Hooks v. Burns

152 So. 469, 168 Miss. 723, 1934 Miss. LEXIS 374
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1934
DocketNo. 31009.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 152 So. 469 (Hooks v. Burns) 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
Hooks v. Burns, 152 So. 469, 168 Miss. 723, 1934 Miss. LEXIS 374 (Mich. 1934).

Opinion

*727 Anderson, J.,

delivered tlie opinion of the court.

Appellee filed her bill on the equity side of the county court of Quitman county against appellant and the Citizens ’ Bank & Trust Company of Marks to recover the sum of one hundred seventy-six dollars deposited by appellant with the bank, being the proceeds of the sale of cotton produced by him on land of appellee on which appellee had a landlord’s lien for rent. There was a trial on bill, answer, and proofs, resulting in a decree in favor of appellee. On appeal by appellant to the circuit court, the decree of the comity court was affirmed. From that decree appellant prosecutes this appeal.

Appellee set up in her bill, in substance, that she owned certain sixty acres of land in Quitman county which she leased for the year 1932 to Q. O. Steadman. The bill fails to set out the amount of rent Steadman was to pay for the land; the amount opposite the dollar mark being left blank. The bill charges that Steadman subrented part of the land for the same year to appellant, for which appellant agreed to pay him one hundred seventy-six dollars; that appellant produced crops on the land, including cotton, and out of the proceeds of the sale of the cotton, he deposited the sum of one hundred seventy-six dollars to his own credit in the Citizens ’ Bank & Trust Company of Marks; that Steadman paid all the rent he agreed to pay appellee, except the sum of one hundred seventy-six dollars, the exact amount appellant had on deposit in the bank; that appellee was entitled to subject the one hundred seventy-six dollars in the bank to the payment of the balance due her by Steadman for rent, for the reason that she had a landlord’s lien for Steadman’s rent on the crops produced by appellant, of which the one hundred seventy-six dollars was a part of the proceeds.

*728 Appellant answered the bill and made his answer a cross-bill seeking to make new parties. He set up in his answer that one Peter Curry worked part of these sixty acres of land leased by Steadman from appellee, and that Steadman worked part of it and both of them produced crops thereon, and that the value of such crops was more than sufficient to pay the rent Steadman agreed to pay appellee for the sixty acres of land; that one T. M. Garrott had purchased all the cotton produced on the land by Steadman and Curry. Appellant averred in his cross-bill that he objected to the one hundred seventy-six dollars he had placed in the bank being subjected to the payment of the balance of the rent due by Steadman to appellee, for the reason that Steadman owed him a larger amount than that sum, which amount he proposed to offset against the one hundred seventy-six dollars to that extent. In his cross-bill appellant prayed that Stead-man, Curry, and Garrott be made parties to the cause as cross-defendants, and that appellee’s remedy for her rent be first exhausted against Steadman, Curry, and Garrott before resorting to the one hundred seventy-six dollars which he had on deposit in the bank.

Appellee demurred to the answer and cross-bill. The demurrer was sustained, and properly so, upon the ground that new parties cannot be introduced into a cause by a cross-bill. Griffith’s Chancery Practice, sec. 382; Ladner v. Ogden, 31 Miss. 332 ; Bishop v. Miller, 48 Miss. 369 ; Shaw v. Millsaps, 50 Miss. 380 ; Wright v. Prank, 61 Miss. 32 ; District Grand Lodge v. Leonard, 92 Miss. 777, 46 So. 532 ; Lemmon v. Dunn, 61 Miss. 210.

Appellant thereupon filed an answer to appellee’s bill, admitting, in substance, the facts therein alleged, but not the conclusions of law. He further set up in his answer, as he had in his-cross-bill, that his landlord, Steadman, owed him more than the one hundred seventy-six dollars, which latter amount he had the right to credit on what Steadman owed him, for the reason that Steadman and *729 Curry had produced more than enough crops on the leased land cultivated by them to pay the entire rent due by Steadman to appellee, that the cotton produced by them had been sold to T. M. Garrott, and that under the law it was the duty of appellee to exhaust her remedy for the balance due her by Steadman by proceeding against him and Curry and Garrott.

After the demurrer was sustained to the answer and cross-bill, appellant moved the court, by reason of the matters set up in his answer and cross-bill, to require the complainant to so amend her bill as to make Curry, Garrott, and Steadman parties to the cause, because they were necessary parties, in order to determine the rights and equities of all concerned. This motion was overruled by the court.

In its decree, the court awarded a recovery in favor of appellee against appellant and the Citizens’ Bank & Trust Company of the one hundred seventy-six dollars. The evidence, although more or less indefinite as to the amount of crops produced on the land by Steadman and Curry and the value of such crops purchased by Garrott, tended to show that they were of sufficient value to pay the balance of the rent due by Steadman to appellee.

The question in the case is whether or not the court, erred in refusing to require appellee to so amend her bill as to make Steadman, Curry, and Garrott parties to the cause, and that question turns upon whether or not they were necessary parties. A court of equity will not proceed with a cause if the complainant has failed to bring in necessary parties. Griffith’s Chancery Practice, sec. 109. Necessary parties include all persons who have such a substantial interest in the cause as that no “complete, practicable and executable final decree can be made without directly affecting their interest, or else leaving the controversy in such a condition that its final determination may be wholly inconsistent with equity and good conscience.” Griffith’s Chancery Practice, sec. 102.

*730 If appellee liad proceeded at law instead of in equity, under the authority of Applewhite v. Nelms, 71 Miss. 482, 14 So. 443, appellant would have had the right to resort to a court of equity making appellee, Steadman, Curry, and Garrott parties, and enjoining the action at law, and compelling appellee to exhaust her remedy against Stead-man and Garrott to the extent of the value of the crops produced hy Steadman and purchased by Garrott, and adjust the equities between appellant and Curry if the latter was also a subtenant of Steadman.

Section 2186, Code of 1930, gives the lessor of land a lien on all the agricultural products of the leased premises, however and by whomsoever produced, to secure the payment of rent, money, and supplies advanced the tenant. This section is a rescript of section 2495, Ann. Code'of 1892, which was under consideration and construed in the Applewhite case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
152 So. 469, 168 Miss. 723, 1934 Miss. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hooks-v-burns-miss-1934.