Richton Tie & Timber Co. v. Tillman

100 So. 2d 857, 233 Miss. 12, 1958 Miss. LEXIS 350
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1958
DocketNo. 40677
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 100 So. 2d 857 (Richton Tie & Timber Co. v. Tillman) 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
Richton Tie & Timber Co. v. Tillman, 100 So. 2d 857, 233 Miss. 12, 1958 Miss. LEXIS 350 (Mich. 1958).

Opinion

McGehee, C. J.

This is the second appearance of this cause on appeal to this Court. The case was formerly here on demurrer in Tillman, et al. v. Richton Tie & Timber Co., cause No. 39,687, reported in 224 Miss. 789, 80 So. 2d 745. The trial court had sustained the demurrer, and we reversed the case on the ground that the allegations of the bill of complaint and the exhibits thereto were sufficient to state a cause of action. It appears from the record on the former appeal that a demurrer was also sustained to an amended bill of complaint in the cause, and that the appeal was granted to this Court from the action of the trial court in sustaining a demurrer of the [15]*15Richton Tie & Timber Co. to tbe said amended bill. There was at that time filed as an exhibit to the amended bill, along with copies of certain forfeited tax land patents, a copy of a lease contract from Mrs. M. E. Hyde to James Eubanks, bearing date of January 1, 1947, which lease indicated on its face that Mrs. M. E. Hyde, the predecessor in title of the appellant Richton Tie & Timber Company in the instant case, was the purported owner of the land in question.

In the instant case there were no exhibits attached to the amended bill of complaint on which this cause was tried, but at page 225 of the record now before us there appears a copy of a deed of conveyance executed November 12,1928, from H. A. Bouehillon, et al. to John Palmer Tillman conveying certain lands to him “during his life and at his death to his bodily heirs”. In the amended bill now before us it is alleged that Mrs. Mabel Tillman, Katie Lee Anderson, Fred Tillman, Mrs. Claudia Mae Gibson and Mrs. Sibil Baine, “all adults and being the sole and only heirs of John Palmer Tillman” are the complainants. Elsewhere in the amended bill it is alleged that John Palmer Tillman was the “husband of complainant Mrs. Mabel Tillman and the father of all other complainants” and that the complainants received the life estate theretofore granted to John Palmer Tillman. As a matter of fact the complainant Mrs. Mabel Tillman, the wife of John Palmer Tillman, could not have been one of his bodily heirs. There are named as defendants to the amended bill of complainant now before us Willis Jones, Mrs. Willis Jones, Mrs. M. E. Hyde, E. L. Hyde, E. L. Woodruff and M. A. Woodruff, the alleged agent of E. L. Woodruff, and Tommy Reed and the Richton Tie & Timber Company. Some of the defendants other than the Richton Tie & Timber Company did not specifically deny that John Palmer Tillman was the father of Katie Lee Anderson, Mrs. Claudia Mae Gibson, Mrs. Sibil Baine and Fred Tillman, but each and [16]*16every material allegation of the amended bill of complaint was specifically and categorically denied by the appellant Richton Tie & Timber Company.

On remand of the canse by this Court, no proof was introduced whatever showing who the bodily heirs of John Palmer Tillman were, or as to the relationship of the complainants Katie Lee Anderson, Mrs. Claudia Mae Gibson, Mrs. Sibil Baine and Fred Tillman to the said life tenant John Palmer Tillman. The record now before us contains 238 pages of pleadings, interrogatories and answers to interrogatories, and only 48 pages of testimony. The lease contract of January 1, 1947, entered into by Mrs. M. E. Hyde with James Eubanks, was neither made an exhibit to the amended bill of complaint in the record now before us nor was the said lease introduced in evidence. That lease is the only document or other evidence whereby it was attempted to be shown that Mrs. M. E. Plyde, the immediate predecessor in title of the appellant Richton Tie & Timber Company, was shown to have ever had any connection prior to her purchases at tax sales in 1948 with the land and timber in question, as owner thereof, and we have had to borrow from the record on the former appeal all of the information that we have as to Mrs. M. E. Hyde having ever executed a lease in favor of James Eubanks on January 1, 1947, and it is the only document whereby the complainants base their claim that Mrs. M. E. Hyde was .under any duty to pay the taxes on the land which was assessed against Willis Jones for the year 1947, and for which taxes the land was sold , to her in April 1948.

Moreover there is no proof in this record that M. A. Woodruff was the agent of E. L. Woodruff or that E. L. Hyde was the agent of his wife Mrs. M. E. Hyde, or that either of them ever undertook to act as such.

Under the “Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law” of the chancellor it is recited that John Palmer Tillman “went into the possession of all of the lands and held [17]*17same, claiming to be tbe owner thereof as a life tenant with the remainder in his said bodily heirs (referring to the complainants Katie Lee Anderson, Mrs. Claudia Mae Gibson, Mrs. Sibil Baine and Fred Tillman) and that said possession was continuous, obstinate, peaceable, open and notorious for a period of more than ten years”, and that John Palmer Tillman held the title to said lands in adverse possession for life and remainder to his bodily heirs. The findings of fact and conclusions of law then adjudges thát Katie Lee Anderson, Mrs. Claudia Mae Gibson, Mrs. Sibil Baine and Fred Tillman, “all being adults and the bodily heirs of the said John Palmer Tillman”. The above mentioned findings of fact are apparently based solely upon the contention of the complainants and not upon any proof contained in the record. This proof was essential as to the claim of the appellant Richton Tie & Timber Company, which had purchased the timber on the land from Mrs. M. E. Hyde for a cash consideration of $3,250, and which Timber Company had specifically denied each and every material allegation of the amended bill of complaint.

The findings of fact correctly traced the record chain of title to the appellant Richton Tie & Timber Company, except that the court found that there was no deed of record from Willis Jones to Mrs. M. E. Hyde, the immediate predecessor in title of the said appellant, but found that the lease contract (which was neither an exhibit to the amended bill of complaint in the instant case nor was introduced in the evidence at the trial on the merits) gave rise to the presumption of the ownership of Mrs. M. E. Hyde to such an extent that she did in fact own the said property, and that it was her duty to have paid the taxes thereon for the year 1947, and that she therefore obtained no title to the land under her purchase thereof at the two tax sales of September 23, 1953, since the court held that she was the life tenant of the property on January 1, 1947, and the two tax sales [18]*18were made for the nonpayment of the taxes for the said year. The life tenant John Palmer Tillman did not die until August 9, 1953, several weeks prior to the maturity of the tax title of Mrs. M. E. Hyde to the land.

At a time when the land had been conveyed to E. L. Hyde, husband of Mrs. M. E. Hyde, they conveyed the same to one Willis Jones and there was some testimony tending to show that after Willis Jones had held the record title of the land for approximately 8 years he decided to let it go back to E. L. Hyde on account of the fact that he was advised that he could not get a good title thereto. However, in response to interrogatories, Willis Jones testified that he collected $130 as rent for the land for the year 1947 from Eubanks and that he held a note for the remainder of the rent for that year. The chancellor held that the conveyances to E. L. Hyde and from E. L. Hyde and Mrs. M. E.

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Related

Anderson v. Richton Tie & Timber Co.
115 So. 2d 536 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1959)

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Bluebook (online)
100 So. 2d 857, 233 Miss. 12, 1958 Miss. LEXIS 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richton-tie-timber-co-v-tillman-miss-1958.