Bacot v. Duby

724 So. 2d 410, 1998 WL 812362
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedNovember 24, 1998
Docket96-CA-00555 COA
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 724 So. 2d 410 (Bacot v. Duby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bacot v. Duby, 724 So. 2d 410, 1998 WL 812362 (Mich. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

724 So.2d 410 (1998)

Samuel A. BACOT; Rosella Bacot Gill; James W. Bacot; Imogene Bacot Fly, Individually and as Administratrix of the Estate of Evelyn Bacot; Frances Bacot, by and through James W. Bacot; and Gerald M. McMillan, Appellants,
v.
Marguerite B. DUBY; Marness Bacot (Marness Bacot Frye); Violet A. Bacot; Winston Duby; Donald R. Duby; Roger Richmond; David Richmond; Mary L. Bacot; John R. Bacot; Hilda Bacot Booty; Guardianship of Stacy Bacot, Nora Devine and Don Devine, Guardians; Guardianship of James Augustus Jones, III, Blanche Bacot Sanders, Guardian; Alfred E. Bacot; Susan P. Jolly; Alfred J. Duby; Carolyn D. Kyzer; Michael Duby; June V. Owen; Lynne Richmond; Delores Bacot Martin; Heather Bacot Jones Newton; Donna McCullough; Samuel Vaught Richmond; Edith Bacot Bowden; Eleanor Bacot Jones; Samuel A. Bacot, Jr.; David Michael Hyde as Personal Representative of the Estate of Eleanor V. Hyde; and Marion V. Gordon, Appellees.

No. 96-CA-00555 COA.

Court of Appeals of Mississippi.

November 24, 1998.

*411 Clyde Ratcliff, Gerald M. McMillan, McComb, Attorneys for Appellants.

H.B. Mayes McGehee, Meadville, T.F. Badon, Liberty, Attorneys for Appellees.

Before THOMAS, P.J., DIAZ, and HERRING, JJ.

HERRING, J., for the Court:

¶ 1. This appeal arises from a judgment rendered in the Chancery Court of Pike County, Mississippi, concerning certain real property originally acquired by Dr. and Mrs. William Bacot. Several heirs[1] of Dr. and Mrs. William Bacot[2] filed an action to partition the surface estate of 920 acres of property in Pike County, known and referred to as the "Bacot Place." In a motion for a declaratory judgment, the Appellees claimed an undivided one-seventh (1/7) surface interest in the property by virtue of the provisions of a will executed by Emma Bacot Jones, one of Dr. and Mrs. Bacot's seven children.

¶ 2. In response, the Appellants, the heirs of Dr. and Mrs. Bacot's son, Fred Bacot, also claimed ownership of Emma Bacot Jones's one-seventh (1/7) surface interest through a deed dated March 22, 1958, whereby Emma transferred her interest in the surface estate to her brother, Fred. The Appellants also alleged that a subsequent "Agreement" dated November 19, 1958, which was executed by Emma and all of the other surviving heirs of Dr. and Mrs. Bacot and purported to establish individual ownership interests of each heir in the Bacot Place, was not a conveyance of the surface estate at all, but rather, was intended to establish and reaffirm each heir's undivided mineral ownership interest in the Bacot Place.[3] Accordingly, the Appellants sought a reformation of the November 19, 1958, agreement on the grounds of (1) mutual mistake or scrivener's errors or; (2) alternatively, a determination that they had acquired *412 Emma Bacot Jones's one-seventh (1/7) surface interest by adverse possession.

¶ 3. Following a trial, the chancellor found that the heirs of Fred Bacot failed to establish that the November 19, 1958, agreement was executed by a mutual mistake by the parties or contained a scrivener's error. The court also held that the evidence presented by Fred's heirs failed to demonstrate that he acquired Emma's one-seventh (1/7) surface interest in the disputed property by adverse possession. In a "Final Decree", the chancellor declared that the devisees and descendants of devisees under Emma's will were the lawful owners of her surface interest in the property. It is from this judgment that the Appellants perfected an appeal to this Court. After reviewing the briefs of counsel, the record, and after listening to oral argument, we find that the chancellor did not abuse his discretion or commit manifest error in his findings of fact. Therefore, we affirm.

