54 Miss. 722 | Miss. | 1877
delivered the opinion of the court.
This case is now on appeal in this court for the third time. The principles on which the rights of the litigants depend are well settled, and were stated in the judgment pronounced on the first appeal. Taylor, the present appellant, obviated the title asserted by the complainants in their bill by the averment in his answer that he purchased the land under a judgment recovered by him against one Dulany, the grandfather of Mrs. Meredith, the mother of the complainants, and her grantor by voluntary deed. This court was of opinion that the conveyance was voluntary, or presumptively so, as against Taylor, whose debt was in existence at the date of that conveyance, but reversed and remanded the cause, because Taylor did not prove, by competent evidence, the existence of the judgment and execution under which he claimed to have bought the land. It was directed by this court that the cause should be remanded to rules, and reasonable .time allowed for
The merits of the appellant’s application are ample, and should have entitled him to an opportunity to reproduce the evidence, unless the Chancellor was precluded by the instructions of this court to the Chancery Court, for an account as to permanent and valuable improvements and rents. The Chancellor doubtless supposed that he must literally conform to the judgment of this court, and could entertain no other question than the account directed to be taken. Was it competent for the Chancery Court, in the peculiar circumstances, to have permitted the appellant to have restored to the files and the record those parts of it which had been abstracted by the solicitor ? for that, in effect, was the motion. To do that, of course, necessitated a re-examination of witnesses. It must be assumed that the judgment of this court, in all particulars, is predicated of the case as presented in the record before us, and that directions to the inferior tribunal as to its action are founded alone on the case thus presented. Our judgment meant no more than that, as the record was, the account should be taken. But we did not thereby deny the right and power of the Chancery Court to consider new matter which might be properly brought into the cause, though thereby its complexion might be entirely changed. The authority of the Chancery Court in the premises is vindicated in principle by the cases of Wailes v. Johnson, 25 Miss. 421, Hanserd v. Gray, 46 Miss. 75, and the opinion of this court on the first appeal in this case. These cases establish the doctrine that, after a case has been remanded by the Appellate Court, the Chancellor has power to allow amendments. In the second case cited, the answer was
On May 23, 1877, the reference was made to the master. On the 23d he made his report, predicated on data furnished by depositions taken anterior to the reference ex parte, without notice to the defendant, so far as we can discover. The master did not give notice to the defendant of the time and place of settling the account: if that had been done, he could have successful^ objected to the depositions, and might have produced evidence beneficial to himself. The report and final decree were made on the 23d of the same month. These several steps were taken in rapid succession, in disregard of the rights of the defendant, and, the account being taken without notice, were erroneous. Felder v. Wall, 26 Miss. 595; Knox v. Bank of United States, 26 Miss. 655. In this case the facts necessary to the taking the account did not appear in the pleadings, and more was required of the master than to make a mere computation: he had to obtain information on which to base his calculation.
Decree reversed and cause remanded.