Alewine v. Pitcock

47 So. 2d 147, 209 Miss. 362, 1950 Miss. LEXIS 400
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 12, 1950
Docket37549
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 47 So. 2d 147 (Alewine v. Pitcock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alewine v. Pitcock, 47 So. 2d 147, 209 Miss. 362, 1950 Miss. LEXIS 400 (Mich. 1950).

Opinion

*367 McGehee, C. J.

This is a suit for partition of 160 acres of land among the heirs at law of Mrs. Frances Adella Alewine, who died on June 7, 1947. The sole complainant is Mrs. C. C. *368 Burns, a daughter of the deceased. One of the defendants, F. C. Alewine, who is the appellant here, filed an answer in which he alleged, among other things, that on February 27, 1947, his mother, Mrs. Frances Adella Alewine, was the sole owner of the fee-simple title to said land and conveyed the same to him; and he therefore denied that either the complainant or any of his co-defendants owned any interest therein. The complainant thereupon amended her original bill of complaint by alleging' that the deed of conveyance from her mother to her brother, F. C. Alewine, was wholly void for want of mental capacity on the part of the grantor to execute the same. She was .unable to prove such allegation of mental incapacity and her bill of complaint was therefore dismissed and she does not prosecute an appeal.

Two of the defendants, who are the appellees, Mrs. Osie Lee Pitcock and Mrs. Daisy D. Lipe, daughters of the said Mrs. Frances Adella Alewine and of her former husband, J. W. Walker, who died intestate on February 14, 1891, made their answer a cross bill and alleged that their father, J. W. Walker, owned the land in question at the time of his death, and that the same thereupon descended to their mother and to the said two defendants as tenants in common; that the said Mrs. Pitcock, then Osie Lee Walker, was five years of age and Mrs. Lipe, then Daisy D. Walker, was three years of age at the time of the death of their father; and that they have never-parted with their interest in said land. Hence they asked in their cross bill that they each be declared to be the owner of an undivided one-third interest in said land and that the defendant, F. C. Alewine, be recognized as the owner of the other one-third undivided interest; and that the same be sold for a partition of the proceeds. The trial court granted the prayer of their cross bill, and ordered the sale of said land for a division of the proceeds thereof accordingly.

' The several other defendants, as children of Mrs. Frances Adella Alewine, by her subsequent marriage to *369 F. W. Alewine, are making no claim to any interest in said land, but on the contrary they recognize the conveyance from their mother of February 27, 1947, to their brothei1, F. C. Alewine, the appellant, as being a good and valid conveyance of the land to him in fee simple.

Therefore, the issue presented for decision is whether or not Mrs. Frances Adella Alewine owned the land in fee simple at the time she executed the said conveyance, shortly prior to her death, which occurred on June 7,1947.

The fee-simple title asserted by the appellant, F. C. Alewine, depends for its validity as such upon the following facts, to wit: On January 10, 1891, J. W. Walker, the father of the appellees, Mrs. Pitcock and Mrs. Lipe, and who was the then husband of Mrs. Frances Adella Walker, executed a deed of trust on the 160 acres of land, as sole owner thereof, at a time when it constituted no part of his homestead. Hence his wife did not join therein, and she did not sign the note which was secured by the deed of trust. The deed of trust secured an indebtedness of $340.00 owing by J. W. Walker to a Mr. Bell due one year after date. The grantor died shortly thereafter and before the indebtedness became due. Default having thereafter been made in the payment of the indebtedness, there was a foreclosure of the deed of trust on April 30, 1892, and Mr. Bell became the purchaser at the sale. It appears that the trustee’s sale was made by a substituted trustee whose appointment was not placed of record prior to the sale, and that the foreclosure was also invalid for other reasons, and with the result that the legal title which the widow and the two children of J. W. Walker inherited on February 14, 1891, as tenants in common, remained in them as his sole heirs at law, subject to the then existing lien of the said deed of trust.

However, on November 15, 1893, Mr. Bell conveyed the land to the said Mrs. Frances Adella Alewine “and her heirs” for a cash consideration paid by her of $650.00, she being widow of the said J. W. Walker, and who had in the meantime become married to F. W. Ale- *370 wine. This deed of conveyance was thereupon duly placed of record, but it inured to the benefit of all three of the tenants in common until such time as there was an ouster of the two children by the grantee.

It appears that J. W. Walker also owned at the time of his death on February 14, 1891, two other tracts of land, one consisting of 40 acres and the other 120 acres adjoining the 160 acres in question, and that these two smaller tracts constituted the homestead; that following the foreclosure sale Mrs. Walker and her two children remained in possession of the 160 acres now in controversy, together with the land which constituted the homestead, but the proof fails to disclose whether or not she paid any rent to Mr. Bell on the 160 acres, which he had purchased at the trustee’s sale, for the period' of approximately 18 months that intervened before he conveyed the same to her. At any rate, she and her second husband have continued since that time to use this 160 acres of land along with the other two tracts constituting the homestead, and have reared thereon six other children of their own by this second marriage; and the Alewines have never accounted to the appellees, Mrs. Pitcock and Mrs. Lipe, for any of the rents or proceeds derived therefrom, nor have they ever been requested to do so.

The Alewines paid the taxes every year on all of the land from 1893 until this suit was field on May 8, 1948, and during the period beginning in 1906 and ending in 1933 Mr. and Mrs. Alewine executed sixteen deeds of trust on the 160 acres, all of which conveyances were duly placed of record. At some time prior to the death of Mrs. Alewine on June 7, 1947, they built fences and enclosed this land with the “home place” and also constructed a three-room tenant house on and cleared 25 or 30 acres of the 160 acres of land now in controversy, placed the same in cultivation, and have at all times used the same as their own prior to the conveyance to the appellant by Mrs. Alewine. During their possession, a son of the Ale- *371 wines cultivated a part of the land and paid rent to his mother thereon for a number of years.

The two Walker children became of age in 1907 and 1909 respectively. They married and established their respective homes at a distance of six or seven miles from the land in question, but have never at any time since they attained their majority made any requests for an accounting for rents and profits from the land, or made any effort to have the same partited although their mother ceased to be a widow, with a right to use the same as such, at some time during the year 1893, even if it had been a part of the homestead.

Moreover, on January 17, 1910, the appellees joined their mother in a deed to her husband, F. W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 So. 2d 147, 209 Miss. 362, 1950 Miss. LEXIS 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alewine-v-pitcock-miss-1950.