Lampton-Reid Co. v. Allen

171 So. 780, 177 Miss. 698, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 152
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1937
DocketNo. 32338.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 171 So. 780 (Lampton-Reid Co. v. Allen) 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
Lampton-Reid Co. v. Allen, 171 So. 780, 177 Miss. 698, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 152 (Mich. 1937).

Opinion

*707 Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit involves the title and right of possession of three separate twenty-acre tracts of land, which will be hereinafter designated as parcels Nos. 1, 2, and 3.

During and prior to the year 1918, Iverson Allen owned parcels Nos. 2 and 3, and in 1921 he acquired title to parcel No. 1, and has since lived on and cultivated these three parcels of land. On December 16, 1918, the said Allen and his wife executed to the Farmers Bank of Osyka a promissory note in the sum of five hundred forty-one dollars and eighty-five cents, due November 1, 1919, and secured by deed of trust on parcels Nos. 2 and 3 of the land here involved. This note was indorsed by the appellee Immer Ball, and the time for the payment thereof was duly extended from time to time until September 26, 1924, when the bank refused further extensions. Thereupon the said Ball, as accommodation indorser, paid the indebtedness to the bank, and the note and deed of trust were transferred and delivered to him. The fact that the note and the deed of trust had been extended from time to time to September 26. 1924, was not entered or noted on the record of the deed of trust within six months after the remedy to enforce the same appeared on the face of the record to be barred by the statute of limitations, and in fact such notations have never been made.

On February 25, 1924, Allen and his wife became indebted to Jerome Ford in the amount of six hundred thirty-nine dollars and eighty-four cents, and to secure this indebtedness they executed to him a note and deed of trust on parcels Nos. 2 and 3 of said land, and this instrument was promptly recorded. There was also described in this deed of trust an additional sixty acres of land which did not belong to the Allens. After the note secured by this deed of trust was past due and unpaid, it was transferred and assigned to a third party, *708 who in turn, on April 3, 1928, assigned it, for a valuable consideration, to H. W. Kenna and L. M. Brumfield, and this assignment was duly entered on the margin of the record of the deed of trust.

On January 2, 1926, Iverson Allen and his mother signed a deed of trust in favor of Immer Ball covering parcel No. 1 of said land, hut this instrument was not recorded, and on May 8, 1926, the said Allen and wife executed in favor of Ball a deed of trust to secure an indebtedness of six hundred dollars, due October 1, 1926, in which parcels Nos. 2 and 3 of the land were conveyed in trust, and this deed of trust was afterwards duly recorded. On December 4, 1928, the said Allen and wife executed a deed conveying to Immer Ball the three parcels of land, and this instrument, which recited no consideration, was duly filed for record and recorded.

On the failure of the Allens to pay and satisfy the Ford note on or before July 30, 1929, Kenna and Brum-field, the then owners of said indebtedness and deed of trust securing the same, filed their bill of complaint against Iverson Allen, his wife, Anna Allen, Immer Ball, and W. L. Brent, trustee, wherein they sought, first, a reformation of the said deed of trust so as to include therein parcel No. 1 of said land, and exclude therefrom the sixty acres described therein, which the Allens did not own; second, a cancellation of the deed of trust in favor of Immer Ball dated May 8, 1926, and the deed in his favor dated December 4, 1928; and third, the foreclosure of the reformed deed of trust as a first and prior lien on the three parcels of land. On this bill of complaint process was issued and duly returned by the sheriff with the notation that personal service was had on all the defendants on August 8, 1929. None of the defendants entered an appearance or filed an answer, and the cause duly proceeded to a final decree, whereby the said deed of trust was ordered to ,be reformed so as to include therein parcel No. 1 of the land; the said in *709 struments in favor of the defendant Ball were canceled, and the land was ordered to be sold by a commissioner appointed by the court. In pursuance of this decree, the commissioner advertised and sold the land to H. W. Kenna for the sum of three hundred dollars, and this sale was reported to and confirmed by the court, and a commissioner’s deed was executed, conveying the three parcels of land to the said Kenna. Thereafter for a recited consideration of ten dollars Kenna conveyed the land to the appellant Lampton-Reid Company.

On April 16, 1931, the said Lampton-Reid Company began a proceeding in the chancery court against the said Iverson Allen and Immer Ball seeking a personal decree against them for rent on all the land for the year 1930, and thereafter it filed a proceeding in the county court seeking to remove the said Allen from the land. The latter suit was transferred to the chancery court and consolidated with the proceeding pending therein, and to these consolidated causes the defendants filed answers, and the defendant Ball filed a cross-bill which was substantially the same as an original bill later filed by him and consolidated with the proceedings already pending.

In the original bill last above mentioned the Lamp-ton-Reid Company, Iverson Allen, and his wife, Anna Allen, H. W. Kenna, and L. M. Brumfield were joined as defendants, and it was therein alleged, with deraignment of title, that Ball was the owner of the three parcels of land; that the deed of trust in his favor dated May 8, 1926, was entitled to priority over the Ford deed of trust which was executed on February 25, 1924; that the decree in the former foreclosure proceeding, and. the resultant deeds eventually placing the title in the Lamp-ton-Reid Company, should be canceled as being fraudulent and void, for the reason, among others, that the said decree was rendered without service of process on the said Ball, or notice to him of said proceeding in any manner or form. The bill also prayed for a reformation of *710 the deed from the defendants Iverson Allen and wife to the said Ball, so as to recite the proper consideration therefor, and for a confirmation of Ball’s title to all said land. After answers were filed, the combined causes were heard, and upon the proof, the chancellor entered a decree granting the full relief prayed for in the cross-bill and the original bill last above mentioned, and from this decree the Lampton-Reid Company, H. W. Kenna, and L. M. Brumfield prosecuted this appeal.

Section 2292, Code of 1930, prescribes the period of limitation within which actions on promissory notes shall be commenced, as being six years next after the cause of action shall have accrued thereon, that is, within six years next after the instrument has become due and payable; while section 2290, Code of 1930, provides that no action, suit, or other proceedings shall be brought or had upon any lien, mortgage, or deed of trust to recover the sum of money secured thereby and specified in any writing, unless such action, suit, or proceeding is begun within the time allowed for the commencement of an action at law upon the writing in which the sum of money secured by such mortgage or deed of trust is specified, and that “in all cases where the remedy at law to recover the debt shall be barred, the remedy in equity on the mortgage shall be barred. ’ ’

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
171 So. 780, 177 Miss. 698, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lampton-reid-co-v-allen-miss-1937.