Beauchamp v. McLauchlin

Decision Date22 April 1946
Docket Number36111.
Citation25 So.2d 771,200 Miss. 83
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
PartiesBEAUCHAMP et al. v. McLAUCHLIN et ux.

Morgan & Thornton, of Kosciusko, for appellants.

A. M. Warwick, of Carthage, for appellees.

ROBERDS, Justice.

Pat N McLauchlin and his wife, Wyvette McLauchlin, appellees, filed their bill in the Chancery Court against H. B. Beauchamp, C E. Morgan, A. H. Cauthen and Nelson Cauthen, the appellants herein, and the State of Mississippi, seeking to cancel a patent issued by the State to A. H. Cauthen to 40 acres of land and also a patent issued to Nelson Cauthen to 160 acres of land, and to annul and cancel a deed from the Cauthens conveying both tracts of land to appellants Beauchamp and Morgan, and to obtain a decree of the court adjudicating that Pat N. McLauchlin had performed such acts as were necessary to legally redeem said land from a tax sale to the State. The Chancellor sustained the bill and all of the defendants appeal except the State of Mississippi.

The tax sale in question occurred the 6th day of April, 1931, for delinquent taxes for 1930. Pat McLauchlin offered to redeem the lands from that sale, in the manner hereinafter set out, in December 1941, before he became twenty-three years of age on June 20th thereafter. A minor has two years after becoming of legal age within which to redeem his land from tax sale. Section 9948, Code 1942. Appellants contend that Pat McLauchlin was not the owner of the lands when they sold for taxes. That is grounded on the claim that there was no delivery of a deed to Pat, under the circumstances hereinafter related, until the year 1938, and that he had no title to the land until that time; that, until that time, the land was owned by D. J. McLauchlin, an adult and that therefore the right of a minor to redeem under the foregoing statute did not exist. Was there a delivery of the deed to Pat McLauchlin prior to this tax sale in 1931?

On that question the record discloses that Dan J. McLauchlin, the father of Pat Newton McLauchlin, owned between three and four thousand acres of land in Leake County, Mississippi. He had several children and a number of grandchildren. He decided to give his children and grandchildren certain of his lands. He executed and recorded a deed to each of them. He delivered to the adult grantees their deeds and the deeds to the minor grandchildren he delivered to their parents for such minors. The deed to Pat is dated February 18, 19308 and describes the 200 acres of land in question. It recites a consideration of $1 'and the love and affection I have for my son'. The grantor delivered the deed to the Chancery Clerk on March 14, 1930, for the purpose of being recorded.

It was actually recorded March 19, 1930. After being recorded the deed was redelivered to the grantor and by him placed in a trunk in his home, and he retained the physical possession of it until sometime in the year 1938. When the deed was executed and recorded Pat was around eleven years of age and was then living in the home of his parents, where he continued to live until he later married. During this time Pat and his mother both knew the deed had been executed and it was generally understood in the family that said land belonged to Pat. Also during that time the father managed the land. It appears he rented it to two people. Apparently no cash rent was paid, the tenants using the land as a pasture and paying the rent by making certain improvements on the premises. On April 16, 1938, Pat married the appellant, Wyvette McLauchlin, and about that time, or shortly thereafter, the deed was physically delivered to him by his father. During 1938 and 1939 Pat constructed on the premises a residence of the value of five to six hundred dollars and a barn of the value of one hundred and fifty dollars. Pat and his wife moved into this residence and onto the land in October, 1939. Further acts of ownership will be detailed later but for the present purpose need not now be stated. The question is whether there was a delivery of the deed prior to the tax sale on April 6, 1931?

In Young v. Elgin, Miss., 27 So. 595, the mother executed a deed conveying her residence to her daughter who lived with her and placed the deed in the grantor's wardrobe. The daughter knew nothing of the execution of this deed until the mother, when leaving to visit another daughter a few months after, told her where the deed was, and that she had given the property to her. The mother died, the deed still being in the wardrobe. This Court held that the deed had been delivered.

