Warner v. Hogin

Decision Date31 October 1927
Docket Number26580
Citation148 Miss. 562,114 So. 347
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
PartiesWARNER v. HOGIN. [*]

(Division B.)

1. APPEAL AND ERROR. Interlocutory decree, sustaining demurrer on ground that bill did not state grounds for discovery and accounting and transferring cause to circuit court, was not appealable; "principles involved in cause" (Hemingway's Code 1927, section 9).

Interlocutory decree in chancery court, sustaining demurrer on ground that bill failed to state cause for discovery and accounting and transferring cause to circuit court, was not appealable under Laws 1924, chapter 151, section 17 (Hemingway's Code 1927, section 9), since sole question was one of jurisdiction as between chancery court and circuit court, and decision of this question was not determination of "principles involved in cause."

2. TRIAL. Where cause was transferred from chancery court to circuit court, latter acquired jurisdiction whether it was of law cognizance or not (Hemingway's Code 1927, section 496).

Under Code 1906, section 703 (Hemingway's Code 1927, section 496), providing that "circuit court shall have jurisdiction of all cases transferred to it by chancery court," where chancery court transferred cause to circuit court on ground that bill failed to state cause of action for discovery and accounting and that subject of litigation was one of exclusive law jurisdiction, circuit court acquired jurisdiction to finally dispose of cause whether it was one of equity or law cognizance.

3. APPEAL AND ERROR. Cause cannot be reversed because of having been transferred to wrong court unless complaining party has been denied substantial right thereby (Constitution 1890 section 147).

Where cause, which has been transferred by either chancery court or circuit court to the other, is appealed, supreme court cannot reverse it, under Constitution 1890, section 147, on ground alone of mistake of jurisdiction, but if, in addition complaining party is denied substantial right on account of cause being in wrong court, supreme court will reverse it and send it to right court.

4. APPEAL AND ERROR. Supreme court itself will raise question of its jurisdiction of appeal from decree transferring cause from chancery to circuit court (Constitution 1890, section 147).

Supreme court itself will raise question whether it has jurisdiction under Constitution 1890, section 147, of appeal from decree of chancery court transferring cause to circuit court.

Division B

APPEAL from chancery court of Sunflower county.

HON. J L. WILLIAMS, Chancellor.

Suit in chancery court by C. B. Warner against John E. Hogin. From a decree sustaining a demurrer and transferring the cause to the circuit court, plaintiff appeals. Appeal dismissed.

Appeal dismissed.

Pollard & Hamner, for appellant.

The chancellor should have overruled the demurrer, as it went clearly to the jurisdictional feature of the cause. This case is of equity jurisdiction, since it involved both an accounting and a discovery.

This court has ruled so frequently and so consistently that the allegations of the bill must be accepted as true on demurrer that we will neither argue this point nor cite authorities. Griffith's Miss. Ch. Pr., section 289.

The court below should have overruled the demurrer, ordered the defendant to answer with a complete discovery, as prayed for, and then on proof should have awarded a decree to the complainant for such sum, if any, as the proof showed that he was entitled to receive; and in failing to do this, the court below erred.

Chapman, Moody & Johnson, for appellee.

The accounting. The bill fails to make any allegations justifying an accounting in equity. Section 161 of the Constitution, by which section the chancery court has jurisdiction of suits involving inquiry into matters of mutual accounts. 1 C. J., pages 598-99; Barneard & Co. v. Sykes, 72 Miss. 297, 302, 18 So. 450.

We apprehend that the appellant does not claim that the account is a mutual account, but that a court of equity has jurisdiction by reason of the complexity of the account. It would seem from the section of the Constitution cited, that the chancery court has not original jurisdiction if the accounts are only complicated and not mutual; but that if a suit is brought in the circuit court and it appears that the accounts to be investigated are mutual and complicated, the suit may be transferred to the chancery court. But assuming for the sake of argument that the chancery court has jurisdiction to decree an accounting where the accounts are complicated, we shall now inquire whether the allegations of the bill state such a case. Appellant confuses the real or apparent difficulty of making the calculations upon the basis agreed on in the contract with an equitable accounting. 1 C. J., pages 619-20.

