Barner v. Lehr

199 So. 273, 190 Miss. 77, 1940 Miss. LEXIS 190
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1940
DocketNo. 34332.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 199 So. 273 (Barner v. Lehr) 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
Barner v. Lehr, 199 So. 273, 190 Miss. 77, 1940 Miss. LEXIS 190 (Mich. 1940).

Opinion

*82 Ethridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellants, complainants in the court below, filed a bill against the appellees for the cancellation of claims of appellees to certain property described in the bill, and for further relief, general and special. The bill alleged that the lands involved in the suit, to which the defendants claimed the right, had belonged to Mrs. M. Barritt, also known as Mrs. C. A. Barritt, in her lifetime, she having died on December 18, 1938, without issue, and without having made conveyance of the said property during her lifetime. She died intestate, seized and possessed of the lands, leaving, the bill alleged, the complainants as her sole heirs-at-law, who inherited the lands; but the defendants claimed title thereto.

The defendants were summoned and answered- the bill, propounding their claim to the land in question through a will made by M. Barritt, the husband of Mrs. M.-Barritt; also setting up the claim that in his lifetime Mrs. M. Barritt (or Mrs. C. A. Barritt) conveyed the lands to her husband, which, deed was never placed of record, and could not be produced, as it was claimed to have been lost.

Title to the land in question was deraigned from the United States government through the mother of Mrs. *83 C. Á. Barritt, and passed to Mrs. Barritt through her mother’s will, upon the death of the latter; such lands being described in the bill of complaint, deeds, etc., in Mrs. C. A. Barritt’s chain of title, as lot 7, section 3, township 21 north, range 4 west, “less and except therefrom twelve acres,” theretofore conveyed to another.

The land is described in the will of M. Barritt, which will was probated after his death by his wife, Mrs. C. A. Barritt, named therein as executor, reading, in part, as follows: “To my wife, C. A. Barritt, I devise that land located in Sunflower county, Mississippi, described as all' that part of Lot seven of Section three, Township twenty-one, North, Range three West, which lies between the south boundary of Lot One of said Section and the gravel public road, for and during her natural life, with remainder in fee to E. G-. Hunter.”

In another article of the will it is provided: “To my wife, C. A. Barritt, I devise all of my other real estate of every kind and description and wheresoever located for and during her natural life, with remainder in fee to the children of John Lehr and Mollie Lehr, including their children, if any, hereafter to be begotten, share and share alike, living at the death of my said wife, O. A. Barrett. ’ ’

The defendants set up in their answer and cross-bill that in item 3 of the will of M. Barritt, above quoted from, either through his own error or that of the scribe in the description of land, there was devised to E. G-. Hunter lot 7, section 3, township 21 north, range 3 west, when in fact the lot was in range 4 west; and that it was the intention of the testator to devise said land in range 4 instead of range 3. It was further charged in the answer and cross-bill that there is no lot 7 in section 3, township 21 north, range 3 west in Sunflower county, Mississippi; that saicl section 3 in township 21 north, range 3 west is not divided into lots, but into quarter sections; that M. Barritt never owned any land in range 3 in Sunflower county, but that at the time he wrote the will, and at the *84 time of his death he did own lots 2 and 7, section 3, township 21 north, range 4 west in Sunflower county; and that he intended to devise, and in fact did devise, that part of lot 7 in section 3, township 21 north, range 4 west, which lies between the south boundary of lot 1 of said section and the graveled public road, to his wife, Mrs. C. A. Barritt, “for and during her natural life, with remainder in fee to E. G-. Hunterand that the cross-complainants are advised that the court should declare the proper description of said land erroneously described in the said will of M. Barritt.

Also, it was set up in the answer and cross-bill that certain statements had been made by Mrs. C. A. Barritt in her lifetime, indicating that M. Barritt owned the property, and had used, rented and improved it; and that Mrs. C. A. Barritt, in probating the will containing the above description, was thereby estopped from disputing the ownership of the lands in M. Barritt; and that the complainants, as her heirs, are also estopped from asserting claim, for that reason.

The defendants, and cross-complainants sought among other things, to establish adverse possession of the said land by M. Barritt in his lifetime as against his wife even though no deed had been made — which they claim was done, although not recorded — alleging that by his acts of ownership, and claim of ownership, he possessed the title as against his wife, Mrs. C. A. Barritt. The proof in the case shows that M. Barritt owned lot 2 of section 3, township 21 north, range 4 west, and that lot 7 of said section, township and range lay south thereof, and adjoining the home of M. Barritt and his wife, Mrs. C. A. Barritt, being on said lot 2.

M. Barritt and Mrs. C. A. Barritt, husband and wife, lived upon the property involved in this suit, occupying it as a homestead from 1878 until the death of M. Barritt in 1930, and the death of Mrs. C. A. Barritt in 1938, she having continued to live in the home after her husband passed away. Mrs. Barritt died intestate, leaving no *85 children., and the complainants, appellants here, are her heirs-at-law.

We are of the opinion that the possession and use of the property by M. Barritt in his lifetime was insufficient to establish title by adverse possession, being* such as is usual where the husband has charg’e of the wife’s property and operate it as a farm. In such case the husband is the agent of the wife, and they are each in possession of the land, which in this instance they occupied during their lifetime. Consequently there was no proof of exclusive possession, and no proof of hostile use, excluding the wife from possession and occupation. We do not deem it necessary to elaborate upon the law in this regard. Where the husband uses the wife’s property, he is considered her agent in such use, by virtue of our statutory regulations.

We.do not hold that under no circumstances would the husband acquire right to the property of the wife by adverse possession, but if there are such instances, this record does not present such a case. The entire use and occupancy of the property by M. Barritt during his lifetime was consistent with the title and ownership which was in his wife, so far as lot 7 is concerned. The general rule is that the occupancy of property is in accordance with the title thereto, and the adverse possession must be such as to remove this presumption by clear and unequivocal claims and acts of ownership, of which the title owner is aware, or should be charged with knowing clearly, so as to show that there existed such occupancy as is required in order to acquire title against the true owner.

Cross-complainants also sought to prove title by deed through the testimony of a lady who was a near neighbor of Mr. and Mrs. Barritt, and on intimate terms with them. This lady was said to be aged, and her deposition was taken out of court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
199 So. 273, 190 Miss. 77, 1940 Miss. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barner-v-lehr-miss-1940.