STATE v. CUMMINGS
No. 36756
Supreme Court of Mississippi
May 24, 1948
Suggestion of Error Overruled June 14, 1948
33 So. (2d) 636 | 203 Miss. 583
Other assignments of a general nature have been examined and found without merit.
Affirmed.
Crawley & Ford and John C. Love, all of Kosciusko, for appellant.
Argued orally by Williаm E. Ford, for appellant, and by J. P. Coleman, for appellee.
Roberds, J., delivered the opinion of the court.
On April 5, 1932, the W½ of the SW¼ of Section 7, Township 19, Range 11, situated in Choctaw County, this State, was sold to the State of Mississippi for nonpayment of taxes thereon for the year 1931. The land was then owned by and assessed to L. D. Hemphill.
The State, on August 31, 1936, executed a patent to said land to appellee Cummings.
On June 19, 1946, the State Land Commissioner filed the bill in this cause to annul and cancel that patent on the grounds that Cummings failed to answer certain questions in the application for the patent and made false answers to other questions therein. Cummings denied
We pretermit the question of laches and go at once to the deciding question in the case, and that is whеther the chancellor was manifestly wrong in holding that the State failed to prove that Cummings, in procuring the patent, was guilty of actual fraud under the applicable provisions of
As to the first contention, the proof on behalf of the Commissioner showed there was considerable merchantable timber on the land when the application was made; the proof оn the part of Cummings was to the effect it contained no timber of appreciable value at that time; that Hemphill sold and removed from the land all of the timber of any value after the sale to the State. The chanсellor accepted the evidence of Cummings on that question and it amply supports his finding.
On the second question, the opinion of the chancellor states “The Court further finds that the defendant made application for thе purchase of 124 acres of land in 1935, and did all things required of him, including the payment of the purchase price, to secure a patent to same, . . .” but that the State did not issue the patent until January 15, 1936. The chancellor further held thаt the statement of Cummings in his application that he had not purchased any land from the State in 1936, as above set out, did not prove him guilty of “actual fraud” under said
In passing upon the findings and conclusions of the chancellor, we should give due weight to the purpose of the law and the power and discretion vested thereby in the chancellor in dealing with such matters. The purpose of the Act was “. . . to stabilize and validate public land titles, and promote the private use and enjoyment оf such land, to quiet title to same and to enable owners thereof to procure full right of ownership and title in fee simple thereto.”
We cannot say the chancellor was manifestly wrong.
Affirmed.
ON SUGGESTION OF ERROR.
L. A. Smith, Sr., J., delivered the opinion of the court on suggestion of error.
On the suggestion of error in this Court, appellant seeks to introduce new evidence by way of our alleged right to take judicial notice of a fact, evidenced by а receipt filed here for the first time. It was not before the trial court when the case was tried. It is presented to us in form of a certified copy from the records of the State Land Commissioner. In the first place, it is too lаte to represent such evidence here for the first time.
Being an appellate court, we take the record as it comes to us, and receive no new evidence here. Harvey v. Briggs, 68 Miss. 60, 8 So. 274, 10 L. R. A. 62; Witherspoon v. State ex rel. West, 138 Miss. 310, 103 So. 134; Williams v. J. E. Walton & Son et al., 202 Miss. 641, 32 So. (2d) 566.
In the next place, the evidence of the date of payment of the fee here is a factual transaction that must be proven as any other fact is ordinarily proven. It is not such a record as to which judicial notice will be taken by the courts. We do not take judicial notice of every paper, or bookkeeping entry, or similar matters in the various state departments. For instance, we cannot take judicial notice that a certain officer is a foreign corporation‘s statutory agent for service. This pertains to the office of the Secretary of State. Masonite Corporation v. Burnham et al., 164 Miss. 840, 146 So. 292, 91 A. L. R. 752. Courts cannot take judicial notice that Registers and
The Suggestion of Error reargues other questions, carefully considered by us on the original submission here, and we cannot see that we committed error as to the same.
Suggestion of error overruled.
ROBERDS, J.
