Court Opinion

ID: 7992626
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:33:00.059121+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:25.646319
License: Public Domain

Stevens, J.,
delivered the opinion 'of the court.
This appeal is prosecuted by the state of Mississippi and M. A. Brown, land commissioner, from a decree of the chancery court of Wilkinson county awarding a judgment against the state in the sum of fifty dollars for the purchased price of certain land described in the hill, title to which had failed.
Appellees, as complainants in the court below,' exhibited their hill in chancery against M.. A. Brown, land commissioner, charging the facts following: That in the year 1903 the state, through its land commissioner, conveyed' as forfeited tax land to W. H. Black the northwest quarter of section 26, township 2, range 1 west; that the consideration for the patent was fifty dollars; *680that Mr. Black, the vendee, conveyed the lands to complainants H. B. & Eugene Ford; that the complainants had before that time in the year 1912 filed a hill in the chancery court to confirm their tax title, and in doing so made the state land commissioner a party defendant; that this first suit was styled “Eugene Ford et al. v. Henry R. Keller et al.,” being No. 832 on the docket of the said chancery' court; that on the hearing of said cause the tax title conveyed by the state was held to he void, being based upon a void assessment made under what is known as the “Madison Act.” The prayer of the bill in the present suit is that upon final hearing the complainants he granted a decree “requiring the said state of Mississippi to pay to them the amount of said purchase money, with interest and all costs herein.” A demurrer was interposed to this hill and by the court overruled. Appellants having declined to answer, complainants applied for and were granted a decree pro confesso, and final decree was entered upon the bill of complaint and decree pro confesso. This final decree that the complainants “do have and recover of and from the state of Mississippi the said sum of fifty dollars so paid for said land, with six per cent, interest thereon and all costs of this suit.” The complainants relied in the court below upon and attempted to justify the relief awarded under section 2927, Code 1906.
This suit is prosecuted without authority of law. It is not a suit to confirm or try title. In the first suit filed by appellees the land commissioner appears to have been made a party defendant, and in that suit the question of the failure of title was determined, and a decree was entered declaring the tax title to he void and of no effect. The prosecution of the first suit was expressly authorized by section 2927 here relied on, and the decree in that case finally adjudicated the invalidity of appellee’s title. The decree there rendered would justify the presentation to the auditor of the claim for the purchase money, and if the auditor should refuse *681' to issue a warrant in payment of the claim thus presented, then, and not until then, could appellees under section 4800 of the Code institute a suit against the state. Gulf Export Co. v. State et al., 73 So. 281 (decided December 23, 1916).
While the present action purports to be a suit against the land commissioner, the decree is against the state in its sovereign capacity, and sueh proceeding must be controlled by section 4800 of the Code. Appellees fail to state a case under the last-named section, sued in the wrong county, and the bill was taken as confessed contrary to section 4801. It necessarily follows that the decree of the court below should be reversed, and a decree entered here dismissing the bill.
Reversed, and decree here for appellants.

Reversed.

Ethbidgb, J., having briefed this case for the state, took no part in the decision.