Gill v. Johnson

40 So. 2d 600, 206 Miss. 707, 1949 Miss. LEXIS 295
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 23, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 40 So. 2d 600 (Gill v. Johnson) 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
Gill v. Johnson, 40 So. 2d 600, 206 Miss. 707, 1949 Miss. LEXIS 295 (Mich. 1949).

Opinion

*711 McGehee, C. J.

This is a suit in ejeetment and was filed on August 25, 1945, by the devisees under the will of John W. Hilton, deceased, to recover possession of Lot 59 of the Thrift *712 Survey in the City of Vicksburg, in Warren County, Mississippi, which was owned by the testator at the time of his death on September 20, 1938, and which was sold to the appellant David B. Gill on November 8, 1941, for the payment of the debts of the estate of the testator under a decree of the Chancery Court of said County, and which sale was duly confirmed by said Court on November 15, 1941, at which time the purchaser went into the actual possession of the property after having paid the purchase money and received a deed therefor.

Section 745, Code of 1942, Section 2315, Code of 1930, reads as follows: “An action shall not be brought to recover any property hereafter sold by order of a chancery court, where the sale is in good faith and the purchase-money paid, unless brought within two years after pos•session taken by the purchaser under such sale of the property. ’ ’

The two remaining parcels of real estate owned by the testator at the time of his death, which are likewise located in the City of Vicksburg where the decedent had a fixed place of residence during the last sixteen years of his lifetime, were also sold for the payment of the debts of the estate, under a decree of the Chancery Court of Warren County, but the property embraced in those two sales is not involved in this ejectment suit.

At the conclusion of all of the evidence the trial court, in responding to the contention of the defendants David B. Gill and others that the plaintiffs Mrs. Lyda Johnson and others had participated in the proceedings whereby this real estate was ordered sold for the payment of the debts in the hearing of the report of the Commissioner and the confirmation of the sale of the property to the defendant David B. Gill on November 15,1941, and also that they were parties to the proceedings whereby the final account, filed on September 28, 1942, of the administratrix Mrs. Nora Hilton, who made such sales and distributed the proceeds in the payment of the debts and the expense of the administration of the estate, etc., announced *713 its conclusion to the effect that “the doctrine of res judicata does not apply in this case. The petition filed by Mrs. Lyda Johnson (which is discussed in the case of Johnson v. Hilton et al., 197 Miss. 400, 19 So. (2d) 694) did not aslc that the sales be set aside: . . .” And the trial court further held that: “The two year statute (Section 745 Code 1942, hereinbefore quoted) would bar this suit except that I do not think that the defendants here have met the burden of proof that these sales were in good faith, . . .”. Therefore, the Court overruled the motion of the defendants for a peremptory instruction in their favor, and then granted a directed verdict in favor of the plaintiffs, saying: “I consider these sales void until you show they are not, until you prove they were made in good faith.” The Court evidently oveidooked the fact that when the defendants had shown that the property involved in this ejectment suit had been sold by order of the Chancery Court, the purchase money paid and possession taken by the purchaser under such sale, and had testified, without contradiction, as to the good faith, they had sustained their plea of the bar of the statute of limitation unless the plaintiffs could show in rebuttal that the sale was not in good faith. No such testimony was offered in rebuttal. Bad faith was not to be presumed in favor of the plaintiff’s as against the defendants. The sale was shown to have been made under a solemn decree of the Chancery Court, with proper notice to and appearance by all of the parties in interest and the sale had been made in order to pay the debts of the estate, as aforesaid, and the decree of confirmation thereof was unappealed from. The presumption is that the Chancery Court had also acted in good faith in ordering the sale and that the administratrix was guilty of no bad faith in conducting the sale and conveying the property to the purchaser. Moreover, the court had necessarily adjudicated in confirming the sale that the property had brought a fair price.

*714 The only circnmstances on which the trial court could have based its conclusion that the sale was not made in good faith as to the particular parcel of land involved in the ejectment suit, are, (1) that the purchaser at the sale made by the administratrix under the decree of the Chancery Court later married her, nearly eleven months after the sale, and, (2) that the purchaser testified that he paid the amount of his bid of $1,400.00 in cash at the sale. The trial court may have thought it unreasonable that the intended purchaser would have carried $1,400.00 in cash to the sale, although the sale was advertised to be made for cash and his testimony was uncontradicted in regard thereto; and the Court may have been of the further opinion that the purchase was made for the benefit of the administratrix who sold the land, but there is no proof in the record to that effect.

Moreover, it was undisputed and affirmatively shown that the bid was actually paid in some manner, since the admininstratrix charged herself with the proceeds thereof in her final account and showed that she had applied the same to the payment of the probated claims against the estate, and the plaintiffs in ejectment were parties to the proceeding whereby the final account was approved, and the decree in that behalf was unappealed from.

Then, too, it is shown that thereafter the plaintiff Mrs. Lyda Johnson, as the executrix named in the will of the testator and on behalf of all of the devisees thereunder, filed a petition asking that the administratrix be required to deliver to her the property remaining in the hands of the administratrix. The property so remaining in her hands was the excess of the proceeds of the sale after the payment of the debts and the expenses of the administration, and which excess amounted to the sum of $690.24, as shown by the opinion in the case of Johnson v. Hilton, supra, decided on November 13, 1944, by this Court, wherein the Court said [197 Miss. 400 19 So. (2d) 696]: “It will be noted the petition does not pray that the sales *715 of real property be set aside. On the contrary, it asks that the proceeds of snch sales be paid petitioners.”

In the instant case, at the conclusion of all of the evidence, the court declined to grant' a peremptory instruction in favor of the defendants on the further ground urged by them to the effect that the ejectment suit constituted a collateral attack upon the judgment and decrees of the Chancery Court in the matter of the ádministration of the estate of John W. Hilton, deceased, the trial court being of the opinion that the decree for the sale of the land and the decree confirming such sale in the purchaser were null and void and, therefore, amounted to nothing. And this brings us to a consideration of the question of whether or not the Chancery Court had jurisdiction to order the sale of the property to be made by Mrs. Nora Hilton, administratrix and sole heir at law of her deceased husband John W.

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Bluebook (online)
40 So. 2d 600, 206 Miss. 707, 1949 Miss. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gill-v-johnson-miss-1949.