77 So. 528 | Miss. | 1917
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellee here, L. E. Turner, complainant in the lower court, filed an original bill in the chancery court of Perry county against W. D. Harvison. The bili, in substance, alleges that Turner sold to Harvison some land-in Green county for the sum of' three thousand dollars; that to secure the' payment of the purchase price,' appellant Harvison gave his note for the purchase price, three thousand dollars, payable three years after date. A vendor’s lien was reserved in the deed to the land in Green county. Harvison and wife, also to secure the payment of the note, executed and gave • a deed of trust on some timber bn lands owned by them in Perry county. Subsequent to the execution of the deed of trust on the standing timber on the lands in Perry county, Harvison gave a deed-of trust upon the land and the timber in Perry county to the Jeff Griffis Mercantile Company, to secure an indebtedness of five
It is alleged that Harvison owns no property except the tracts of land in Green and Perry counties; that ' the Green county land is a homestead and exempt from execution. It is alleged that the Perry county lands had been relieved of the deed of trust of the mercantile company solely by the sale of the timber on the lands through this company and the application of the proceeds of the sale to the payment of its deed of trust; that Harvison is trying to sell the Perry county lands or to secure a loan by mortgaging them; that if either is done, Turner would be without remedy on account of the insolvency of Plarvison. It is then alleged that Turner is entitled, not only to a decree against the defendant for the value of the timber cut by him from the Perry county lands, but is entitled to be subrogated to the lien of the deed of trust of the mercantile company. The prayer is for this subrogation and a decree for the value of the timber so cut and removed from the Perry county lands by Harvison.
To this bill of complaint a demurrer was interposed by Harvison, in which it is alleged, among other things, that the bill and exhibits show that all the matters alleged in the bill were adjudicated in the first litigation in the chancery court of Perry county. The chancellor overruled the demurrer, and from that decree this" appeal is prosecuted.
It therefore becomes necessary for us to set out in substance the material allegations and denials contained in the bill and answer in the first Perry county litigation, and also the decree, in that case, from which no appeal was prosecuted, in order to determine whether or not the issues presented by the bill were or should have been adjudicated.
The answer of Turner denied that he purchased the timber on the lands in Green and Perry counties, as specifically averred in the bill. It denies that Turner entered upon the land in Perry county and cut down and removed and converted into money most of the timber. Denies that he cut and removed any timber on the Perry county lands. : Denies that defendant executed to the Jeff Griffis Mercantile Company a writing conveying the balance of the timber on the Perry county lands. In short, the answer in detail denies the material allegations as to the selling, cutting, and removing of the timber on the lands in both Green and Perry counties. Denied that the note had been paid, but averred that a balance of one thousand, two hundred ninety-four dollars and ninety-two cents was due. It avers that complainant and defendant entered into an agreement that certain timber was to be cut’ and the proceeds from the sale' of same applied as a credit on the note; that Turner agreed to relinquish his prior lien on the Perry county land, provided the mercantile company would pay Turner two hundred dollars to be applied on this note; that this arrangement was made in the interest of Harvison. Denies that he promised, while the timber was being cut on the Perry county lands, that he would deliver the three thousand dollar note to Harvison. The cross-bill of Turner alleges, in short, that Harvison made arrangements with certain parties whereby he sold the timber to them in these counties, and that the net proceeds of this timber was to be applied on the three thousand dollar indebtedness, and that Turner agreed to this arrangement, and that certain payments were made and credited on the note,
It is the contention of the appellee, Turner, that the only issue presented in the first suit was whether or not Harvison had been-paid the balance due on the Green county lands by sale of the timber on the Perry and Green county lands to Turner, and that the court by decreeing that the note had been paid necessarily held that it was paid by the sale of this timber to Turner, and that therefore Turnei; was the owner of the timber, and that Harvison' was liable to him for the value of any timber sold from these lands by Harvison after the sale of the timber by Harvison to Turner.' We think this is entirely too narrow a view to take of the issues in the first case. It was. not only alleged in the original bill filed by Harvison and wife, that these notes had been paid and settled by a sale of the timber to Turner, but it was further alleged that Turner himself had cut and removed most of the timber from the
Reversed and remanded.