Gandy v. Kirkland
Gandy v. Kirkland
Opinion of the Court
In this cause the appellee, R. L. Kirkland, has filed a motion to strike the court reporter’s transcript of the testimony taken at the trial of the case on the ground that no notice ivas given by the appellants, J. J. Gandy and others, to the court reporter within ten days after the adjournment of the July 1954 term of the Chancery Court of George County, wherein the decree appealed from was rendered on July 25, 1954. Due notice of the motion to strike this part of the record now before us is shown to have been given on April 28, 1955 to opposing counsel which rendered the motion subject to hearing on Saturday, May 7, 1955, and no response has been made thereto.
The record shows only that the chancery clerk ivas given notice on September 20, 1954, that the appellants were aggrieved at the chancery court decree appealed from, and that they were praying for an appeal to the Supreme Court and tendering the sum of $100 to prepay the cost of the transcript on appeal. The record fails to disclose that any notice was ever given to the court reporter to transcribe her stenographic notes taken of the testimony at the trial, but the record does contain a certificate of the chancery clerk of October 25, 1954 to the effect that “there has not been filed in my office any copy of evidence of notice to the official court reporter or stenographer of the chancery court to transcribe her notes of the evidence” taken in this cause.
This leaves for our consideration only the pleadings, exhibits thereto, and the final decree rendered by the Chancery Court of George County on July 21, 1954.
The appellee, R. L. Kirkland, filed his original bill of complaint against the State of Mississippi, the appellants in this cause all of whom are nonresidents, and against numerous other nonresident defendants to confirm and quiet his title as against the several defendants named in the original bill of complaint for several tracts of land in which the several groups of nonresident defendants, respectively, were supposed to be parties in interest, and all of which several tracts of land save one had been acquired by appellee by mesne conveyances from the patentees of the state under tax forfeited state land patents. ' The tract of land here involved, to wit: the
Thereupon the appellee, R. L. Kirkland, filed an amended and separate bill of complaint against the appellants, J. J. Gandy, Joseph Gandy, Ernest Gandy, Clabe Gandy, Ishmael Gandy, Gladys Mary Beard, and Gurry Balden, nonresidents, and Katie Talbert, an adult resident citizen of George County, Mississippi. The nonresident appellants and Katie Talbert then filed an answer and cross bill to the amended and separate bill of complaint in which they set up certain affirmative defenses, including an allegation that the taxes had been paid on this eighty acres of land prior to its sale to the State on April 6, 1931, and other affirmative defenses. This answer and cross bill also denied the detailed averments in the amended and separate bill of complaint to the effect that the appellee, as purchaser of this tract of land from the State under a forfeited tax state land patent during the year 1940, had been in the continuous, open, notorious, adverse and uninterrupted possession thereof for more than ten years subsequent to his acquisition of the patent from the State, and prior to the institution of this suit.
We must therefore assume that the evidence, including the muniments of title introduced on the hearing, if any, ivas sufficient to show that the allegations of the amended and separate bill of complaint were sustained by the proof heard by the chancellor on the hearing of the cause prior to the rendition of this final decree.
The decree appealed from must therefore be affirmed.
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