33 So. 2d 293 | Miss. | 1948
On the former appeal of this case, the decision of which is reported in Clark v. Carpenter,
On remand the trial court, without hearing further evidence, rendered a decree ordering that the deed of trust be again foreclosed upon the theory that our holding to the effect that the motion to exclude the complainant's evidence should have been overruled and our statement *31 in the opinion that the sale was void under the proof then offered by the complainant, amounted to a final adjudication in that behalf, when as a matter of fact the status of the case on remand was the same as if a peremptory instruction had been erroneously granted in favor of a defendant in a circuit court.
In the case of Partee v. Pepple et al.,
The case must, therefore, be again reversed and remanded for a new trial when the complainant will be entitled to introduce his evidence anew, together with such additional evidence as he may desire to offer, and the defendants be allowed to meet the proof offered by the complainant by showing that the land was offered for sale in a lawful manner instead of the way it was shown to have been offered by the complainant's evidence on the former trial.
Reversed and remanded. *32