The appellant, S. A. J. Walley, as complainant, filed his bill of complaint in the Chancery Court of Greene County against George D. Hunt, individually and as trustee, and Thomas Harvey Robinson, individually and as assistant to the trustee, asking for the cancellation of three mineral deeds executed by the defendants and purporting to. convey to the grantees therein named certain interests in the mineral rights in and to 160 acres of land owned by the complainant in Greene County, and. asking for a
In special demurrer No. 2 the defendant challenged the complainant’s right to recover damages for the alleged slander of complainant’s title on the ground that the bill of complaint showed on its face that the complainant’s cause of action for slander of title accrued more than one year prior to the commencement of the suit, and that the cause of action for slander of title was barred by the one year statute of limitations, Section 732, Code of 1942. The court sustained the demurrer and in its decree granted to the complainant the right of appeal to this Court for the purpose of settling the principles of law involved in the court’s ruling on the special demurrer.
In his hill of complaint the complainant alleged that on May 12, 1937, the defendant, George D. Hunt, trustee, approached the complainant for the purpose of securing an oil lease covering the above mentioned 160 acres of land, and that the complainant, after a discussion of the terms of the proposed lease, agreed to execute an oil lease upon the land; that the defendant prepared the instrument, and that the complainant executed the same relying upon the defendant to prepare the lease instrument according to the terms of the agreement made between the parties; that the complainant, at the time he executed the instrument, thought it was an oil lease, but that sometime thereafter, while examining the records affecting said land, he learned that the instrument was a mineral deed conveying to the said grantee an undivided one-half interest in the minerals on said land; that the complainant immediately thereafter filed suit in the Chancery Court of Greene County for the cancellation of said mineral deed as a cloud on his title to said land;
The complainant further alleged in his bill of complaint that, notwithstanding the cancellation of the above mentioned mineral deed, the defendants, George D. Hunt, trustee, and Thomas Harvey Robinson, assistant to the trustee, thereafter, on June 30, 1944, knowing full well that they did not own any minerals in said land and that the above mentioned mineral deed had been can-celled by order of the chancery court, with malicious intent to injure the complainant, executed a mineral deed conveying to Mrs. Crawford S. Enochs and others fractional interests in and to the minerals on said land, and with like intent, on July 31, 1944, executed another mineral deed conveying to the said George D. Hunt, as an individual, and others, other fractional interests in and to the minerals on said land. The two instruments were filed for record and were duly recorded on August 7, 1944. The complainant further alleged that on July 30, 1945, the defendants executed another mineral deed conveying to T. J. Neal a fractional interest in and to the minerals on said land which was filed for record on January 16, 1946. Copies of said instruments, showing the dates of filing for record and the dates of recording of same, were attached as exhibits to the bill of complaint.
The complainant further stated in his bill of complaint that during the month of August 1948, the Humble Oil and Refining Company, owner of an oil, gas and mineral lease covering said land, entered upon said land for the purpose of drilling an oil well thereon; that a few weeks later the oil company relocated its proposed well on an adjoining tract of land owned by another; that complainant made inquiry of the title man of said oil company as to why the well was not being drilled on his land, and then learned for the first time that the defendants had executed the three mineral deeds pur
“Slander of title” is a phrase commonly employed to describe words or conduct which bring or tend .to' bring in question the right or title of another to particular property, as distinguished from the disparagement of the property itself. The slander may consist of a ■statement in writing, printing, or. by word of mouth, and máy relate to personal as well as real property. In 33 Am. Jur. fit page 311, the general rule of liability for slander-of title is stated as follows: “One who falsely and maliciously publishes matter which brings -in question or' disparages the title to property, thereby ‘c'ausing special damage to the owner, may be held liable -iil-'a civil action for damages. Thus, an action for slander of title lies for claiming a lease on the plaintiff’s propérty, therqby preventing its lease or sale to another, for forbidding an’ auction- sale of property on the ground that the person- offering it has no right to sell it; or for alleging, on the-part of a former owner, insanity or an illegal marriage which would render-the title defective.”
