MOSES, ET UX. v. Weaver

49 So. 2d 235, 210 Miss. 228, 1950 Miss. LEXIS 341
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1950
Docket37715
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 49 So. 2d 235 (MOSES, ET UX. v. Weaver) 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
MOSES, ET UX. v. Weaver, 49 So. 2d 235, 210 Miss. 228, 1950 Miss. LEXIS 341 (Mich. 1950).

Opinion

Ethridge, C.

This is the fourth lawsuit between the parties to this action or their predecessors in title (but the first reaching this Court) concerning the ownership and location of a small strip of land, approximately 115 feet in length by 16 feet in depth, in the Town of Ackerman, Choctaw County, Mississippi. About the only thing remaining to be decided is to ascertain the effects of what was decided in the three earlier cases. We think the chancellor was correct in applying the efficacious doctrine of res judicata in his decree and in holding for the appellee.

In 1912, S. B. Dobbs was the owner of a tract of land in the northern part of Ackerman. He had it surveyed, divided into lots and blocks, and a map of it was made designating it as the Northern Addition to the Town of Ackerman. The subdivision and plat were approved by *230 the Mayor and Board of Aldermen of Ackerman and recorded, as required by statute, and the town also accepted the dedication by S. B. Dobbs of Dobbs Street, which was fifty feet in width and ran in an easterly and westerly direction close to the center of the subdivision. The deed of dedication conveyed to Ackerman an easement in the street but reserved the balance of the fee title in S'. B.' Dobbs. The easement conveyed was perpetual, with a provision that it should terminate and revest in S. B. Dobbs or his successors when it ceased to be used for street purposes.

Subsequently, appellants, Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Moses, acquired title to Lots 8 and 9 and 20 feet off the west side of Lot 7 of Block 2 in the subdivision. These lots are immediately to the south of Dobbs Street and part of Lot 9, on the west, fronts on the east side of State Highway No. 15; In 1940, E. B. Dobbs, the successor in title to S. B. Dobbs’ interest in Dobbs Street, filed a suit in the Chancery Court of Choctaw County in which the complainant charged that he was the owner of Dobbs Street, that it had never been used as a street, that therefore the full title to it had revested in him, and that S. B. Dobbs and his successors had exercised adverse possession thereto for more than thirty-two years. The Town of Ackerman, Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Moses, appellants herein, and other parties were made defendants to that action. The bill charged that the Moses had objected to the passing’ of a resolution by the Mayor and Board abandoning the easement in the street. It requested the court to confirm complainant’s title to the street and to remove any and all clouds upon his title which the town, the Moses, and other parties were asserting. The bill described Dobbs Street by metes and bounds, based upon the 1912 plat,-and also described it as being’ fifty feet in width. The Town of Ackerman filed an answer making no claim to the street. The appellants herein filed an answer in which they admitted that Dobbs Street was fifty feet in width, and averred that the dedication of *231 the street had been accepted, it was still in use by the general public, that they owned lands adjacent to it, and had a right of easement therein. By cross-complaint, the Moses prayed for a decree confirming their easement rights in the street and enjoining E. B. Dobbs from interfering with it.

After a hearing on the merits, the court rendered a decree on September 30,1942, in which, as to that part of the street here, in issue east of Highway 15, it adjudicated that the street had never been used as a street, and that the complainant had a right to withdraw the street from the dedication. The court then described the street by metes and bounds and adjudicated that the fee simple title to that part of the street here in issue was “vested in E. B. Dobbs, the complainant, free from all easements of every kind, character and nature, and all easements and other rights imposed by the dedication of S. B. Dobbs on November 26,1912, are hereby removed, and all clouds, rights, or easements and other claims held by any persons, firms or corporations are hereby removed from the title of the said E. B. Dobbs to the above described land.”

The complainant in the present action, appellee J. F. Weaver, is the successor in title to E. B. Dobbs in the property affected by that 1942 decree. Both of the appellants herein, Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Moses, were defendants in that action against whom the aforesaid 1942 decree was rendered. This 1942 decree was based upon a suit in which the title to Dobbs Street was involved, the final decree removed ‘ ‘ all clouds, rights or easements or other claims ’ ’ held by the present appellants and other persons in and to the street, and the street was described by metes and bounds and also as being fifty feet in width. It is further noted that in this action upon which the 1942 decree was based, the Moses did not plead that they obtained any title to any part of the street by adverse possession and that the court in its decree did not specifically pass on that issue. However, it removed all clouds and *232 rig’hts asserted by tbe present appellants in and to Dobbs Street.

In 1947, J. F. Weaver, tbe successor in title to tbe interest of E. B. Dobbs in Dobbs Street, and appellee herein, filed a bill of complaint in the Chancery Court of Choctaw County against Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Moses, appellants herein, in which the complainant set up the 1942 decree concerning’ his title to Dobbs Street, and alleg’ed that when the complainant undertook to establish the exact south line of the street it developed that the defendants, the Moses, had a fence over on the south side of the street for several feet, and that they refused to move their fence from complainant’s property, in violation of the 1942 decree. Complainant prayed for an injunction restraining1 the Moses from interfering with his title to Dobbs Street. The court overruled a demurrer to the bill of complaint, and in 1947 perpetually enjoined the Moses from interfering with Weaver in his use of Dobbs Street, including that part encroached upon by the fence. The defendants then in their answer denied that the 1942 decree in any way affected the strip of land claimed by them on the south side of Dobbs Street, and denied that they were asserting any title to the street. They then averred that they had held the strip- of land in issue in open, notorious and hostile possession for twenty years and claimed title by adverse possession. Weaver moved to strike the answer on the grounds that the 1942 decree was res judicata, and the court sustained that motion on March 16, 1948.

On July 1, 1948, Weaver, appellee herein, filed a bill in chancery against the Moses, appellants herein, in which he set up the 1942 and 1947 decrees, charged that the Moses had failed to comply with those decrees and had violated them, and prayed for a mandatory injunction against the Moses removing them from the 16 foot strip on the south side of Dobbs Street and putting him in possession. The defendants filed a general demurrer, and the court on July 24, 1948, sustained the demurrer *233 and dismissed the bill “without prejudice”. Apparently the chancellor was of the opinion that the 1942 and 1947 decrees could be enforced more effectively by a petition to the court in the latter suit for a citation for contempt, or by a new action seeking to establish the location of the south line of Dobbs Street adjacent to the Moses property.

No appeals to this Court were taken from the decrees in the first three cases.

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Bluebook (online)
49 So. 2d 235, 210 Miss. 228, 1950 Miss. LEXIS 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moses-et-ux-v-weaver-miss-1950.