73 Miss. 91 | Miss. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the court.
There was no subrogation here, legal or conventional. One who discharges for the debtor to the creditor, who holds an incumbrance or lien securing the debt, such debt, by agreement express or reasonably inferable from the facts of the particular case, that he shall have the incumbrance or lien kept alive for his benefit, is protected within the rule for conventional subro
In Chaffe v. Patterson, 61 Miss., 28, there was no appeal by Mrs. Henry from the decree of the chancellor in the litigation between her and John Chaffe & Sons holding Chaffe & Sons entitled to subrogation to the rights of her vendor against the Montgomery lands. That holding was clearly erroneous, and would have been reversed on appeal. But it stood unreversed, and so was the law of that particular case; and Patterson et al., in their litigation with Chaffe & Sons, were affected with notice
Affirmed.