In the case at bar the items of account are upon one side only, and surely it presents no great complexity. For the year 1923 the rent will be determined by the average price of Grade D-8, and for the year 1924 the rent is four thousand dollars; the complainant has received certain sums, which he has credited on the account; the balance due him, if any, is easily and readily determined. Lesley v. Rosson, 39 Miss. 368; Barnard & Co. v. Sykes, 72 Miss. 297, 18 So. 450; Walley & Sons v. Dantzler Lbr. Co., 114 Miss. 601, 75 So. 433.

The discovery. It is not true that all of the allegations of the bill must be accepted as true; a demurrer admits only all material facts well pleaded in the bill; it does not admit conclusions of law, inferences or deductions of facts; it does not admit all of the allegations of the bill, but it admits only the material, well-pleaded facts. Tennent v. Barksdale, 3 So. 80; Partee v. Kortrecht, 54 Miss. 66.

It is true that the bill in the instant case alleges "that such information is all peculiarly within the knowledge of the defendant," but that statement is a bare inference, or conclusion of the pleader, not warranted by the allegations of fact contained in the bill and, indeed, is contrary to and contradicted by them. A perusal of the bill readily discloses that the facts, of which discovery is prayed, and which are alleged to be peculiarly within the knowledge of the defendant, are shown by the bill not to be peculiarly within his knowledge, but to be facts in the possession and knowledge of the Staple Cotton Co-operative Association.

An examination of the bill shows that every fact of which discovery is prayed, is not a fact exclusively or peculiarly within the knowledge of the defendant, or even that it is a fact within his knowledge at all, but that it is a fact within the knowledge and possession of the Staple Cotton Co-operative Association, not a party to this suit, and such as might be ascertained from an examination of its records and books. To require this defendant, only a member of the Cotton Association, to disclose what is shown by its records and books, would be on a parity with requiring a stockholder of a large corporation--e. g. United States Steel Corporation, or American Telephone & Telegraph Company--to discover what the records and books of such corporation may...

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11 cases
  • Dilworth v. Fbderal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
    • United States
    • Mississippi Supreme Court
    • April 30, 1934
    ...of the court will be reversed, and the case will be sent to the court which is best fitted to administer justice. In Warner v. Hogin, 148 Miss. 562, 114 So. 347, 348, in third syllabus, it is stated that a "cause cannot be reversed because of having been transferred to wrong court unless co......
  • Dilworth v. Federal Reserve Bank Of St. Louis
    • United States
    • Mississippi Supreme Court
    • October 30, 1933
    ...of the court will be reversed, and the case will be sent to the court which is best fitted to administer justice. In Warner v. Hogin, 148 Miss. 562, 114 So. 347, 348, in third syllabus, it is stated that a "cause cannot be reversed because of having been transferred to wrong court unless co......
  • White v. White
    • United States
    • Mississippi Court of Appeals
    • August 16, 2022
    ... ... erroneous." Hopson ex rel. Hopson v. Meredith , ... 719 So.2d 1176, 1177 (¶3) (Miss. 1998); see also ... Warner v. Hogin , 148 Miss. 562, 567, 114 So. 347, 348 ... (1927) ("The chancery court and the circuit court cannot ... make football of a case ... ...
  • Hyde Const. Co. v. Highway Materials Co., 42814
    • United States
    • Mississippi Supreme Court
    • December 20, 1963
    ...Valle House, 148 Miss. 259, 114 So. 321; Talbot & Higgins Lbr. Company v. McLeod Lbr. Company, 147 Miss. 186, 113 So. 433; Warner v. Hogin, 148 Miss. 562, 114 So. 347; Liberty Trust Company v. Planters' Bank, 155 Miss. 721, 124 So. 341; Drummond v. State, 184 Miss. 738, 185 So. 207; Hayes v......
  • Request a trial to view additional results

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