From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Carothers v. Bank of Baldwyn

Supreme Court of Mississippi, Division B
Dec 1, 1930
131 So. 111 (Miss. 1930)

Summary

In Carothers v. Bank of Baldwyn, 158 Miss. 602, 131 So. 111, this Court said: "Appeals from amendable bills demurred to and the demurrer sustained or overruled do not settle all of the controlling principles of a case, and these cannot be known or determined sufficiently until the pleadings have been settled. If we entertained appeals to amendable bills from interlocutory decrees sustaining or overruling demurrers, it would result in delay and expense rather than save it."

Summary of this case from Martin v. Reed

Opinion

No. 28973.

December 1, 1930.

APPEAL AND ERROR. Where bill stating case imperfectly is curable by amendment, appeal to settle principles of case should be denied; only where bill states no case and cannot be made to do so on any theory should appeal to settle principles of case be allowed ( Code 1930, section 14).

Under chapter 151, Laws of 1924, section 14, Code of 1930, an appeal is only granted to settle all the controlling principles involved in the case. Whenever a bill states a case imperfectly, which may be cured by amendment, such appeal should not be granted. It is only where a bill, on appeal from an order sustaining a demurrer, states no case at all, and cannot be made on the theory of the bill to state a case, in the judgment of the chancellor, that an appeal to settle the principles of the case should be allowed.

APPEAL from chancery court of Prentiss county. HON. J.A. FINLEY, Chancellor.

Creekmore Creekmore and E.C. Sharp, all of Jackson, for appellant.

Cox Cox, of Baldwyn, and W.C. Sweat, of Corinth, for appellee.

Briefs of counsel were on the principles of law to be settled by the appeal.


This appeal was granted by the chancellor from an order sustaining a demurrer to settle the principles of a case.

We think the appeal was improvidently granted. The bill was only defective in amendable particulars, and the principles governing the cause are well settled. Under the present statute, chapter 151, Laws of 1924, section 14, Code of 1930, appeal is only granted when the appeal will settle all the controlling principles involved in the cause. Whenever a bill states a case imperfectly, which may be cured by amendment, the chancellor should require the pleader, when the demurrer is sustained, to elect to stand on his bill or to amend it within a given time. It is only where no relief can be granted under the bill on appeal from an order sustaining a demurrer thereto that all the principles of a case can be settled until the pleadings have been made up.

The only question is whether or not there are sufficient facts pleaded in the bill to bring the case within simple principles. Appeals from amendable bills demurred to and the demurrer sustained or overruled do not settle all of the controlling principles of a case, and these cannot be known or determined sufficiently until the pleadings have been settled. If we entertained appeals to amendable bills from interlocutory decrees sustaining or overruling demurrers, it would result in delay and expense rather than save it.

We desire again to call attention of the bar and bench to the observations of the court in Bierce v. Grant, 91 Miss. at page 797 and 798, 45 So. 876, and to the principles announced in Yazoo M.V.R. Co. v. James, 108 Miss. 661, 67 So. 152, and Norris v. Burnett, 108 Miss. at page 378, 66 So. 748; Barrier v. Kelly, 81 Miss. 266, 32 So. 999; and Armstrong v. Moore, 112 Miss. 511, 73 So. 566. The declaration sent up stated a cause of action defectively, which can be cured by amendment.

The appeal must be dismissed, and the cause remanded, with leave to the complainant to amend his bill within thirty days or to elect to stand upon the bill as it is drawn. In the latter case, if the bill is dismissed, the order will be a final decree.

Appeal dismissed.


Summaries of

Carothers v. Bank of Baldwyn

Supreme Court of Mississippi, Division B
Dec 1, 1930
131 So. 111 (Miss. 1930)

In Carothers v. Bank of Baldwyn, 158 Miss. 602, 131 So. 111, this Court said: "Appeals from amendable bills demurred to and the demurrer sustained or overruled do not settle all of the controlling principles of a case, and these cannot be known or determined sufficiently until the pleadings have been settled. If we entertained appeals to amendable bills from interlocutory decrees sustaining or overruling demurrers, it would result in delay and expense rather than save it."

Summary of this case from Martin v. Reed
Case details for

Carothers v. Bank of Baldwyn

Case Details

Full title:CAROTHERS v. BANK OF BALDWYN

Court:Supreme Court of Mississippi, Division B

Date published: Dec 1, 1930

Citations

131 So. 111 (Miss. 1930)
131 So. 111

Citing Cases

Johnson, et al. v. City of Meridian

We submit that appellants cannot lawfully by the expedient of declining to amend as they did at the time the…

Yates v. Box

Were we to take jurisdiction of this appeal and hold that the demurrers were properly sustained, the bill on…