90 So. 449 | Miss. | 1921
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellee was conplainant below, and appellant was defendant. The complainant filed his bill in the chancery court to quiet his title to certain lands described in the bill as the Southwest half of section 8, Township 12, Bange 5 east, containing one hundred fifty acres, more or less; said Southwest quarter being a fractional quarter; also the Northwest quarter of section 8, Township 12, Bange 5 east, which lies south of the Port Gibson public road, containing eighty acres, more or less; also the south end of the West half of the Northeast quarter, section 8, Township 12, Bange, 5, being that part south of the Byrnes road, containing twenty acres more or less; and set forth his de-raignment of title by conveyances from the government through his chain of title to himself. The description of the land in controversy in this suit as shown in the deeds is as follows: Beginning at the Northwest corner of the Southwest quarter of section 8; thence east to the Southeast corner of the West half of Northeast quarter of .section 8; thence south to a drain or bayou; thence down the drain to the Greer branch; thence down the Greer branch to Bayou Pierre; thence down Bayou Pierre to the Hermitage Plantation of T. H. MeCaleb, deceased, containing one hundred fifty acres, more or less, in section 8, Township 12, Bange 4 east, Claiborne county, Miss. The bill alleged that the defendant has interfered with complainant’s possession by claims and assertions of title which are so made as to harass, annoy, and disturb complainant in the quiet, peaceable, and free enjoyment of his property, and so as to cast a cloud, doubt, and suspicion upon his title; that defendant claims and sets up that all of the Southwest quarter, section 8, Township 12, Bange 5 east, and all of
Defendant’s answer admits that complainant was in possession of certain lands in section 8, Township 12, Range 5, east, and that he had a deed thereto, but says that the description of said land in the bill and in.the deraignment of title shown in the bill did not correctly describe said lands, but that the description in the bill and in the de-raignment of title is a general description, meant to be in support of a particular description, which is as follows: Begin at Northwest corner of Southwest quarter, section 8; thence east to the Southeast corner of the West half of Northeast quarter of section 8; thence south to drain or bayou; thence down .the drain to Greer branch; thence
“Respondent further shows unto the court that he claims the 'land in controversy both by paper title and also by adverse possession in himself and his grantors, Drury Anderson and W. J. Greer; that the line as claimed by him has been for a period of forty or more years the recognized line of the Hermitage Plantation; that it is marked for a part of the way upon the eastern line with old marked trees; that it has been accepted as the true line between the tract formerly owned by Byrnes and the tract formerly owned by McCaleb, said Byrnes owning section 8, or a part thereof, and said McCaleb owning, among other lands, section 7; that the respective owners upon each side of the line as claimed by this respondent recognized such line at the true line, and that each claimed up to said line, and exercised rights of ownership over the same, and were, and remained, in actual, notorious, continuous and adverse possession thereof for the period aforesaid and that each recognized the ownership of the other upon his side of said line as aforesaid; that the claim made by said Pickett is for the first time made by any owner of the Byrnes tract, and that it is wholly without any support in right of justice.”
There appear to have been two surveys made by the ■ government and two maps filed in the county concerning this land. According to one of the maps section 7 contained thirty-nine and a fraction 'acres; according to the other map this section contained sixty acres. Several surveyors had run the lines between McCaleb land and the land of complainant, some of which support the claims of defend
The appellant contends that there is no dispute that the former owners of the lands now owned respectively by complainant and defendant had treated the boundary lines as contended for by the defendant as being the true boundary between them, and that such boundary had been recognized by all parties interested'for thirty or forty years, and had not been disputed until recently, and that such evidence was not disputed by anything in the record, and that under such evidence he was entitled to a decree. The appellee has not dealt with this feature of the case until he filed a reply brief to the appellant’s reply brief, and now contends that this contention cannot be maintained for the reason that complainant and his grantors who testified in the case stated that they claimed nothing in section 8, and that their claims were based upon lands in section 7, and that they did not own any lands in section 8. The contention of the appellant is, and he so claims in his answer, that the true line is the one established by the surveys favorable to him, and that he has both the paper title to the lands in controversy and also title by adverse possession. The witnesses introduced by him upon this point support his contention in this particular, and there was no evidence that said land had not been fenced for many years before this controversy arose, nor that any dispute had existed as to the true boundary as contended for by defendant. The chancellor evidently based his finding for complainant upon the statement of the defendant and his grantors that he did not own any lands in section 8, to gether with the fact that defendant’s deed called for section 7. We think the contention of the appellant is supported by the doctrine, of Metcalfe v. McCutchen, 60 Miss. 145, and Jones v. Gaddis, 67 Miss. 761, 7 So. 489, which cases hold that, notwithstanding the party claims lands as being within the calls of his deed and was relying upon his deed as the foundation of his claim, yet, it he occupied
Reversed and dismissed.