33 So. 2d 628 | Miss. | 1948
Claiming to be the owner as a tenant in common of an undivided one-sixteenth interest in the land described in his bill, appellee, on June 25, 1945, began his suit for a partition. Appellants answered and set up the fact that appellee's interest had already been sold under a previous partition proceeding, wherein the sale had been confirmed on November 3, 1924, and that this former decree had become conclusive and final as to appellee under Section 977, Code 1942, the further fact being that appellee was approximately twenty-nine years old when he instituted the present suit.
The cited section reads as follows: "Section 977. Final decree and decree of confirmation. — The final decree of the chancery court in partition proceedings shall ascertain and settle the rights of all parties; and it, and the decree confirming the partition, shall constitute an instrument of evidence in all questions as to the title of the lands which may be the subject of the decree, in all courts, and shall be conclusive as to the rights of all parties to the suit, and subject to appeals and bills of review, as in other suits, and to a repartition as provided."
By the express language of that statute the final decree and the decree confirming the partition is conclusive against all parties save as to appeals, bills of review and a repartition. It was definitely so held in Martin v. Gilleylen,
The repartition mentioned in the statute is that provided by Section 982, Code 1942, but this is limited to one year next after the first partition. No appeal was here taken, and appellee did not file a bill of review within two years next after he reached the age of twenty-one years. Section 752, Code 1942.
Appellee contends that the sale made in 1924 was void for the reason that the minor owners in the original partition, of whom appellee was one, were made parties complainant therein by their mother, as their next friend, and that she became and was the purchaser at the partition sale; and the sale being void for that reason, as appellee contends, he would not be barred except for the ten-year statute of adverse possession, which had not run its full course when he instituted the suit now before us.
We held in Memphis Stone Gravel Co. v. Archer,
Appellee relies principally on Smith v. Strickland,
The sole and only attack here made on the first partition suit is that the next friend became the purchaser at the sale and this appears on the face of the record thereof. Any attack on that ground is, therefore, the subject matter of a bill of review, limited by said Section 977, Code 1942, to two years after the disability of minority has been removed. Compare Brown v. Wesson,
Reversed, and decree here for appellants.