House v. Gumble & Co.

78 Miss. 259
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 78 Miss. 259 (House v. Gumble & Co.) 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
House v. Gumble & Co., 78 Miss. 259 (Mich. 1900).

Opinion

Terral, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Gumble & Co. filed their bill in the chancery court of Washington county to cancel two tax deeds made to L. R. Crouch [265]*265by the tax collector on the fifth day of March, 1897, of the west half of lots 8 and 9, of block é, first addition of the town of Areola, in said Washington county, Mississippi. On the first Monday of March, 1897, the tax collector of Washington county sold, for the taxes of 1896, the west half of lot 8, and the wrest half of lot 9, of block i, of the first addition of the town of Areola, in Washington county. The said two halves of said lots were sold separately to L. R. Crouch, and were separately conveyed to her, and, soon after the two years allowed for redemption passed, Mrs. Crouch sold and conveyed her tax title to said lots to the defendant, J. B. House. The said two parcels of land, at the time of their assessment, were the property of Lelia E'. Holcomb, but were assessed to J. R. Holcomb. Gumble & Co. allege and show, as constituting their claim to the relief sought by them, a trust deed executed by Mi'S. Holcomb, on the ninth day of April, 1896, conveying the property in controversy to Henry E. Gumble, as trustee, to secure to them an indebtedness of something more than $1,000; a sale under said deed of trust on the fourteenth day of February, 1898, and a purchase by them of said property; and also the execution, on the nineteenth day of February, 1898, of a deed to said property to them by said trustee. It appears from the record that Lelia E. Holcomb, on the fourteenth day of February, 1898, filed in the chancery court of Washington county her bill of complaint against Gumble & Co., the beneficiaries in the deed of trust above alluded to, and against Henry E. Gumble, the trustee therein, alleging a payment oi other discharge from said alleged indebtedness to them, and praying relief therefrom, and with said bill she filed the fiat of Chancellor Pintard for an injunction against the sale of said property under said deed of trust. The injunction writ was placed in the hands of the sheriff of Washington county on the fourteenth of February, 1898, the day of sale, but he returned the same on that day to the chancery clerk’s office not executed, because received too late, Areola, the place of sale, [266]*266being too distant to be reached by him before the hours of sale should be ended. It does not appear that the fiat for the injunction came to the knowledge or notice of Gumble & Co. or of their trustee until some time after the sale and conveyance of the property by the trustee to them. The fourteenth paragraph of the bill of complaint, among other things not necessary to be recited, alleges: “That the west half of lot 8 and the west half of lot 9, of block 4, of the first addition of Areola, are two entire and distinct assessments, Tout that both of said lots are assessed to J. R. Holcomb, all of which will fully appear by reference to so much of the land assessment roll of Washington county, Mississippi, made in the year 1896, as affects the west half of said lot 8 and the west half of lot 9, in block 4, of the first addition to the town of Areola, a plat of which said block, and a copy of as much of said assessment roll as affects said lots, are herewith filed and made a part of this bill as exhibits G and H. . . . That said tax collector (J. B. Hebron) offered said lots separately, to wit: First, the west half of lot 8, in block 4, which was sold to L. R. Crouch for taxes due thereon, as shown by exhibit D, and the west half of lot 9, in block 4, was separately offered, and purchased by L. R. Crouch, as shown by exhibit D.” Exhibit D is a copy of the two deeds of the tax collector to these two parts of said lots 8 and 9, separately sold and conveyed for the recited consideration in each deed of $13.

Exhibit “G,” being a copy of the real assessment roll of said Washington county, as far as it pertains to the property in controversy, is as follows:

[267]

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Bluebook (online)
78 Miss. 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/house-v-gumble-co-miss-1900.