58 Miss. 30 | Miss. | 1880
delivered the opinion of the court.
There is a serious conflict in the evidence. The chancellor believed the evidence of the appellees and dismissed the appellant’s bill. We cannot say that the chancellor erred in giving credit to the .witness for the appellees. The testimony of this witness established this state of facts: That appellant Evans came to Bourgess, one of the appellees, and told him that Abercrombie would ship his house two hundred bales of cotton, and that Abercrombie would want some bagging and ties and a small advance in money; that Evans said nothing about a lieu for rent in favor of the landlord on Abercrombie’s cotton, nor did he intimate that he himself had a mortgage on it. Bourgess made the advances that Abercrombie wanted, to the amount of $700, and received seventy-six bales
Decree affirmed.