79 Miss. 503 | Miss. | 1901
delivered the opinion of the court.
Wooten & Agee brought their action of unlawful entry and detainer against Gulp for the possession of certain land, lost their case before the court of the justice of the peace, appealed to the circuit court, won there, and Gulp appeals to this court.
Under the law once existing here, a deed absolute on its face might be shoAvn, by parol, to be in fact a mortgage to secure a debt. Section 1299 of the code of 1880, brought forward in § 4233 of the code of 1892, introduced a modification of this doctrine by providing that an absolute deed should be shown by parol evidence to be a mortgage where the maker of the deed parts Avith the possession of the property, unless fraud in its procurement be the issue to be tried. The defenses which Gulp makes to the action are that the absolute deed which he executed Avas designed to be a mortgage, and that its execution was obtained by fraud; and he claims that he never parted Avith the possession of the land. Of course if he never parted with possession, he may, under the law as modified, show by parol that the conveyance was designed to be a mortgage; and whether he parted with the possession or not, he may show that it Avas procured by fraud. There is
The plaintiffs’ third instruction, we think, should not have been given. It charges the jury to find for plaintiffs unless they believed from the evidence that Culp “had never given up possession of said place to said plaintiffs.” This is too narrow, in that it excludes any consideration of any question of fraud.
We are of opinion, also, that there is error in giving plaintiffs’ fourth charge. Because Wooten & Agee intended the instrument to be a simple deed, and not a security for debt, does not warrant recovery if there was fraud, or if possession was not parted with, and Culp was led to believe by their assurances that it was redeemable.
Reversed cmd remanded.