Talbott v. Perkins

82 So. 2d 570, 225 Miss. 8, 1955 Miss. LEXIS 552
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 26, 1955
DocketNo. 39577
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 82 So. 2d 570 (Talbott v. Perkins) 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
Talbott v. Perkins, 82 So. 2d 570, 225 Miss. 8, 1955 Miss. LEXIS 552 (Mich. 1955).

Opinion

McGehee, C. J.

In this case we have two separate appeals from an interlocutory decree overruling the motions of the appellants.E. A. Talbott and wife Laura E. Talbott and of Karl Wiesenburg, their attorney, to dissolve a preliminary prohibitive injunction issued against each of them by the Chancery Court of Jackson County, and which [12]*12preliminary injunctions were issued after notice and service of a copy of the bill of complaint on each of them as filed by the appellees E. E. Perkins, E. H. Ware and Johnson Ware, doing business as the Pail Funeral Home.

At the time fixed by the notice for the hearing as to whether or not the preliminary injunctions should be granted, it appears that the bill of complaint was read to the chancellor by the attorney for appellees and a statement made of his reasons for seeking the issuance of the writs, followed by statement of the appellant Karl Wiesenburg of his reasons why the preliminary injunctions should not be issued; and that after the chancellor had announced that on the basis of such hearing he had concluded that the preliminary injunction should be issued against the defendants E. A. Talbott and wife but that in view of the fact that the defendant Wiesenburg was an officer of the court and had stated on the hearing that he had no interest in the property involved in the controversy and that he had acted only in the capacity of an attorney for the Talbotts in their purchase of the same, the preliminary injunction should hot be issued as to him. According the the statement of the chancellor in the record, the defendant Wiesenburg stated that if the injunction was to be issued against his clients then he wanted it also issued against him, since he didn’t want to be shown any special consideration on account of being an officer of the court; and the preliminary injunctions were therefore accordingly issued.

It further appears that thereupon the defendants asked to be allowed to offer testimony, pursuant to the notice that had been given them in order that they may be heard in the matter of whether or not the preliminary injunctions should be issued; and that as to the issuance of the writ against the defendant Wiesenburg, he had only consented, according to his recollection of what had occurred, for the same to be issued if an injunction was to be issued without the hearing of the testimony proposed to be offered. The chancellor did not so recol[13]*13lect that the attorney Wiesenburg had consented to the issuance of the injunction on the condition stated, but that the attorney had requested its issuance against him if the chancellor was going to order it issued as against his clients, the Talbotts. It is well settled in our jurisprudence that when that which is said between trial judge and an attorney in a case js not taken down by a court reporter at the time it is being said, this court must of necessity adopt the version of the trial judge as to what transpired.

Moreover, after the preliminary writs of injunction against each of the defendants had thereupon been issued, there were motions filed by each of the defendants to dissolve the injunctions issued and served on them, and after the required five days notice had been had on the motion to dissolve, there was a hearing which lasted for a period of six days after which the motions to dissolve were overruled, the injunctions retained for a full and final hearing on the merits, and interlocutory appeals were granted to this court without supersedeas.

Therefore, the precise question presented to us for decision is whether or not the preliminary injunctions thus issued should have been dissolved at the conclusion of the six day hearing on the motions to dissolve or whether the same should have been retained pending this appeal and the final hearing after remand in the event this Court should be of the opinion that the writs were properly issued.

It is contended by the appellants that the trial court was in error in refusing to hear testimony after he had announced his conclusions that the preliminary injunctions against the Talbotts should be issued and should be denied as against the defendant Wiesenburg in view of the fact that he was an officer of the court and had stated that he had no interest in the property involved or in the controversy between the complainants and the defendants except as an attorney for his co-defendants. But we are of the opinion that if the court was in error [14]*14in that regard, the error was cured when the court heard testimony on issues involved for a period of six days on the motions to dissolve the injunctions.

The facts disclosed at the hearing on the motions to dissolve, as found by the chancellor in his decree thereon, were necessarily that the complainants R. E. Perkins and others had sold to the Mississippi State Highway Commission a part of a tract or parcel of land owned by them in the City of Pascagoula for a right-of-way for the relocation of Ü. S. Highway No. 90; that by negotiations between the complainants Perkins and others and the State Highway Commission an offer had been made whereby the latter was to pay the former the snm of $45,000 for all of the tract of land except a triangular portion thereof which was then later sold by the complainants to the Talbotts for the sum of $8,000; that there was a funeral home building about 56 feet in width and from 70 to 80 feet in length located on the entire tract, the larger portion of which was on the portion sold to the State Highway Commission and the smaller portion of which building was located on the triangular portion sold by the complainants to the defendants Talbott; that it was contemplated by the State Highway Commission and by the complainants and the defendants Talbott that this building was to be removed from the entire tract of land, and that this was known by the Talbotts at the time they purchased the remaining triangular portion from the complainants; that after the complainants Perkins and others had acquired a lot from the estate of J. I. Ford, deceased, just across Magnolia Street from the funeral home building, for the purpose of removing the building to said Ford lot, and had obtained permission from the owners of another lot over which the funeral home building was to be moved to the Ford lot, and had cleaned off the two lots across the street with a bulldozer and had placed rollers under the funeral home building to make ready for its removal across the street to the Ford lot, the defendants Talbott caused [15]*15their attorney Wiesenburg, who had approved the “title opinion” on the triangular parcel of land which had been sold hy the complainants to the said defendants Talbott, to write the complainants on July 7, 1953, the following letter: “E. A. Talbott has asked me to advise you not to attempt to move the Pails Funeral Home Building across his property without first obtaining an easement from him for that purpose, if such is your intention. ’ ’

The triangular tract of land had been conveyed to E. A. Talbott-and his wife, Laura E.

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Bluebook (online)
82 So. 2d 570, 225 Miss. 8, 1955 Miss. LEXIS 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/talbott-v-perkins-miss-1955.