120 So. 456 | Miss. | 1929
It was alleged in the pleadings and shown by the evidence that appellant owned block 240, and appellee W.D. Bass block 233, in Alcorn county, both of which blocks having been formerly within the corporate limits of the city of Corinth. In 1884, the legislature passed an act excluding the territory of which these two blocks were a part from the corporate limits of the city of Corinth. The land in controversy is a strip of land twenty-four feet wide between these two blocks.
The chancellor found the following facts and conclusions of law, and was justified by the evidence and the law in so doing: That neither appellant nor appellee, W.D. Bass had title to the strip of land; that, some years prior to the filing of the bill, appellant had taken possession of the strip of land and had inclosed it with a fence *520 along with block 240 owned by him; that, in so doing, none of the rights of the appellee W.D. Bass were violated; that, as between appellant and appellee W.D. Bass, appellant's possession of the strip of land was rightful; that therefore neither appellee W.D. Bass nor the other appellees, his sisters, who were acting for him in tearing down and removing the fence inclosing the strip of land, were justified in so doing; and that, in tearing down and removing the fence, they incurred the statutory penalty of twenty dollars provided by section 4987, Code of 1906 (section 3451, Hemingway's 1927 Code), which penalty the court decreed against the appellees. The court therefore committed no error in holding that neither of the parties had title to the land, and in dismissing both the original and the cross-bill as to that phase of the case.
But appellant contends that the court should have gone further in its decree and provided that appellees should restore to him the possession of the strip of land which they had so taken, while appellees contend, on their cross-appeal, that, if appellant has such a right, it is a legal and not an equitable right, and that his remedy is in a court of law and not in a court of equity; that, in a court of equity, a complainant has no right to cancel an adverse claim of title to land unless he shows title in himself; that appellant, having failed to show title in himself, is without remedy against the appellees because of their interference with his possession, and that such an interference was a violation of his legal, and not his equitable, rights, and his remedy therefor is alone in a court of law.
The rule is that, to entitle a complainant to cancel, as a cloud upon his title to land, his adversary's claim thereto, he must show in himself a perfect legal or equitable title to the land. Handy v. Noonan,
The decree appealed from should be reversed on direct appeal and affirmed on cross-appeal, and a final decree entered here requiring the appellees to restore to *522 appellant the possession of the land involved, and enjoining them from further interference with such possession.
Reversed on direct appeal and affirmed on cross-appeal.
Affirmed. Reversed.