Kerr v. Freeman

33 Miss. 292
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 33 Miss. 292 (Kerr v. Freeman) 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
Kerr v. Freeman, 33 Miss. 292 (Mich. 1857).

Opinion

Fisher, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The object of this bill was to enjoin the defendant below, from committing waste upon the land in question, and to have certain [294]*294deeds cancelled, which, the complainant alleges operate as clouds upon his title.

It appears from the allegations of the bill, that the land was patented in 1835, by the General Government, to Lewis White-sides ; that he died some time about the year of , and that his widow, son, and grandson, who were his only heirs at law, executed a quitclaim deed, on the 19th day of August, 1847, to the complainant, under which he claims title. The bill then proceeds to state that the land is uninclosed, in the actual possession of no one, but as may be inferred from the whole tenor of the bill, in the constructive possession of the' complainant; that the defendant has been for many years committing acts of trespass upon the land; that he is insolvent, and not able to satisfy a judgment, if recovered against him at law; that the defendant claims title to the land under a deed made by EL 0. Daniels and wife, in 1844, and under a deed made by the sheriff of Hinds county, by which it appears that the land was sold as the property of John Shields, and purchased by the defendant, and that such deeds conveying no title to the defendant, they form clouds upon complainant’s title. The prayer is that the deeds be cancelled, and the complainant confirmed in his title.

The defendant demurring to the bill, and the demurrer being overruled, filed his answer, in which he sets forth the manner in which he acquired the possession of the land; that he had been in possession for a considerable length of time, and was in possession at the date of the deed under which the complainant claims. That defendant claims title to the land, under a deed from one Moyses to the defendant; that Moyses claims under a deed made to him by Hill and wife, the latter being the only heir at law of John Shields; and that Shields, about the year 1836, purchased the land from Whitesides, who executed a deed for the same: all of which deeds are made exhibits to the answer, and the two former, to wit, the deed from Moyses to the defendant, and the deed from Hill and wife to Moyses, appear to have been executed after the bill was filed. The answer avers the defendant’s solvency, &c. Upon the coming in of the answer, the complainant filed an amended and supplemental bill, alleging that the deeds from Moyses to the defendant, and from Hill and wife to Moyses, were void as to the [295]*295complainant, because they were executed after the defendant was informed of the complainant’s purchase, and are fraudulent and without consideration. The amended bill then proceeds to deny all knowledge of the deed from Whitesides to Shields, and in fact charges that it was never executed. The bill then proceeds to state certain facts in regard to the complainant’s title: that a judgment was rendered against Whitesides in his lifetime; that an execution issuing upon this judgment, was levied upon the land, which was sold by the sheriff, and purchased by one William R. Gist; that the land was afterwards assessed in his name, and default being made in the payment of the tax assessed, the land was purchased, on the 4th day of April, 1848, by one Watson, who in November following, executed a quitclaim deed to the complainant. This title is set up by the amended bill. The defendant, after his demurrer to this bill had been overruled, answered, stating his possession of the land, denying fraud, &c. Other matters are set forth in the answer, but do not require special notice.

The chancellor upon the hearing made the injunction, restraining the defendant from committing waste, perpetual, and decreed the cancellation of the deed from Whitesides to Shields, the deed from Hill and wife to Moyses, and the deed from him to the defendant; that the complainant be confirmed in his title, and that the sheriff of Hinds county execute the decree, &c. From which decree this appeal has been prosecuted.

Two questions must necessarily arise for our consideration. First. Has the complainant shown a clear title to the land ? and, Second, supposing a clear title to have been shown, was the evidence sufficient to authorize the decree ?

The bills,' both original and amended, appear to have been filed by the complainants Freeman and Lewis W. Gist, the grandson and heir at law of Whitesides. The first point under the facts averred by the two bills is, whether Gist is in any manner interested in the controversy ? In the first place, he is a party to the quitclaim deed executed to the complainant on the 19th day of August, 1847. By this deed he undertook to divest himself of all interest in the land. It is true that he was then an infant; and let it be admitted that he could not, by his deed, part with his title, he is still in no better condition than if the deed was operative. The [296]*296amended bill sets forth a valid sale under an execution against the ancestor, and a purchase of the land by William R. Gist, father of the complainant, Lewis W. Gist. This being the case, the title passed to the purchaser at execution sale; and William R. Gist being also a party to the quitclaim deed, his interest, which according to the amended bill, was the whole interest, passed to the complainant Freeman, who is the only person interested, as shown by the amended bill; and the controversy will, therefore, be considered as exclusively between him and the defendant. A few words will suffice, as to Freeman’s title acquired under the quitclaim deed from Watson. The land had been assessed and sold as the property of Wm. R. Gist, who had previously conveyed by the quitclaim deed of the 19th August, 1847. But for this deed, Gist would have had the clear right to redeem the land from Watson, and Freeman having acquired the right of Gist, would also be entitled to redeem. Watson’s quitclaim would not, therefore, operate as a conveyance to Freeman, but only as a redemption of the land, leaving him where he stood before, upon his first deed as to his title.

This preliminary point having been settled, we will proceed to consider the question relating to the complainant’s title. A quitclaim deed, or in other words a deed of release, under general principles of law, can never operate as a conveyance in a technical sense, unless the party taking such deed is in possession of the land, and then the deed merely operates to enlarge the estate, whatever it may be. It could never operate as an enlargement of the estate, Unless the releasee had an estate of some kind to be enlarged, such as possession of the land, or an estate for years, &c.

This rule is, however, doubtless changed by our statute (Hutch. Code, 610, § 28); and the deed may constitute the foundation of such an action as could have been maintained by the parties making it. Conceding that the statute has made this change, the deed itself implies a doubtful title, in the party who executes it; and such being its operation, can it be treated as passing anything more than a doubtful title to the complainant ? This brings us to the point on this branch of the case. The rule is, that to authorize the court to give relief, the complainant must show a clear title. His deed merely shows a doubtful title, and this doubt is certainly [297]*297increased, when it is not shown that either the complainant or the persons from whom he claims, were in possession of the land at the time the deed was executed.

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Bluebook (online)
33 Miss. 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kerr-v-freeman-miss-1857.