Gillum v. Case

71 Miss. 848
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 71 Miss. 848 (Gillum v. Case) 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
Gillum v. Case, 71 Miss. 848 (Mich. 1894).

Opinion

Cooper, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an. action brought by the appellants to recover from the appellee mesne profits of certain lands received by appellee from December. 1880, to May, 1889.

The defendant pleaded that the plaintiffs had, before that time, instituted against, her an action of ejectment for the recovery of the possession of the lands the mesne profits of which are demanded in the present suit, in which actiou the defendant had set up and claimed for valuable and permanent. improvements ; and that, on the eleventh day of December, A.D. 1891, the plaintiffs had recovered a judgment in said former proceedings for the possession of said lands, but it was in said proceeding also determined and adjudged that the value of the improvements put upon the land by the de[852]*852femlant was the sum of three thousand seven hundred dollars, for which sum it was adjudged the defendant had a lien upon the lands. The sum thus found due, the defendant pleaded as a set-off’ against the plaintiffs’ demand. To this plea the plaintiffs replied that, in the action of ejectment they had not demanded mesne profits against the defendant; that by the verdict of the jury in that action the following facts were found:

1. That the plaintiffs were entitled to recover the possession of the laud.

2. That the value of the land, exclusive of improvements put thereon by the defendant, was $450.

8. That the value of the improvements put on the land by the defendant was $3,700; that the plaintiffs declined to pay to the defendant the value of her improvements as assessed by the jury, and thereupon the defendant paid to the plaintiffs the value of their lands as found by the jury, and was awarded a perpetual stay of execution, as provided by the statute; wherefore the plaintiffs insist by their replication that the demand pleaded by the defendant as a set-off has been fully paid and disehai’ged. To this replication, the defendant demurred, and her demurrer was sustained, and, the plaintiffs refusing to further reply, judgment final was rendered against them, from which they appeal.

Our statute by which the question involved is controlled, is as follows : “ In all cases where the defendant in ejectment would be liable for mesne profits and damages, the plaintiff' may declare for and recover the same in the action of ejectment, or he may have his action for mesne profits after the recovery in ejectment as heretofore ; but it shall be lawful in all cases for the defendant in ejectment, whether the plaintiff demand mesne profits or damages or not, or in an action for mesne profits, to plead the value of all permanent, valuable and not ornamental improvements made by the defendant on the land, or by any one under whom he holds, before notice of the intention of the plaintiff to bring the action, [853]*853and all taxes that may have been lawfully paid on the land by defendant or those under whom he holds up to the date of trial, including iuterest, costs and damages incident to such taxes; but a defendant shall not be entitled to such compensation for improvements or taxes unless he claim the premises under some deed or contract of purchase acquired or made in good faith.” Code of 1892, § 1673; Code of 1880, § 2512.

“ The jury shall find the actual cash value of such improvements, and the amount of taxes paid, the value of the mesne profits and damages, and the actual cash value of the land without the improvements; where the value of the improvements and taxes exceeds the value of the mesne profits and damages, the defendant shall have a lien upon the land for the difference between the value of the mesne profits and the value of improvements and taxes so found, and execution shall not issue in favor of the plaintiff’ until he shall have paid the amount so found due to the defendant; and unless the plaintiff’, within three months after the rendition of the verdict, pay the amount so found due, the defendant may pay to the plaintiff' the assessed value of the land, with interest from the date of the verdict, and pay the*costs of the suit, and thereupon the execution of the judgment for the recovery of the land shall be perpetually stayed; and if the defendant fail to pay to the plaintiff the value of the land so assessed, with interest and costs of suit, within three months after the expiration of the time allowed the plaintiff for making payment, an execution shall issue for the sale of the land recovered in the ejectment.”' Code 1892, § 1674; Code 1880, §2512. ■

JBy the code of 1880 (§ 2512) it was provided that out of the proceeds of the sale of the laud, after payment of costs, the plaintiff should first be paid the assessed value of the land, with interest from the day of verdict, and then that the defendant should be paid the assessed value of the improvements above the value of the mesne profits and damages, with [854]*854interest as aforesaid, if the residue should be so much ; and, if a surplus should remain, the same should be ratably divided between the plaintiff and the defendant. .By the code of 1892 it is provided that the proceeds of the sale, after payment of costs, “shall be divided between the plaintiff and the defendant in proportion to the sums due them respectively, as found by the vei’dict.” See § 1675.

It- is contended for the plaintiffs that they were allowed by law either to demand mesne profits and damages in the action of ejectment, or to pretermit the demand in that suit, and afterwards prosecute another for the damages and profits alone; that the defendant was, in like manner, permitted to interpose her claim for improvements in the action of ejectment, and fix it as a lien on the property, or to withhold it to bo asserted in any suit that the plaintiffs might thereafter institu te to recover mesne profits and damages; that the defendant’s claim has not only been adjudicated in the former suit, but has been finally and fully paid and discharged by the acquisition of title by her of the land on which the improvements are located; that to permit the defendant to secure the land and the improvements by paying to the plaintiffs the value of the laud without the improvements, and then to set off, as against the present demand for mesne profits and damages, the value of such improvements, is to allow her to recover twice on the same demand. For the defendant it is argued that the same statute by which it is provided that the plaintiffs could recover mesne profits and damages in the action of ejectment or in a subsequent suit, also provides that the defendant may, in “all cases” in ejectment, or in the separate action for mesne profits, plead the value of improvements made by him or those under whom he holds; and so it is contended for the defendant that she may set up against the plaintiffs the value of the improvements made by her so often and wherever she is pursued by them touching her occupancy of the land, the receipts of the profits thereof or injury thereto.

[855]*855We do not tbink it possible for the defendant to maintain that she is now the owner of a liquidated and adjudicated demand agaiust the plaintiff's which can be relied on as a set-off. The plaintiffs never owed lier any thing, and she never could have.maintained an action against them to compel them to pay to her the value of the improvements she had placed upon the land. For the protection of her possession of the land, the statute permitted her to interpose her claim to the extent that she and those under whom she claimed liad improved the estate.

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Bluebook (online)
71 Miss. 848, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gillum-v-case-miss-1894.