85 So. 173 | Miss. | 1920
delivered the opinion of the court.
Appellee, a corporation, exhibited its bill in equity against appellant, a corporation, to recover four thousand two hundred and thirty dollars, the purchase money' for the lands described as the Southeast quarter of Southeast quarter of section 10, and West half of Southeast quarter, section 11, township '5, south of range 16 west; and in support of its claim alleg'ed in substance, the following facts: That prior to March, 1912, one W. B. Harbeson was the owner of the lands; that Harbeson had conveyed to appellee, the Lacey Lumber Company, the right to cut and remove all of the merchantable pine timber ; that the timber was to be manufactured at appellee’s sawmill at Carriere, Miss.; that appellee had a tram or logging railroad over which the logs would be transported, and before appellee company was permitted to move and manufacture the timber the Poitevant & Havre Lumber Company, a corporation, claimed to be the owner of the lands, and in assertion of its claim the last-named company filed its bill of complaint against the said Harbeson and the Lacey Lumber Company in the chancery court of Pearl River County, seeking to confirm its (the complainant’s) title, and enjoined Harbeson and "^ey Lumber Company, the defendants to said suit, from cutting and removing the timber; that the injunction was issued and served, and that the Lacey Lumber Company was thereby prevented from cutting the timber, the bill further alleges that the Lacey Lumber Company had practically cut out its standing timber in the territory in which the land was situated, and desired to remove the logging railroad, and that it was important that the timber be
For the complainant Mr. Harbeson testified to facts set up in the bill, while Mr. Weston testified for the defendant, appellant here. The pleadings and decree rendered by the chancery court in the former litigation between Poitevant & Favre Lumber Company and appellee were introduced. The final decree reads as follows:
“This cause, coming on for final hearing at a special sitting of the court, as per previous order of the court, on bill of complaint and amendment thereto, answer, and amended answers, ■ depositions, record evidence, and agreement of parties, and same having been fully argued
“It is therefore the judgment of the court, and is ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the bill of complaint in this cause be, and the same is hereby, dismissed; that the titles set up to said land hereinabove described is in the said respondent Lacey Lumber Company as per the title by it pleaded, and it is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the injunction in this cause be, and the same is hereby, dismissed, set aside, and dissolved, and that the respondent do have and recover of and from complainant the sum of five hundred dollars, and all costs of this court, for all of which let execution issue.
“Ordered, adjudged, and decreed; this the 22d day of October, 1914”
The question of fact as to whether there was a special agreement not incorporated in the deed was a disputed question of fact, and the final decree now appealed from on this point has the following recital:
*213 “The court is of the opinion that the reformation prayed for should be denied as a matter of law only.”
It affirmatively appears that if there was any effort to reach a special agreement about refunding the consideration, it was a contemporaneous oral agreement in no wise referred to or incorporated in the written conveyance. The deed executed by appellant was the usual warranty deed.
We are led to the conclusion that upon the facts and applicable principles of law, the decree of the learned chancery court must be reversed. The record shows that Mr. Harbeson is the chief stockholder, managing officer, and dominant influence in the Lacey Lumber Company. He claimed title to the land, and had conveyed the timber rights to his codefendant, the Lacey Lumber Company. In this situation the Poitevant & Pavre Lumber Company asserted title to the land and timber and filed its bill to confirm title. In this, the Jjrst suit reflected by the present record, both Harbeson and the Lacey Lumber Company were parties defendant. That suit was prosecuted to a successful termination and in this three-cornered fight over the title the court expressly decreed title in the Lacey Lumber Company. Among other recitals in the first decree is the following:
“It is therefore the judgment of the court and it is ordered, adjudged and decreed that the bill of complaint in this cause be and the same is hereby dismissed; that the title set up to said land here described is in the said defendant Lacey Lumber Company as per the title by it pleaded.”
This decree, we think, is binding upon the parties and privies to that litigation. From that decree there was an appeal to the supreme court, and the cause was affirmed. The decree thus affirmed adjudicated xthe title in the Lacey Lumber Company, and this adjudication is binding upon all parties involved, either in the first or in the present litigation. Ever thereafter it estopped
“By ‘parties,’ in the sense here intended, all persons having a right to control the proceedings, to make defense, to adduce and cross-examine witnesses, and to appeal from the decision, where appeal lies, are included.
“By the term/privies,’ is meant those who stand, in mutual or successive relationship: to the same rights of property. And privies are distributed, into several classes, according to the manner of this relationship. Thus there are privies in estate, as donor and donee, lessor and lessee, and joint tenants; privies in blood as heir and ancestor, and coparceners; privies in representation, as executor and testator, administrator, and intestate ; privies in law, where the law, without privit?/' of blood or estate, casts the land upon another, as by escheat. All tjhese are more generally classed into privies in estate, privies in blood, and privies in law.
“The ground upon which judgments bind those in privity with the party against whom they are rendered is that they are identified in interest, by their mutual or successive relationship’ to the same rights of property involved in the litigation.”
“The general meaning of privies includes those who claim under or in right of parties.”
“The allegation, that Baldwin has broken his covenant of seizin, by reason that Fitch owned the property when he purchased it, is repugnant to the direct acknowl ■ edgement in the act of receiving a title, of taking a conveyance from Baldwin. Paying a valuable consideration and accepting a deed from Baldwin restrains the bargainee from asserting- that the bargainor was not seized of the premises, but that the bargainee was seized. The covenant of seizin extends only to guarantee the bargainee against any title existing in a third person, and which might defeat the estate granted. ’ ’
The announcement of the New York court was subquently quoted with approval, and the same doctrine announced in the case of Horrigan v. Rice, 39 Minn. 49, 38 N. W. 765, in which the court by Mitchell, J., said:
*215 “Where at the time of the conveyance the purchaser has in himself the valid title to the premises, he cannot sue on the covenant it contains, for they only extend to a title existing in a third person, which may defeat the estate granted by the convenantor. They do not embrace
To these authorities may be added Rawle on Covenants of Title (5th Ed.), section 268; Harris & Mitchell v. Amoskeag Lbr. Co., 101 Ga. 641, 29 S. E. 302; 15 C. J. par. 137, p. 1282. It should be particularly noted that there is not the slightest element of fraud, ignorance, or oppression. Appellee was induced to negotiate with appellant, it seems, chiefly because of the necessity to cut the timber pending litigation, and it negotiated with appellant Aith full knowledge of all the facts, and especially with full knowledge of the exact claim which both" appellant and appellee had or possessed to the premises in dispute. •
Reversed, and decree here for appellant.