Howard v. Clanton

481 So. 2d 272, 1985 Miss. LEXIS 2426
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1985
Docket55023
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 481 So. 2d 272 (Howard v. Clanton) 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
Howard v. Clanton, 481 So. 2d 272, 1985 Miss. LEXIS 2426 (Mich. 1985).

Opinions

The Chancery Court of Calhoun County, Mississippi, entered a judgment for the appellee in an action by the appellant on a complaint on warranty arising out of transfer of property, and adjudicated that the appellant LEXIE HOWARD was not entitled to recover from the appellee HAVEN CLANTON attorney's fees of $2,414.30 incurred in a prior action to remove clouds from the title, and denying Howard recovery of certain interest on escrow funds.

There are five assignments of error:

I. Failure to adjudicate that the chain of title to Clanton was such that curative work was required before it was marketable;

II. Taking judicial notice that the $20,000 purchase price was in an escrow fund bearing interest;

III. In the interruption of cross-examination of Clanton by Howard's attorney and in permitting Clanton's attorney to confer privately with Clanton while in the midst of cross-examination;

IV. In finding that attorney's fees were not allowable when incurred to correct a defective title;

V. In failing to find that the attorney's fees incurred by Howard in the Grenada County Chancery Court were reasonable.

The tract in question is 40 acres of land located in the Southeast Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of Section 10, Township 21 North, Range 7 East, in Grenada County, Mississippi. It is necessary to review the history of this 40 acres.

In 1936 the land was patented out of the United States Government to Gladys Ash, and that same year Ash conveyed by warranty deed to one F.C. Gallaher. Gallaher conveyed by warranty deed to Boyce Clanton. Taxes, however, were not paid on the 40 acres while assessed to Gallaher and it was sold for taxes to the state of Mississippi. The property again sold for taxes in the early 1940's while assessed to Boyce Clanton, and was sold to D. Seward. On April 25, 1945, by quitclaim deed, D. Seward conveyed the property to Clayton Carpenter.

Notwithstanding that Clanton had thus seemingly been divested of his interest in the property, on September 10, 1946, the state of Mississippi executed a forfeited tax land patent conveying the 40 acres to Boyce Clanton. Unfortunately, this tax land patent erroneously described the 40 acres as lying in Section 11. Sometime thereafter, the state of Mississippi executed a corrected forfeited tax land patent to Boyce Clanton, which was never recorded.

On June 17, 1952, Boyce Clanton conveyed the land to Clayton Carpenter, by warranty deed recorded in Land Deed Book 101 at Page 553. Clayton Carpenter thus had title under deeds both from D. Seward and from Boyce Clanton, and, it would seem, possessed the fee.

Haven Clanton became interested in the land in 1974. He went to the Grenada County Court House to check the title and came to the conclusion that the state of Mississippi had acquired title to the land in 1955 because of non-payment of taxes. The land records indicate that for advalorem tax purposes the 40 acres was assessed to Clayton Carpenter from 1951 through 1954, and to the state of Mississippi from 1955 through 1974. However, there is no record of any tax sale in 1955 to the state of Mississippi. The record indicates that the last tax sale at which the *Page 274 state of Mississippi was the purchaser was in 1938, and that the state had conveyed the property by forfeited tax land patent to Boyce Clanton, which patent contained an erroneous description. The state had corrected the description in a corrected forfeited tax land patent to Boyce Clanton, which patent was never recorded. The state was without title in 1955.

Haven Clanton then employed Sam Waits to obtain for Clanton title from the state of Mississippi. Both Waits and Clanton contacted Watt Carter, then the Land Commissioner for the state of Mississippi. In June of 1974, Carter informed Waits that the state "apparently" owned the land since a particular land patent number 58,364 granted to Boyce Clanton was never recorded within the statutory time period. The letter also revealed that the Chancery Clerk of Grenada County was notified of the patent in 1952 but that the required certificate and original patent were never received by the state land office. Clanton then put in his application to purchase the land from the state on June 13. Carter subsequently informed Waits that the widow of Boyce Clanton would have priority to purchase the land because of patent number 58,364 issued to Boyce Clanton. After further research, Waits found that Boyce Clanton had conveyed his interest in the property to Clayton Carpenter in 1952. Carter then notified Waits that if the land sold for the 1955 taxes there would be no need to cancel patent number 58,364, which had never been recorded, if the Grenada County Chancery Clerk would certify the sale to the state.

However, Waits informed Carter that it seemed that the property sold for taxes in 1939, rather than in 1955. It was on this state of affairs that on October 25, 1974, Clanton's application for the purchase of the land was approved, and a forfeited tax land patent was issued to him on October 22, 1974.

In the spring of 1975, Clanton had heard that Howard might be interested in purchasing the property. Clanton went to Howard's place of business and informed him that the purchase price was $6,000.00. Howard agreed to purchase the property and told Clanton to have Waits prepare a deed and hold it until he paid the money to Waits. Howard finally paid Waits and received a warranty deed to the 40 acres on May 5, 1975.

Howard held the property until August 24, 1981, when he conveyed it by warranty deed to Donald Sultan for $20,000. Prior to this conveyance, Sultan requested a title opinion from Howard and Howard's attorney researched the chain of title and found the defect. The defect was a break in the chain of title since it appeared that the state had acquired title. There was no reference, however, to any tax sale involving Clayton Carpenter, who had acquired the land from D. Seward and Boyce Clanton. Therefore, he declined to certify the title. Jay Gore, Jr., who was Howard's attorney, then consulted with Waits and neither could determine exactly how the state had gained title to the property. Gore then spoke directly with Clanton but still could not determine how the state had acquired title.

Gore subsequently wrote a letter to Clayton Carpenter's heirs attempting to obtain quitclaim deeds from them. This being unsuccessful, suit was filed by Lexie Howard in the Chancery Court of Grenada County against Clayton Carpenter's heirs. This suit was filed on January 21, 1982, and sought removal from the title of the clouds created by the claims of the Carpenter heirs. On February 4, 1982, Howard notified Clanton that the expenses of the suit would fall on Clanton's shoulders and Clanton was invited to employ his attorney and participate in the suit in order to minimize the cost. This was not done.

Sultan was substituted as a complainant in the Grenada County proceedings by agreement of the parties, since Howard had conveyed the property to Sultan in August of 1981. However, the purchase price of $20,000 was not paid to Howard at that time but was withheld by Sultan. The Carpenter heirs answered the suit and filed a cross-claim seeking to cancel as a cloud *Page 275 upon their title the Howard/Sultan deeds and to evict Sultan from the property.

After a full trial, the Grenada County Chancery Court found title to be vested in Sultan through the warranty deed executed by Howard.

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Howard v. Clanton
481 So. 2d 272 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1985)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
481 So. 2d 272, 1985 Miss. LEXIS 2426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-v-clanton-miss-1985.