Liability for slander of title may also be predicated on the filing and recording of a false instrument purporting to affect the title to property, or on the execution, wilful acceptance, and malicious recordation of a deed' which falsely declares the title of the property involved to be in a person other than the true owner.
In Collins v. Whitehead, supra, the plaintiff entered into negotiations with the defendants which resulted in an offer by the plaintiff to sell certain land to the defendants. A deed was sent to a bank, to be delivered to the defendants on payment of the purchase price. The defendants, claiming to have discovered a defect in the title, did not take the property within the time specified by the agreement, but applied to the plaintiff for an extension of time, which request was refused. Subsequently the defendants, wilfully and without cause, filed in the office of the records of deeds a paper which stated [
In Smith v. Autry, supra, the defendants in error, in order to secure a loan from the plaintiff in error, executed a mortgage on certain lots owned by them. It was later discovered that the plaintiff in error had filed of record in the office of the register of deeds a warranty deed puporting to have been executed by the defendants and purporting to be an absolute conveyance of said property. This was held to be sufficient to warrant a recovery for damages sustained. In Coffman v. Henderson, supra, the court held that an action for damages for filing, or causing to be filed, a notice of lien upon plaintiff’s land and refusing to cancel the same is in the nature of a suit for slander of title and is governed by the rules applicable to such actions. In the case of Greenlake Investment Company v. Swarthout,
In the case of Kelly v. First State Bank,
The complainant in the case that we now have before us alleged that the mineral deeds executed by the defendants and filed for record on August 7, 1944, and on January 16,1946, were executed by the defendants wilfully and with knowledge that the defendants had no interest in the mineral rights in complainant’s land, and that said deeds were executed with the malicious intent to injure the complainant. For the purpose of disposing of the special demurrer the allegations of the bill must be taken as true, and the only question presented for consideration by the court on this appeal is whether the complainant’s cause of action for slander of title, to recover monetary damages on account of the execution and recordation of the mineral deeds complained of, is barred by the statute of limitations.
Section 732, Code of 1942,- reads as follows: “All actions for assault, assault and battery, maiming’, false imprisonment, malicious arrest, or menace, and all actions for slanderous words concerning the person or title, and for libels, shall be commenced within one year next after the cause of such action accrued, and not after. ’ ’
In the case of Forman v. Mississippi Publishers Corporation,
In a memorandum opinion in King v. Miller,
The bill of complaint in the case that we now have before us was filed on August 31, 1949, approximately five years after the date of the filing for record of the first two mineral deeds, and approximately three and one-half years after the date of the filing for record of the third mineral deed.
The appellant in his brief contends that the cause of action accrued and the statute of limitations began to run only from the date when the false statement concerning the complainant’s title was communicated to a prospective purchaser in October 1949. "We think that this contention is untenable. This Court in the Fortiian
According* to the allegations of complainant’s bill, the wrongful acts complained of were committed by the defendants when the defendants executed and filed for record the mineral deeds hereinabove mentioned. The execution and filing for record of the mineral deeds purporting to convey title to an undivided one-half interest in the minerals on complainant’s land was in effect an assertion of claim of ownership by the defendants of an undivided one-half interest in said minerals and a denial of the complainant’s ownership of such interest. The assertion by the defendants of such interest in the manner alleged, if falsely and maliciously made, constituted a disparagement of the complainant’s title. That is the tort which gave rise to complainant’s cause of action for damages for slander of title and the complainant’s right to sue therefor accrued at the time of the execution and filing for record of said mineral deeds. The full measure of damages that might ultimately result from the defendants’ wrongful acts may not have been immediately foreseeable, but complainant’s cause of action accrued when the instruments were filed for public record, and the statute of limitations began to run at that time.
The chancellor committed no error in sustaining the special demurrer No. 2 as to that part of the bill of complaint which sought to recover monetary damages on account of the execution and recordation of the mineral deeds complained of. The decree of the chancellor sustaining the demurrer is therefore affirmed, and since the appeal was granted to settle the principle of law involved in the chancellor’s ruling on the special demurrer, the cause is remanded for such further proceedings as may be proper.-
Affirmed and remanded.
