99 So. 366 | Miss. | 1924
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal from a decree of the chancery court of Sunflower county dismissing a bill of complaint. The appellants, Fuller Fox Wilson and his two minor brothers, filed a bill of complaint averring, in substance that, as heirs at law of their father, T. J. Wilson, deceased, they were the owners of a three-eighths interest in certain land therein described; that on the 25th day of November, 1912, the mother, three named uncles, and one cousin of appellants, by collusion with the defendant, George C. McCorkle, and with intent to defraud the appellants out of their interest in said land, filed an' ex parte petition in the chancery court of Bolivar county, seeking to have the disabilities of minority of the appellants partially removed so as to enable them to convey their interest in said land to the defendant; that in said petition it was alleged, among other things, that petitioners were the only kindred of the appellants within the third degree computed according to the civil law, whose residence was known to appellants or to the petitioners; that this averment was false and known to be false by each of the petitioners at the time said petition was filed by them; that at the time the petition was filed, in addition to the kindred joining therein, the appellants had a large number of other kindred within the third degree computed according to the civil law, whose place of residence was known to appellants and to petitioners, the names and post office addresses of these
The ’defendant demurred to the bill of complaint, and, the demurrer having been sustained, an appeal was prosecuted to this‘court, where the decree of the court below was reversed and the cause remanded with leave to answer; the opinion on the former appeal appearing in 91 So. 469. Thereafter the defendant filed his answer denying the allegations of the bill, and on the final hearing a decree was entered dismissing the bill of complaint.
The petition for the removal of the disability of minority of these minors contained the averment that the next of kin joining therein were all of their next of kin within the third degree, computed according' to the civil law, whose place of residence was known to the petitioners, while the decree based upon this petition expressly found that the petitioners were in fact all of such kindred. However, on the hearing of the case at bar testimony was offered which conclusively established the falsity of this averment of the petition and recital in the decree.
While the chancellor held that there was no fraud in the filing of the petition for the removal of the disabilities of minority of the minors, we do not understand that he found as a fact that all of the next of kin within the prescribed degree, whose places of residence 'were known to the petitioners, joined in the petition. If such had been the finding of the chancellor, it could not be upheld, since the evidence conclusively establishes, the contrary. The contention is made that the chancellor
In the case of Hardy v. Pepper, 128 Miss. 27, 90 So. 181, it was held that — “Under section 545 [Code of 1906] in an ex parte proceeding it is necessary that all kindred within the third degree known to the minor or to his copetitioners shall unite in the application.”
The joining of all such kindred is therefore necessary to confer jurisdiction on the chancellor under this section, and since the chancellor was induced to assume jurisdiction by the false averments of a petition, known to the petitioners to. he false when filed, we think this at least, constituted legal or constructive fraud on the jurisdiction of the court. Prom the false averments of the petition on that point, it would appear that the petitioners understood that all the kindred within the third degree known to the minors or their copetitioners must unite in the application in order to confer jurisdiction on
The decree purporting to remove the disability of minority of these minors being, void, they are entitled to have a proper accounting, and a partition of the land in controversy, and the decree of the court below will therefore be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.