McAllister v. Clopton

51 Miss. 257
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 51 Miss. 257 (McAllister v. Clopton) 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
McAllister v. Clopton, 51 Miss. 257 (Mich. 1875).

Opinion

Simrall, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This appeal is brought to review the decree of the chancery court, made at the final hearing dismissing the bill. The case was once before in this court, on appeal from a decree dissolving the injunction.

Mary McAllister claims to be the owner of the property which the appellee, the administrator of Thomas Brandon, deceased, is attempting to sell, under a special judgment, founded on a me[258]*258chanic’s lien, for certain erections and buildings put upon the property, under a contract with her husband and one Eerris. The bill seeks a perpetual injunction against the sale.

The complainant alleges that on the 26th of April, 1858, Geo. C. Summay, Martin Luther Strong, and King, with Joseph T. Cason, became purchasers from Lark E. Huston, as trustee, of certain lots in the old town of Aberdeen, Cason acquiring a half interest. Afterwards, in 1858, Summary, Strong and King and Cason sold the lots to Cason, James H. McAllister and L. D. Earris, the two last of whom executed their promissory notes to their vendors in the firm name of J. T. Cason & Co., the name under which they had been conducting a livery stable business. The vendors executed a title bond to make conveyance in fee simple when the purchase money should be paid. This bond has been lost or mislaid. Afterwards Cason sold his interest to James D. McAllister and L. D. Earris. This deed has also been lost.

On the 14th April, 1859, McAllister and Earris made a written contract with Thomas Brandon, the testator, a brick mason and builder, for the erection of a brick livery stable on lot number 110, for which they were to pay him in certain installments, set forth in four promissory notes, to become due in one, two and three years thereafter, to wit: 25th of July, 1860, 1861, 1862, 1863, for $775.42 each. Earris died intestate, and on the 28th of October, 1859, James McAllister bought from his sole heir, Mrs. Wood, and her husband, the interest of their ancestor in the property. On the 8th of January, 1861, McAllister and wife sold to John W. Timberlake a- half interest in the property. In 1865, Mrs. Mary C. McAllister bought Timberlake’s interest. In 1866, Summay, Strong, King and Cason, instituted a suit in chancery to foreclose the lien retained on the property, against J. E. Cason, James D. McAllister, and L. D. Earris, and at the May term, 1867, obtained a decree for $1,369.76, under which decree, at the commissioner’s sale, Mrs. Mary McAllister became the purchaser. In 1858, Brown & Gilson, for the use of Thomas Gil-son, recovered a judgment against Joseph T. Cason for $1,305.20, [259]*259under which a sale was made on the 13th of May, 1859, by the sheriff, of Cason’s interest in the property, when Huston and Eeynolds became the purchasers and conveyed to Mrs. Mc-Allister.

Complainants rely upon the statute of limitations of six months against the two first notes of McAllister and Parris to Brandon, which suit was brought against McAllister alone, and judgment by default recovered for the sum due upon the four notes, which the complainant avers was a fraud upon the several parties under whom she claims, as well as upon herself.

The answer of the defendant, Cl op ton, administrator, etc., responds to the material allegations of complainant, in reference to the deraignment of her title to the property, that he has no personal information, and that he requires strict proof.

The general rule is, if the facts are stated to be on the defendant’s personal knowledge he must answer positively, and not to-his remembrance and belief, unless they occurred several years-before. As to facts which have not happened within his own knowledge, he must answer as to his information and belief, and not as to his information only. Story’s Eq. Plead., § 854. Among the admissible statutory rules regulating pleading and practice, are the following: “ The answer shall be responsive to all material allegations of the bill.” Code 1871, § 1016.

“Pacts averred in the bill and not denied by the answer,” otherwise than by the general traverse, may be taken at the hearing “ as admitted.” Sec. 1024. The effect of these two rules is, that an answer must respond to all the allegations of facts made in the bill, so that it may appear what is admitted; for, unless there is a denial of a material allegation, it is taken at the hearing as admitted. These specific denials put the parties at issue as to which alone proof is required. If the defendant is not so connected with the matters alleged as to have personal knowledge, hen he must answer according to his information and belief, either admitting or denying the allegations. Proof is only required to establish something put in issue by a denial. Such was mani[260]*260festly the meaning given to the original of sec. 1024, in Reynolds v. Nelson, 41 Miss., 87-8. To disclaim knowledge of the facts and demand strict proof, does not amount to a denial of the facts, and put the complainant on the proof of them. There is much force in the position taken by counsel for appellant, that all these allegations of the bill, setting forth how she became owner of the property, and the muniments of her title, have not been controverted by the appellee, in such manner as to require testimony in their support. A disclaimer of personal knowledge, and a demand for strict proof, does not dispense with the necessity of responding according to information and belief, either by denial or admission. The silence of tbe defendant, manifestly, would under the rule, be tantamount to an admission. Silence as to a material allegation would be under the statute, and by its operation of equivalent import as to such allegation to a pro confesso.

The contract under which the appellee claims the mechanic’s lien, was executed by Farris and McAllister, and expressly created the lien on the building and lot 110. It recites that they were jointly to carry on the livery stable business.

The writing, by implication, affirms that they had a right to give the lien on the lot, as well as upon the building.

The allegations of the bill, not sufficiently denied by the answer, and the deeds, documents and testimony, show what the right of McAllister and Farris was. They had an equitable title by purchase with Cason, from Summay, Strong, King and I. T. Cason, holding a bond for title when the entire purchase money should be paid. McAllister and Farris acquired Cason’s interest by purchase.

Mrs. McAllister, the appellant, purchased under decree in the foreclosure suit of Summay, Strong, King and Cason, and thereby became invested with the legal title of these vendors, as well as the equity of the vendees. In addition to that she has acquired Cason’s interest which was sold under judgments at law, and to that extent fortified her title. The conveyance of her husband [261]*261and herself to Timberlake, of a half interest, and his conveyance to her may be laid out of view.

At the time James McAllister and Earris made the contract with Brandon, the property was already incumbered with a lien for purchase money in favor of Summay, Strong, King and J. T. Cason. It has been settled by several decisions that the lien of the mechanic is subordinate to prior incumbrances, so far as respects the land. Otley v. Haviland, 36 Miss., 38; Buchanan v. Smith & Barksdale, 43 id., 99, 100-1-2; Cochran v. Wimberly, 44 id., 506-7; McLaughlin v. Green, 48 id., 202-3; Code 1857, p. 329.

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Bluebook (online)
51 Miss. 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcallister-v-clopton-miss-1875.