Humphrey v. Crorow Hardwood Co.

140 So. 690, 163 Miss. 490, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 66
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1932
DocketNo. 29911.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 140 So. 690 (Humphrey v. Crorow Hardwood 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
Humphrey v. Crorow Hardwood Co., 140 So. 690, 163 Miss. 490, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 66 (Mich. 1932).

Opinion

*493 Ethridge, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellees filed a motion to strike the stenographer’s notes on the following grounds:

“1st. Because no notice was given by the appellants to the stenographer to transcribe and file his notes within ten days from the adjournment of the October, 1927, special term of the chancery court of said county;

“2nd. Because the said stenographer’s notes did not become a part of the record by operation of law, or by any agreement of the parties;

“3rd. Because the record shows that the said stenographer’s notes, as contained therein, are incorrect and incomplete, and they do not show any of the direct testimony introduced by appellee complained of in the court below, nor any of the exhibits introduced by appellee, nor does it show any of the evidence introduced at the O'ctober, 1927 special term of said court when the said final decree was rendered on testimony taken at the February and October terms of court;

“4th. Because said notes do not embody the evidence on which the chancellor heard said case and rendered final decree, but embody only the oral testimony in said cause the exhibits introduced by defendant, appellant here. ’ ’

Accompanying the motion are affidavits by the counsel for appellee, the official court stenographer, and by the chancellor. The stenographer makes affidavit that the notes, as originally filed, were not a true and correct *494 copy of the evidence; there being missing pages. Search was made and pages 27 and 28 were added. Page 27 shows the style of the case, the county, the court, and the chancellor, and page 28 reads as follows:

“By Mr. Shivers: It is admitted that E. PI. Hoffman, chancery clerk of Hancock county at the time this land is a.llegéd to have been sold, is now dead. It is also' admitted that J. F. Cavenue, who was alleged to be sheriff and tax collector of Hancock county, during the years 1888 and 1889, and whose name purports to be signed to the tax deed, is now dead. It is also admitted that Mr. E. E. Deuville is now dead.

“By Mr. Shivers: The complainants first offer in evidence a certified copy of the assessment roll of Hancock county for the year 1887, page 76, showing the assessment of the land in question.

“By Mr. Hathorn: If the court please, we are going to object to this and we anticipate no such evidence to be offered unless the court is satisfied now that the objection should be sustained we would ask the court to reserve a ruling on it until all this evidence is offered and we can take it up together and ask the court’s ruling on all of it together, it will be before the court on this reserved ruling.

“By Mr. Shivers: That will be perfectly satisfactory, after all the evidence we have in this case is introduced it will be perfectly satisfactory for the court to pass on it at that time.

“By the court: Alright — let a ruling be reserved.”

The chancellor, after the finding and filing of pages 27 and 28, made the following affidavit:

“This day personally came and appeared before me, the undersigned authority in and for said county and state, Judge T. Price Dale, chancellor in and for the tenth chancery court district of the state of Mississippi, who, being by me first duly sworn, says on oath that he was in February, 1927, and in March, 1927, and in Octo *495 her, 1927, and is now the duly elected, qualified and acting chancellor in and for said chancery court district of the state of Mississippi, which includes Pearl River county. That as such chancellor he presided, at the trial of the cause styled Crorow Hardwood Co. v. J. F. Humphrey et al., numbered 1876 on the general docket of the chancery court of Pearl River county, Mississippi; that said cause came on to be heard at the regular February, 1927, term of the chancery court of Pearl River county, Mississippi, when, after the introduction of oral and documentary evidence in the case, it was stated by counsel representing complainant that they had received a telegram from New York stating that a party in New York whose name affiant does not now recall, was in possession of the original deed from the tax collector to E. E. Deuville, which deed complainant was seeking by its bill of complaint to have confirmed, and that such original deed would show the true date thereof, which would be different from the date shown by the recorded copy of said deed, and that complainant desired to amend its bill of complaint by setting up therein the date shown by the original deed and have the case held open for the introduction of said deed when it arrived from New York. Whereupon, it was agreed by the attorneys representing both sides that the court should hear all of the oral testimony with reference to the adverse possession issue made by the pleadings in said cause and that after hearing same the the cause would be continued with leave to complainant to amend its bill of complaint with reference to said tax deed, and when such amendment was made and the original of said deed was received a time would be fixed by the court to complete the trial of said cause, and at such time the case would be argued and finally decided by the court in vacation.' In accordance with such agreement, all of the evidence on said adverse possession issue was heard and taken down in shorthand by Harris Sullivan, official *496 court stenographer of the chancery court of Pearl Eiver county, Mississippi, and at the conclusion of the hearing of said testimony, affiant, as chancellor who presided over the hearing of said cause, as aforesaiti, requested .that the attorneys for both sides have said testimony as noted down by the stenographer in shorthand transcribed to be used by affiant in considering said cause and rendering his decree therein; that said attorneys agreed to and complied with said request, and said notes were transcribed by the stenographer and furnished to me for said purpose and were used by me in rendering my decision in said cause.

Affiant further states that he had examined the original of the transcript of said notes, which now appear in the record in said cause now on file in the supreme court, and that- said notes appear to be a true and correct copy of the stenographer’s notes so furnished to affiant and used by affiant in reaching his decision in said cause, except that pages 27 and 28 of said notes are missing from said record. Affiant further states that he has examined the copy of said notes on file in the office of the clerk of the chancery court of Pearl Eiver county, which contains pages 27 and 28- of said notes, which appears to be a copy of said notes, as furnished to and used by affiant -in reaching his decision in said cause, and which two pages of said notes are attached hereto; that if said pages 27 and 28 were added to the original of said notes, then, apparently, said notes would be complete and a true and correct copy of the stenographer’s notes furnished to me in said cause and used by me in considering and deciding the same and would not be different from the evidence on which I tried and decided said cause.

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Related

Scott v. State
75 So. 2d 466 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1954)
Hearn v. State
69 So. 2d 223 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1954)
National Box Co. v. Bradley
154 So. 724 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
140 So. 690, 163 Miss. 490, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/humphrey-v-crorow-hardwood-co-miss-1932.