1. "No plaintiff in ejectment shall have and maintain a separate action in his behalf for the recovery of mesne profits which may have accrued to him from the premises in dispute." Code, § 33-105.
2. "Where one brings suit for the recovery of land, and by amendment to his petition the question of mesne profits is eliminated, and there is a finding and decree in favor of the plaintiff, whether it be in terms that the plaintiff shall recover the land or merely that he has a right to recover, he can not afterwards in a separate action recover mesne profits against the same defendant."
3. Where a suit was brought for cancellation of a deed to land the title to which was in dispute, and no recovery of mesne profits was sought, the plaintiff in such suit is prohibited from bringing a subsequent action against the same defendant for mesne profits which may have accrued to him from the premises in dispute during the time the defendant was wrongfully in possession.
Under the provisions of the deed from the plaintiff to said defendant, dated April 12, 1940, which was executed subsequently to the date of the decree cancelling the deed from Morris to said defendant and establishing the plaintiff's one-half interest in said real estate, the rights of neither party, as they related to the right to sue for mesne profits for the time the possession of one half of the real estate had been wrongfully withheld, were affected, or, in the words of the agreement itself, "the rights of neither party to this deed are prejudiced by the making or acceptance of this deed." "No plaintiff in ejectment shall have and maintain a separate action in his behalf for the recovery of mesne profits which may have accrued to him from the premises in dispute." (Italics ours.) Code, § 33-105. Our Supreme Court has held in Milton v. Milton,
The plaintiff relies on Parker v. Salmons,
Reversed. Broyles, C. J., and Gardner, J.,concur.