A. THE FACTS

¶ 4. Dr. William Bacot and Mrs. Myra Atkinson were married on January 28, 1857. The Bacots subsequently acquired title to 920 acres of real property in Pike County, Mississippi, upon which they built a family residence and reared their children. During the course of their marriage, the Bacots had ten children. Dr. Bacot died intestate on December 11, 1900, whereupon Fred, the youngest of the children, returned home from college to attend to his mother and the property. Mrs. Bacot died intestate in 1919, leaving seven surviving children who were as follows: Junius Laborn Bacot, Anna Moore Bacot Vaught, William Clinton Bacot, Ella Bacot Richmond, Myra Pet Bacot Varnado, Emma Bacot Jones, and Fred Bacot. Each child inherited an undivided one-seventh (1/7) interest in the Bacot Place.

¶ 5. Following the death of Mrs. Bacot, the seven children attempted to reach an agreement as to how the estate was to be divided and met in the home of Myra Pet Bacot Varnado to discuss the division. However, no agreement was ever reached.

¶ 6. An unsigned letter dated February 2, 1954, addressed to Rosa and Meyer Richmond (the daughter and son-in-law of Anna Bacot Vaught) circulated among various heirs. The letter acknowledged the efforts of Fred Bacot in residing upon, preserving, and making improvements to the Bacot Place, and an "Agreement" attached to the letter documented a desire to have Fred own all surface rights to the 920 acres. The attached agreement was signed only by Fred, Emma Bacot Jones, Rosa Vaught Richmond, William B. Richmond, and J. Harold Richmond. However, the agreement never went into effect because of the failure of all the heirs to execute the document.

¶ 7. With the consent of other family members, Fred continued to farm the property and live in the family home with his wife, Bessie, and their six children: Evelyn Bacot, Imogene Bacot Fly, James W. Bacot, Samuel Alfred Bacot, Rosella Bacot Gill, and Frances Bacot. Fred, on occasion, acted as if he were the sole owner of the property by selling timber and granting easements to various oil companies without the consent of his coowners. At other times, various family members would join in the execution of documents affecting title to the property. No other children of Dr. and Mrs. Bacot lived in the Bacot family home after the marriage of Fred and Bessie in 1906.

¶ 8. Upon Fred's death in 1962, his son, James, took over the management of the property, and Fred's daughter, Frances, currently resides in the Bacot family home. There has been no change in the status or use of the surface from any time between Mrs. Bacot's death in 1919 to the present day. No rental payments have ever been paid by Fred to the other Bacot heirs. In addition, neither Fred nor any of his descendants have ever paid a portion of the profits from the operation of the farm to any other members of the family. However, Fred and his descendants have always paid the ad valorem taxes on the property since Mrs. Bacot's death.

I. Documents Purporting to Transfer Additional Surface Interest to Fred Bacot

A. 1927 Document Executed by Junius Laborn Bacot

¶ 9. On January 26, 1927, Junius Laborn Bacot, Fred's brother, executed a document *413 which purportedly released his interest in the estate of his father and mother. The handwritten document did not explicitly convey Junius's interest to Fred. Rather, the document contained one sentence that recited: "For value received from my brother Fred Bacot and other considerations I hereby relinquish all claim of any of my mother and father's real estate and personal property."

¶ 10. Junius Laborn Bacot died intestate on January 20, 1928, leaving as his heirs his widow, Carrie, and seven children. On February 24, 1944, Fred filed the document in the land deed records of Pike County.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
724 So. 2d 410, 1998 WL 812362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bacot-v-duby-missctapp-1998.