Alexander v. Hancock

164 So. 772, 174 Miss. 482, 1935 Miss. LEXIS 91
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1935
DocketNo. 31822.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 164 So. 772 (Alexander v. Hancock) 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
Alexander v. Hancock, 164 So. 772, 174 Miss. 482, 1935 Miss. LEXIS 91 (Mich. 1935).

Opinions

On August 24, 1926, J.N. Johnson, a resident of Washington county, and the owner of a large plantation in that *Page 488 county and the adjoining county of Sunflower, made his last will, and some time later in that year died. Mr. Johnson was a widower, and had four daughters, but no sons. His estate was heavily indebted; and he provided by his will that the executor or trustee thereunder should first pay all debts secured by lien, expressly stating in his will that the "command for the payment of said indebtedness shall be superior and paramount" to any other bequest or distribution. He provided in the next place, and after the payment of said debts, that the net profits of the operation of the property should be distributed to his four children (leaving aside here the payment of two small monetary bequests) and that this distribution should continue during the natural lives of his said four daughters, and that if any one of his said daughters should die leaving children surviving her, then the children of said deceased daughter would receive in equal parts the parent's share of the net profits. In the third place, he provided that upon the death of the last survivor of his four daughters, and when the youngest of his grandchildren became of age, the property shall then be partitioned in fee simple among all the grandchildren living at that time, so that each grandchild should then have an equal interest in fee simple with each of all the other grandchildren.

For the purpose of the operation and management of the property and for the accomplishment of the objects of the testator prescribed in the will, he devised and bequeathed the entire property, real and personal, to his daughter, Mrs. Minnie Lee Alexander, as executrix and trustee. And he further provided that in case of her inability to serve, "then I hereby convey said property to my grandchild Lloyd C. Alexander, as substituted trustee and invest the said Lloyd C. Alexander, as trustee, with the same rights and privileges and impose upon him the same obligations, limitations and conditions as are herein imposed upon the original trustee. If both the original *Page 489 trustee and the substituted trustee herein named predecease me, then I invest in the Chancellor of the Ninth Chancery District of Mississippi, the right, power and privilege to name another trustee provided the trustee so named is required to carry out the trusts herein imposed strictly, but the Chancellor of said court must name one of my children or grandchildren as such substituted trustee if possible to do so."

Upon the probation of the will, Mrs. Alexander qualified and entered upon the discharge of the duties prescribed, and so continued until her death on February 11, 1934. Lloyd C. Alexander, named in the will to succeed his mother, had died on December 2, 1933. During the entire period of Mrs. Alexander's trusteeship she had had the active assistance of her husband, J.L. Alexander. In fact, during some of the time, Mrs. Alexander was in ill health, and during the last year of her life was bedridden. At the date of Mrs. Alexander's death important negotiations were under way for the refinancing of the remainder of the unpaid debts, which negotiations were then about to be consummated, and it was necessary to make an immediate appointment of a successor. Therefore, within a few days after her mother's death, appellant, Catherine Alexander, a grandchild of the testator, was appointed administratrix c.t.a. and trustee, and immediately entered upon the discharge of her duties as such. Thereafter, on February 22, 1934, the three surviving daughters of the testator, aunts of the appellant, filed their petition praying that the order appointing appellant Catherine Alexander be revoked, and that in her stead, the appellee, Nell Johnson Hancock, one of the daughters of the testator, be appointed. This petition averred in effect, that under the will it was the more proper to appoint a child of the testator than a grandchild, and that if the grandchild, Catherine Alexander, were continued in office it would mean that the management of the affairs of the estate would remain in the *Page 490 hands of J.L. Alexander, as theretofore, and the petition made divers charges of misconduct against Mr. Alexander.

Answer was promptly made to this petition, and a hearing thereon was had, but the chancellor declined to order the removal of the appellant Catherine, and she continued in office. However, the family quarrel was on, and on November 9, 1934, appellee and her sisters renewed the contest, with the result, after several further hearings, that on December 21, 1934, the chancellor entered his order removing Catherine Alexander, the granddaughter, and appointing Nell Johnson Hancock, the daughter; and from that decree this appeal is prosecuted.

No opinion by the chancellor appears of record and no request for a finding of facts and the conclusions of law thereon was made of the chancellor, as should have been done under chapter 252, Laws 1934. It is asserted, however, in the briefs in behalf of appellant that in his oral opinion the chancellor stated that his decree was based upon the conclusion of law that a daughter must be preferred to a granddaughter. This assertion is denied in appellee's briefs, and besides, as we have often held, we cannot look to briefs to supply that which is not of record. But if the chancellor did proceed upon the conclusion of law aforesaid, then he was in error.

If we look to the terms of the will, as written, it will be noted that the testator directed that a successor trustee must be named from "one of my children or grandchildren, if possible to do so." There is no significance in the fact that in this language the word "children" first appears. This is no more than a natural sequence in expression. And this is particularly true here, because in the very same item in which this expression is used a grandchild had been specifically named as a successor, in preference to children. Therefore, so far as the wording of the will is concerned, children and grandchildren *Page 491 were brought together into one class out of which a successor should be selected.

It will be noted that the item of the will, which prescribes that the chancellor shall select a successor from among the children or grandchildren, if possible to do so, is preceded by the single provision that this is to be the procedure "if both the original trustee and the substituted trustee herein named predecease me." There is no provision as to what shall be done in case either of those named shall survive the testator, as has actually happened. No point as to this has been made in the argument for either side, and we assume that both sides have considered, and have been willing to abide by the construction, which all parties in interest in the estate have seemed to adopt, that the will is controlling as to the persons from whom the successor appointment shall be made, in spite of the technical omission in the language thereof to which we have referred. Neither side has suggested anything with reference to the general rules of equity upon the general subject of successor trustees, perhaps with the thought before them that if such rules were invoked it might result in a declaration by the court that none of the present parties, but an entirely disinterested, competent person, should be appointed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
164 So. 772, 174 Miss. 482, 1935 Miss. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-hancock-miss-1935.