such orange trees or the land on which they are situated are the property of complainant, or that complainant has any right, title, or interest therein; and denies that he has caused or permitted said trees to be injured in any manner whatsoever; and denies that complainant is entitled to any relief.

It appears from the testimony that the complainant, Inglis, had formerly executed a deed to O. D. Galloway for the lands described in the bill of complaint, said C. D. Galloway making certain payments thereon; that said O. D. Galloway was shown and sold a tract of land situated in a different section and that he entered into possession of the tract which was shown to him as being the tract of land he had bought but which land was not described in the deeds to him, and that said C. D. Galloway made certain improvements upon the said tract of land; that he afterwards discovered that his deed did not convey the tract of land which he had entered upon, but that the description of the land was land situated in another section, which land was about a mile distant from the land which he was occupying; that defendant C. D. Galloway thereupon declined to make further payments on the land, and the complainant, without tendering him a deed correctly describing the land or taking any proceeding to have the title adjudicated in him, proceeded to foreclose the deed of trust given by C. D. Galloway which described the land which the deed to O. D. Galloway described. It also appears that after this foreclosure proceeding was begun, two ejectment suits were filed against O. D. Galloway to the two tracts .of land and possession of the first tract awarded by judgment to Inglis. The sec *357 ond suit, or the suit to the second tract of land, was defended by the defendant C. D. Galloway, and the defendant B. B. Galloway was brought in as the owner to defend title, and such suit was still pending at the time of the filing of the bill of complaint above referred to.

Surveys of the land occupied by C. D. Galloway and his wife, Mary A. Galloway, were made by surveyors, and the land was located in a different section, to-wit, section 22. The lands described in the bill were located in section 9.

Proof was taken before the chancellor, and the conveyances referred to in the deraignment of title were introduced in evidence and showed that the complainant did not have title to the lands occupied by the Galloways. In other words, the proof introduced by the complainant failed to make out a case, and the bill was not amended so as to pray for a reformation of the deeds involved; but at the conclusion of the testimony the complainant, recognizing that he could not recover as against B. B. Galloway, requested and was allowed to dismiss the bill as to B. B. Galloway without prejudice, but the bill was retained against C. D. Galloway and his wife. Mary A. Galloway, and the court found that the proof did not sustain title by adverse possession on the part of the complainant to the said land, and recognized that the complainant had failed to establish title either by a paper title or by adverse possession, but held that as C. D. Galloway had been put in possession of the land under the deed executed by Inglis, C. D.

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Bluebook (online)
103 So. 147, 138 Miss. 350, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galloway-v-inglis-miss-1925.