40 So. 996 | Miss. | 1906
delivered the opinion of the court.
In July, 1904, B. I. Yates and others filed a bill in the chancery court of Noxubee county against W. B. Peebles and others. The bill charges that on the 3d day of December, 1898, B. I. Yates and his wife, Mrs. T. O. Yates, executed a deed in trust on certain property therein described to one John B. Dinsmore, trustee, to secure a note of B. I. Yates for $1,400, payable to Dr.
At the October term, 1904, W. B. Peebles, answering for himself, denied all the material allegations of the bill, and an answer was formally filed by E. O. Patty, trustee. A motion was made to dissolve the injrmction, and affidavits of various parties were taken and read on the hearing of same. On the 30th day of November, 1904, the chancellor rendered a decree overruling the motion to dissolve the injmiction, and requiring the defendant to answer and file with his answer a complete itemized statement of all dealings had with complainants. This decree was not appealed from. Afterwards, on the 20th day of February, 1905, the complainants obtained leave of the court to file an amended bill of complaint. The amended bill is in substance about the same as the original bill of complaint, except that it points out certain items claimed to be illegal charges, and states that in the statement rendered there are certain illegal charges for whiskey sold in violation of the law, and charges of usurious and compound interest, and other illegal and usurious charges which cannot be specifically pointed out until complainants have been enabled to get the itemized account from the defendants, which they refuse to give them; that in the settlement of January, 1902, defendant took credit for all these illegal, usurious, and exorbitant charges; that the twenty-one bales of cotton turned over to said W. B.
On the 27th day of April, 1905, the court overruled the demurrer and in its decree required" W. B. Peebles to answer the amended bill of complaint within sixty days, and to exhibit with his answer a complete itemized statement of the amount involved in the suit, and .all other defendants are given sixty days to answer. From the decree overruling the demurrer to the bill as amended an appeal is prosecuted to this court; the order reciting that an appeal is allowed for the purpose of settling the principles of the case. The following is the assignment of error, viz.: “(1) The chancellor erred in overruling the demurrer to the bill of complaint. (2) The chancellor should have sustained the demurrer and dismissed the bill. (3) The chancellor erred in overruling the motion of defendants to dissolve the injunction.”
The decree appealed from is the decree overruling the remurrer to the bill of complaint as amended, and it is to that decree alone that we shall address ourselves on this appeal. In determining whether or not the decree of the chancellor is correct, we cannot look to the testimony taken before the amendment on motion to dissolve the original bill of complaint, but we consider only the bill of complaint as amended, the demurrer filed thereto, and the decree thereon. Hardie v. Bulger, 66 Miss., 577 (s.c., 6 South. Rep., 186) ; Davis v. Davis, 62 Miss., 818.
In passing upon the other questions in this case it will be well to remember that the case is before this court on an appeal from • a decree of the court below overruling a demurrer filed thereto, and we treat the essential allegations of the bill as confessed by appellants. In this view of it the bill alleges that in January,
In the case of Peteet et al. v. Crawford, 51 Miss., 43, it is said: “Mere errors alone willmot always lead to the opening and restating of accounts; but even when there is an agreement that closed accounts shall not be opened for error after death of the parties, or after a fixed period, a court of equity will oj)en and restate the account for fraud, or great danger of fraud.” Again, in the same opinion, it is said: “If the bill praying for the opening of a settled account, does not allege fraud, but in the opinion of the
Under the allegations of the bill the remedy by injunction is the proper and only adequate remedy. The bill charges that the defendants are undertaking to enforce their deed in trust and to sell the property embraced thereunder for an amount largely in excess of Avhat is due thereon, and for an unlawful and usurious debt. Under such circumstances complainants are entitled to the injunction and fraud need not be specifically alleged. Carey et al. al Fulmer el al., 74 Miss., 729 (21 South. Rep., 752) ; Hooker v. Austin, 41 Miss., 717.
Under the case as made by the pleadings it was not necessary for complainants to make a tender Avith the bill other than that which they do make. They are not seeking a cancellation of the deed in trust and offer to pay Avhatever may be found to be justly due, if anything remains unpaid after the account is restated and purged of the illegal charges and credited with certain items it is claimed that they should be credited with. The bill alleges that it is impossible to make any further tender because complainants cannot tell Avhat amount is due, and all this because of the defendants’ oaaui wrongdoing in Avillfully Avithholding the statement of the account from them, Avhereby it Avould be possible for them to ascertain the exact amount due and tender it. Aust et al. v. Rosenbaum, 74 Miss., 893 (21 South. Rep., 555, in that part of opinion found on page 897 at bottom of 74 Miss., and page 558 of 21 South. Rep.). See, also, Purvis v. Woodward, 78 Miss., 922 (29 South. Rep., 917, in that part of opinion to be found on page 929 of 78 Miss., and page 919 of 29 South. Rep.), and authorities there cited.
The heirs of Mrs. B. G-. Peebles and the trustee are proper and necessary parties, and they are the only necessary parties, so far as it is shoAvn by the allegations in the bill. The bill sIioavs that there is neither an administrator nor an executor appointed for the estate of Mrs. B. G-. Peebles. It alleges that the trustee, act
The case is therefore affirmed, and remanded to be proceeded with in accordance with the decree of the chancellor, sixty days after the mandate is returned to the lower court.