State v. Woodruff

150 So. 760, 170 Miss. 744, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 15
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 30, 1933
DocketNo. 29601.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 150 So. 760 (State v. Woodruff) 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
State v. Woodruff, 150 So. 760, 170 Miss. 744, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 15 (Mich. 1933).

Opinions

Griffith, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was begun by a bill filed in the chancery court of Hinds county on August 18, 1888. On February 21, 1931, forty-three years thereafter, an interlocutory decree was rendered and an appeal was allowed to settle the principles of the case. At the March, 1899 term, this court, in response to a similar appeal in this case, delivered an opinion, reported in Woodruff v. State, 77 Miss. 68, 25 So. 483, which substantially covered the merits so far as the law is concerned, and it seems to us that *765 the appeal now allowed, thirty-two years thereafter, is for a construction by this court as now constituted of the opinion then delivered.

When a ease on an interlocutory appeal has once been before this court, and the court has attempted to deal with the controlling principles in the case, it is not per-' missible to grant another interlocutory appeal to construe the former opinion, more especially after the lapse of long years, and this is true even when, as here, the former opinion is involved in obscurity or is difficult of exact interpretation. There must be an end to appeals. What was said by the court in this case on this subject in 83 Miss., page 110, 35 So. 422, is not the rule now and has not been since the amendment made in 1924 to the statute, and which appears as section 14, Code 1930. But the stated ground upon which an interlocutory appeal is granted is not controlling, Yazoo & M. V. R. Co. v. James, 108 Miss. 656, 67 So. 152, and this court may entertain it upon other grounds apparent from the record. Two of these' grounds are, “to avoid expense and delay,” and because the decree, which we have decided upon, will do both in this case, we have accepted jurisdiction, and will proceed to a determination which will put this ancient litigation to an end so far as this court and the trial court are concerned.

The case came back also to the court at the October, 1903 term, on the question whether the state was subject to suit in the case, and the opinion is reported in State v. Woodruff, 83 Miss. 111, 36 So. 79, 37 So. 706. These reports give sufficient of the facts to form a general statement of what is now before us, and we will not here repeat them. And we consider that the law of the case as found in those opinions is binding upon us here, although those opinions were delivered by special judges appointed in the case in the place of judges of the court disqualified; but we think it our duty to add that we so definitely disapprove of the decision in 83 Miss., holding the state liable to suit in this case, that we hereby expressly over *766 rule that opinion and decision on that point as to all future cases. We hold that the state cannot be made liable to suit out of implications gathered from a statute or any group of statutes, but the right to sue the state must be expressly granted by statute, without which express grant no allowance to sue the state exists.

. The lands which are spoken of as being involved in this litigation are among those in six counties of the Delta lying north of a line projected eastward from the southwest corner of Bolivar county — hundreds of thousands of acres. Neither by the original bill nor by any amendment thereof was any individual liability sought to be imposed upon any owner or owners of any of the lands; nor could there be, for none of the many legislative acts relied on ever attempted to impose any such’ liability on any owner. There was never against an, owner any liability in personam. But the contention was and is that the lands are liable or chargeable in rém and it is sought to enforce the amounts for which the several parcels are charged to be liable by having a commissioner appointed by the said chancery court to sell all these thousands of acres and thereby to make the money to pay complainants. So far as the lands are concerned, the suit is to enforce a charge in rem upon them.

There are occasional sentences or parts of sentences in' the opinion in 77 Miss, which speak in general terms of' the liability of the land for the No. 1 levee assessments, as if it might be meant to hold that these lands could be reached herein by the complainant bondholders, that the assessments or charges imposed by the No. 1 levee act could be enforced by these complainants directly against these lands in the present suit. We have been in much difficulty in the effort to construe the exact meaning of the- opinion in 77 Miss, as to what it intended to hold in respect to the liability, if any, of the lands directly to these bondholders. In numerous conferences and otherwise, through' many tedious hours, the members of the court have earnestly striven to reach some certain con *767 elusion upon the construction of that opinion, but without entire success. The difficulty is that in that opinion the court separately treated of the several elements which entered into the problem and clearly analyzed and announced in plain and definite language its holdings on the said several component elements, and then in combining those elements into the whole, or in attempting to outline the effect of each of the said separate elements in relation to the entire of the problem before the court, such general language was used that it is impossible to determine with entire confidence what was meant by the general terms employed.

In that dilemma we have determined to resort for aid by-borrowing from the principle which is available in the construction of statutes, which principle is that when there is in a statute a particular enactment in plain and, definite terms, the particular enactment will prevail over general language contained in the same statute; and we also bring to our aid those fundamental and thoroughly established principles of law in the full view of which we must assume the said opinion was written.

Let us view the general language, above mentioned, touching the liability of the lands directly to these complainants, first, as regards the large number of owners of these lands who were attempted to be made parties defendant to this suit by designating them not by name but by a general description or sweeping inclusion. After naming several defendants, hereafter to be mentioned, the. bill continued in its introduction in.regard to those m^ide defendants, as follows: “And all persons claiming to-A.wn lands-within the bounds’’ of the,No. 1-Levee District,‘‘.and who'áre too numerous to be made defendants individually,(áp.d,t.o be sérved with process herein.’’

■ The, cou-rOn 77 Miss. made no mention of the abortive manner in’ which the parties so generally designated were attempted to be.brought in as defendants. Certainly, however,-the court-'could, not have overlooked fundamental principles and could not have intended by any general *768 language used by it to hold that the numerous owners, attempted to be made defendants by any such designation or description and without process on them, were in anywise effectively before the court, or that their separate lands, separately owned in numerous separate tracts, could in the slightest be affected by this suit.

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Bluebook (online)
150 So. 760, 170 Miss. 744, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-woodruff-miss-1933.