In Chapman v. Lott, 144 Miss. 841, 110 So. 793, this Court held that a deed executed by the husband to his wife had been delivered where the husband signed and acknowledged the deed and delivered it for record, although the husband obtained the deed after it was recorded and thereafter kept it with the family papers of himself and his wife in the home.

In the case at bar the grantee was a minor living in the home. The deed was placed by the father of record, which act itself was prima facie a delivery. He told the grantee he had executed the deed and the members of the family considered that the property belonged to the grantee. The physical possession of the deed was deliveryed to him upon his marriage, or shortly thereafter. We think it is clear under all of the circumstances and the applicable rules of law that this deed was delivered to the grantee in 1930 and he then became the owner of the legal title to said land.

It is next contended by appellants that Pat did not perform sufficient acts to redeem the land. It is shown that after Pat married and moved onto the land he discovered it had sold for taxes in 1931. He and two older brothers went to the Chancery Clerk's office and Pat informed the clerk he understood the land had sold for taxes and that he wanted to redeem it from the tax sale. He exhibited to the clerk the deed from his father. He told the clerk that he was a minor when this sale was made. The clerk looked at his records and informed Pat that the tax sale had been reported to the State Land Office and that it was too late to redeem the land through his office and that Pat would have to consult the State Land Office. Pat and his two brothers went to the State Capitl that same day and conferred with the State Land Commissioner, with the purpose to either redeem or re-purchase the land from the State. He exhibited to the Commissioner his deed and explained he was a minor when the sale took place, expressing at the time his understanding that the law gave protection to a minor whose land had sold for taxes. The Commissioner informed him, however, he could not issue to him a patent because the Cauthens had made applications for patents and the State was under obligation to issue such patents (one brother understood the patent to A. H. Cauthen had already been issued) and also because the Commissioner erroneously thought that a statute enacted after this sale affected Pat's rights to redeem to re-purchase his land. It is further shown without dispute that when Pat went to the Chancery Clerk and to the Land Office he had upon his person sufficient money with which to redeem the land or to re-purchase it from the State. Appellants contend these acts did not constitute a redemption. Specifically, they say the clerk was not requested to figure up the amount necessary to rdeem and no money was actually tendered the clerk or the Land Commissioner. Substantially the same facts and questions were involved in McLain v. Meletio et al., 166 Miss. 1, 147 So. 878, and Kelly v. Coker, 197 Miss. 131, 19 So.2d 519, and this Court held in both cases redemptions had been effected. Those cases are binding upon us unless we overrule them.

It is next contended by appellants that the proof fails to show that Pat Offered to redeem the lands within two years after he became of age. Specifically they contend that the proof shows that Pat was born June 20, 1918. If he was born in 1918 his offer to redeem in December 1941 came too late, but if he was born June 20, 1919, his offer to redeem was within two years after he became twenty-one years of age. The Chancellor found that he was born in 1919. The evidence in support of that finding is...

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19 cases
  • State ex rel. Kyle v. Dear
    • United States
    • Mississippi Supreme Court
    • May 8, 1950
    ...as to what should not a purchaser upon inquiry, see the cases of Baldwin v. Anderson, 103 Miss. 462, 60 So. 578; Beauchamp v. McLauchlin, 200 Miss. 83, 25 So.2d 771. In the recent case of Koonce v. Board of Supervisors of Grenada County, 202 Miss. 473, 32 So.2d 264, 265, it was expressly he......
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    ...claim of title is sufficient to put subsequent purchasers on inquiry as to the possessor's rights therein." Beauchamp v. McLauchlin, 200 Miss. 83, 94, 25 So.2d 771, 775 (1946). Therefore, Harvey's possession of the property in a manner meeting the elements of adverse possession was notice t......
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    ...as far back as Dixon v. Doe, ex dem. Lacoste, 1 Smedes & M. 70, and through a uniform line of decisions on down to Beauchamp v. McLauchlin, 200 Miss. 83, 25 So.2d 771, decided in 1946, it has been consistently held that the registration statutes do not affect an owner in possession by himse......
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