Watts v. Russell
Watts v. Russell
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
On the 22d day of December, 1909, Green Watts, the appellant here, executed a deed of trust to secure an indebtedness in favor of one of the appellees, J. B. Russell, to secure a note for five hundred dollars due December 22, 1910. This trust deed also undertook to secure any further amounts advanced by Russell to Watts, and later Watts executed his note in favor of J. B. Russell, in which it was recited, among other things, as follows:
*850 “Now having advertised the above-described land according to the terms and conditions of said deed of trust and according to law, and having sold same according to the terms and conditions of said deed of trust, and in conformity with the law in such cases, I have and now convey unto the purchaser herein all the title that I have as trustee in the above-described lands, being' two hundred acres as described in the original deed of trust.”
On the 17th day of October, 1916, J. B. Russell conveyed the same two hundred acres of land-by warranty deed to O. W. Cole.
On the 19th day of October, 1920, O. W. Cole and wife, Leatie Cole, conveyed twenty acres of said land by warranty deed. On the 30th day of August, 1921, O. W. Cole conveyed a small tract of said land to J. C. Tyrone, also by warranty deed.
Prior to November 27, 1922, Green Watts had filed an ejectment suit in the circuit court of Jefferson Davis county against Russell’s- vendees, C-ole, Rutland, and Tyrone, seeking to eject them from all of the lands described in the deed of trust executed in favor of Russell by Watts, and on this date Russell filed his bill in the chancery court of said county, alleging that he had been called upon to protect his warranty of the title by the vendees, the defendants in the ejectment suit, and that he did not have a complete and adequate remedy at law, prayed that all the rights, claims, titles and interests of the various parties be adjudicated in one suit, and asked for a temporary injunction, and prayed that the title to the lands be confirmed and quieted according to the respective deeds, or, in the alternative, if for any reason he (Russell) did not acquire a good title by virtue of the trustee’s sale and deed, that Watts be required to do equity and to pay to.him the amount of the original indebtedness.
There were many other allegations in said bill, but it is unnecessary to mention them.
Green Watts answered the original bill and cross-bill at length, alleging that forty acres of land were included in the deed and deed of trust; but the essential feature of the answer consists of the claim that the deed executed by Baker, the trustee, to Bussell, the complainant, was void because the said lands had not been advertised by the trustee in the manner prescribed by section 2-772, Code of 1906 (section 2276, Hemingway’s Code). We quote from the answer the following paragraph :
“The defendant denies that the trustee, Baker, sold said land in strict accordance and conformity to the terms of the deed of trust, Exhibit B, and the law in such cases made and provided, and charge the truth to be that the said sale was not made and had accordingly and by virtue of the terms and conditions of the deed of trust, Exhibit B, nor the law regulating the sale thereof in such cases, and that said sale was absolutely illegal and void, and these defendants wrongfully and illegally deprived of possession thereof without due process of law. ’ ’
Much proof was taken. We shall refer only to the proof upon the question of the legality of the sale.
Counsel for Watts on cross-examination elicited from the witnesses, Russell and Baker, that they had both seen the newspaper, and that the advertisement appeared in the weekly paper of that county in four issues—January 7th, January 14th, January 21st, and January 28th— and their recollection was that the advertisement appeared on January 28th in a supplement of the weekly paper. The defendant Watts introduced the chancery clerk, who represented the files of the newspaper, showing the publication on January 7th, 14th, and 21st, and a copy of the paper of 'January 28th, showing no such advertisement in the paper presented by him. He further stated that there had not been kept a bound file of the newspapers in his office, and that he did not know whether the paper offered by him of date January 28th was the full size of the paper of that week or not. There was some controversy in the record as to the size of the paper.
The burden of proof being upon the defendant as to this issue, the chancellor having found, as-recited in his decree, distinctly that the advertisement was in all respects in conformity with the decree and the law, we feel bound in this state of the record by the- finding of the chancellor.
The only other question submitted by the appellant is: Did Russell, the vendor of Cole, Rutland, and Tyrone, have a right to invoke the aid of equity to protect his vendee’s title then threatened by the ejectment suit of Watts?
Judge Fisher in Huntingdon v. Grantland & Anderson, 33 Miss. 453, where an injunction had been sought by a vendor restraining the defendants from prosecuting certain actions at law against the vendees of said
“First. The complainant having sold the land, and given covenants of warranty as to the title, _ can he maintain this bill, supposing it in other respects to be sufficient?
‘ ‘ The complainant, being bound to protect the title of his vendee, can avail himself of any remedy of which the vendee could avail himself. The vendee being sued, and giving notice to his vendor to defend, the latter can, of course, make his defense in equity, if that be the tribunal in which he must seek his remedy. He has selected his court, and the question is whether he has made the proper selection.
“. . . The complainant, being ignorant as to the elate of the assignment, is entitled to a discovery as to this fact; and, coming into equity for one purpose, he can maintain his bill for complete relief.”
In Wall v. Harris, 90 Miss. 671, 44 So. 36; the syllabus is as follows:
“A court of chancery, at the suit of a complainant willing to do equity, will enjoin an ejectment against the beneficiary in a deed of trust on the land, predicated of an invalidity in the appointment of a substituted trustee by whom the land was sold to complainant, instituted after the complainant had been in possession for eight years and the debt secured by the deed had become barred by the statute of limitations.”
. In the instant case, after the note had become barred by the statute of limitations and the deed of trust also, Watts seeks to eject the vendees of Russell from the lands which stood as security for the debt.
In Wall v. Harris, 90 Miss. 671, 44 So. 36, at page 676 of the Mississippi Report, Judge Calhoon, speaking for the court, said:
“It would shock the conscience of the court if this beneficiary in peaceable possession should be required to give up the land, and appellants be permitted to hold to*854 the same, and also to avoid payment of the debt. We regard this question as settled by a concluding paragraph of the opinion of this court in Allen v. Alliance Trust Co., 84 Miss. 319, 36 So. 285, and by the same case, with a different party complainant, styled Haggard v. Wilczinski, 143 F. 22, 74 C. C. A. 176. We apprehend that no court would permit the grantors in a trust deed, under the circumstances set forth in this bill, to stand quietly by for eight years, with the beneficiary peaceably in possession, and wait until the note which the trust deed secured became barred by limitation, and then take the land free from the obligation of any of the debt, and with rents and profits. The only .protection in this situation which the beneficiary had was to file a bill stopping such a claim in a law court, with the full tender to do equity in every regard. Such appeal to a court of conscience furnishes the only defensive course which the beneficiary could pursue.”
It follows that we are of opinion that a vendor, having sold his land and gtyen covenant of warranty as to the title, may maintain a' bill in equity against any person, attacking the title by suits at law where the purpose of the bill is to quiet and confirm the title of his vendee, or where such vendor has equitable defenses not cognizable at law against the plaintiff attacking his vendee’s title.
Affirmed.
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