79 Miss. 1 | Miss. | 1901
delivered the opinion of the court.
The record in this case shows that on May 10, 1847, Ransom Bunckley, owning a large body of land in Franklin county, some thirty-odd slaves,- horses, cattle, etc., by deed conveyed a portion of the same to his three sons, Nathan, Ransom P., and Douglass. After the granting clause in the deed, he made this provision: “To have and to hold the said tract or parcel of land, the said negroes and stock, together with all the rights,
On the hearing of this case in the lower court, some of the testimony was taken orally before the chancellor, and because of want of conformity to the law regulating the taking of bills of exceptions, was, on motion, stricken out of the record by this court, so that the case before us stands on a portion of the testimony that was before the chancellor. Appellees invoke the rule requiring an affirmance of this case, when it is shown to the court that all the testimony before the chancellor is not before this court, while appellant contends that, since the oral testimony taken before the chancellor was stricken from this record on motion of appellees, they’are now estopped to claim the benefit of the rule requiring that the case be affirmed on the presumption that the omitted testimony supported the decree, and showed that the finding of the chancellor was correct. In accordance with the law and the rules of practice of this court, the defective bill of exceptions taken by appellant was stricken from the record in this cause. The record then stood as though it had not been attempted to put the matter embraced in the bill of exceptions in the record, and, from this view of the law, we do not think appellees were estopped to claim whatever benefit might accrue to them by reason of the record becoming incomplete. From the earliest adjudication on this question, in Rankin v. Holloway, 3 Smed. & M., 614, this court, in numerous cases, has held that the presumption of correctness is indulged in favor of a decree or judgment when only a part of the testimony before the lower court is before this court. There is this exception, however, as announced by Chief Justice Sharkey in the Rankin Case, supra: “But the effect of this rule is that only such matters as are not properly placed upon record by incorporating them in the bill of exceptions are to be excluded. It does not reject the whole record, and, if the error be apparent without them, then we must reverse ; and, if it is not, then we must affirm. The judgment on its face may
Appellant bases his title on the two deeds of John R. Bunck-ley and Alice I. Williams — the first dated January 27, 1873, and the second dated December 4, 1893. The John R. Bunck-ley7- deed is assailed on the ground that it was in fact made to N. Bunckley, and not to A. N. Bunckley ; this being averred in the answers of appellees. In support of this averment the deposition of one M. J. Young is taken, who says that he saw the deed written, heard it read, saw the check for the purchase money given by Nathan Bunckley, saw it signed and acknowledged, and knows that the deed was made to N. Bunckley, and not to A. N. Bunckley.' This testimony as to this substantive fact was certainly competent, and is undisputed. The peculiarly suspicious circumstances connected with the history of this deed are strongly suggestive of positive fraud. It purports to have been made in January, 1873 — the witness Young says it was made at that time — and it quietly sleeps until October 24, 1896, after appellant’s father had been dispossessed of the land, when appellant presents it for record. From 1873 up to January, 1894, when the Bunckleys are dispossessed, A. N. Bunckley was an inmate of his father’s home; and, while the exact age of appellant is not shown by the record, we infer from all the circumstances that he was a mere youth at the time of the execution of the deed, and living in the home of his father. In the face of the positive testimony of Young, and all the other suspicious circumstances attending this deed, neither appellant nor his father, Nathan Bunckley, is put upon the stand to support this deed. Will it be disputed that they were in full possession of all the facts connected with that deed ? Will it be contended that Nathan Bunckley should not have been called as a witness to contradict the positive testi
We come now to notice the other deed under which appellant claims, towit, the deed from Mrs. Alice I. Williams, of date December 4, 1893. This deed describes the property conveyed as “all our right, title, claim and interest in tract of land belonging to Ransom P. Bunckley, deceased, situated in Franklin county, State of Mississippi.’-’ We are inclined to the opinion that the testimony shows that many years before the execution of this deed Mrs. Williams conveyed her interest in the lands to Nathan Bunckley, if we are to take the testimony of Mrs. Scriber as competent. She (one of the defendants to the bill)
Since the two deeds under which appellant claims title are shown to be insufficient to sustain his case, we are indisposed to discuss the other questions raised by a construction of the deeds of May 10, 1847, as it is unnecessary to a correct determination of this appeal.
It is manifest from the record before us that the decree of the learned Chancellor was correct, and it is therefore affirmed.