Woods v. Chesborough

Decision Date08 March 1909
Docket Number13,825
Citation48 So. 613,95 Miss. 63
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
PartiesMARY SCOTT WOODS ET AL. v. ABAM M. CHEESBOROUGH ET AL

FROM the chancery court of Marion county, HON. THADDEUS A. WOOD Chancellor.

Mrs Woods and others, appellants, were complainants in the court below; Cheeseborough and others, appellees, were defendants there. From a decree in defendant's favor complainants appealed to the supreme court. The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.

Affirmed.

C. G Mayson and Cross, Lovelace & Ross, for appellants.

Appellees' contention is that the bill and amended bills of review are not maintainable. Equity is defined to be the system of justice administered by the high court of chancery in England. Smith v. Everett, 50 Miss. 575.

Assuredly then if the English system prevails in this state the mode of procedure in the application of that system must also obtain except as modified from time to time by legislative enactments or decisions of courts of last resort. We take it then, that the system of equity pleading prevailing in England has been established in this state except as modified.

"There are two cases," says Mr. Justice Story, quoting with approval the ordinances of Lord Chancellor Bacon, "in which a bill of review is permitted to be brought. First: Where it contains error in law appearing in the body of the decree, without further examination of matters of fact, Second: or of some new matter which has arisen after the decree and not any new proof which might have been used when the decree was made." Story's Eq. Pl. sec. 404.

It is to be borne in mind that during the pendency of the first suit the appellee, Southern Pine Company, sold the land to appellee, Cheesborough. Appellee, Cheesborough, was then not a party to the first suit, but it developed that it became necessary to impeach the decree of 1896. This could only be done by an original bill. Story's Eq. Pl. sec. 426.

However, if by analogy it be held that the limitation prescribed in Code 1892, § 2757, Code 1906, § 3111, is to be applied. Surely the limitation should not begin to run until after appellees had knowledge of the existence of the decree of 1896. The cause was pending five years before the decree of 1896 was rendered; appellee might well suppose that it would be continued indefinitely, or at least for five years longer.

That the decision in Hardy v. Hartman, 65 Miss. 504, 4 So. 545, cannot, in this cause, be invoked as res adjudicata or stare decisis, see Adams v. Railroad Company, 77 Miss. 194 24 So. 200, 317, 28 So. 956, and particularly on pages 278, et seq; Railroad Co. v. Adams, 81 Miss. 90, 32 So. 937.

In a late case in the United States circuit court of appeals it was held that the act of 1873 validated the acts, deeds, etc., of the Pearl River Improvement and Navigation Company and that its vendees would be protected. Hall v. Southern Pine Co., 105 F. 84.

T. M. Miller and Alexander & Alexander, for appellees.

Lapse of time alone is sufficient to bar this suit and requires the affirmance of the final decree from which the appeal is prosecuted. Brooks v. Spann, 63 Miss. 198.

Argued orally by T. M. Miller and C. H. Alexander, for appellees.

OPINION

FLETCHER, J.

In October, 1891, the Southern Pine Company, appellees' predecessor in title, filed a bill in the chancery court of Marion county against appellants, dealing with the identical lands here in controversy. The Southern Pine Company claimed by virtue of patents issued by the state of Mississippi subsequent to 1871, and appellants claimed title by virtue of the Pearl River Investment & Navigation Company act of 1871 dealt with in the case of Hardy v. Hartman,[*] 65 Miss. 504, 4 So. 545. The case was continued from term to term, at some of which orders were taken and pleadings filed, until the July term, 1896, when a final decree was rendered on "original and amended bill of complaint, and exhibits and documentary evidence, and the answer and cross-bill and exhibits thereto, and the answer to cross-bill and exhibits," upholding and confirming the title of the Southern Pine Company to all the lands now in...

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2 cases
  • Zewadski v. Barksdale
    • United States
    • Florida Supreme Court
    • 17 Diciembre 1923
    ... ... 616, ... 64 P. 994; Holloway v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co., 122 ... Md. 620, 90 A. 95; Adams v. Adams, 77 N. J. Eq. 123, ... 79 A. 683; Woods v. Chesborough, 95 Miss. 63, 48 So ... In ... announcing this rule the Supreme Court of the United States, ... in Thomas v ... ...
  • William Scott Wood v. Abram Chesborough
    • United States
    • U.S. Supreme Court
    • 26 Mayo 1913
    ...of facts. A decree was entered dismissing the original and amended bills. It was affirmed by the supreme court of the state. 95 Miss. 63, 48 So. 613. The supreme court rested its decision entirely upon the decree rendered in the suit of the Southern Pine company, and, stating the facts, sai......

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