Birmingham v. Conger

222 So. 2d 388
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 5, 1969
Docket45355
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 222 So. 2d 388 (Birmingham v. Conger) 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
Birmingham v. Conger, 222 So. 2d 388 (Mich. 1969).

Opinion

222 So.2d 388 (1969)

Drue Dunlap BIRMINGHAM, Jr.
v.
Mrs. Annie Lee Birmingham CONGER et al.

No. 45355.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

May 5, 1969.

*389 Wall Doxey, Jr., Holly Springs, for appellant.

Dudley Bridgeforth, Jr., Wilroy, Wilroy & Hagan, Hernando, for appellees.

BRADY, Justice:

This is an appeal from a decision of the Chancery Court of DeSoto County, Mississippi, which held that Mrs. Annie Lee Birmingham Conger is the fee simple owner of fifty-four shares of stock, certificate No. 15, of the Bank of Olive Branch, and that the appellant, Drue Dunlap Birmingham, Jr., is estopped to assert any right as a remainderman to the purchase of new issue shares which are being offered for sale by the Bank to present owners of bank stock.

The facts pertinent to this appeal are as follows. On January 1, 1963, Mrs. Maggie Dunlap Birmingham died in DeSoto County, Mississippi, leaving a last will and testament dated August 17, 1940, and witnessed by H.W. May, A.S. Henley and *390 Frank Woodward. The testatrix appointed her children, Drue Dunlap Birmingham, Sr., and Mrs. Annie Lee Birmingham Conger, as executor and executrix of her will. The will was probated and letters testamentary were issued on March 28, 1963. A petition for discharge of the joint executor and executrix was filed on May 15, 1967, which was joined in by the appellant, Drue Dunlap Birmingham, Jr. Previous to that date, on March 6, 1966, Drue Dunlap Birmingham, Sr., one of the devisees and legatees of the will and the joint executor, died testate.

At the time of her death, Mrs. Maggie Dunlap Birmingham owned one hundred eight shares of the Bank of Olive Branch stock, certificates Nos. 12 and 13. Section 3 of her will reads as follows:

It is my desire that the Shares of Stock in the Bank of Olive Branch, which I own, shall be kept in the family as long as practical. The above named children are to divide the dividends equally as long as they live and at their death the stock is to go to my two grandchildren, Drue Dunlap Birmingham, Jr., and Margaret Birmingham, who are to divide it equally between them. Should such time come when my two children shall both agree to sell this stock they may do so and divide the proceeds equally between themselves.

On the will offered in evidence in this cause the words "practical" and "children shall both agree to sell this stock they may do so and divide the proceeds equally between themselves" have been marked through, and below in the deceased's handwriting were written the words "not to be sold." The only surviving witness to the will, Mr. Frank Woodward, testified that he did not remember any alterations made in the will when he signed it, but that it had been twenty-eight years since he signed it. It is not disputed, however, that the will with the delineation and the handwritten words was the will that was admitted to probate. After the death of their mother, Mrs. Conger and Mr. Birmingham agreed to divide the shares of bank stock. Mrs. Conger handled the division with the Bank, and certificates Nos. 15 and 16 were issued in place of Nos. 12 and 13. Thereafter, Mrs. Conger and Mr. Birmingham each held fifty-four shares in their individual names by two separate certificates. From the date of the division until his death, Mr. Birmingham and Mrs. Conger each drew their separate dividends, and each treated the fifty-four shares of stock as his or her own. As proof of this, it was shown that on February 24, 1965, Mr. Birmingham gave his stock certificates as security for a $7,000 loan from the Citizens Bank of Byhalia, Mississippi.

By a holographic will dated March 1, 1966, Mr. Birmingham left the fifty-four shares of his Bank of Olive Branch stock to his daughter, Mrs. Margaret Birmingham Moffatt, with the expressed wish that it be held and owned by her family as long as consistent with good business practices. On July 1, 1966, for the sum of $28,524.50, a part of which was used to pay off the loan from the Citizens Bank of Byhalia, Mrs. Moffatt and her mother, Mrs. Ruth O. Birmingham, by a bill of sale and power of attorney, conveyed all interest which they had in the stock to Mr. Percy E. Smith. On the same day, the appellant, Drue Dunlap Birmingham, Jr., executed a quitclaim bill of sale to Mr. Smith wherein he conveyed to him "any and all interest that I may have in or to any stock of the Bank of Olive Branch represented by certificate No. 16 issued to D.D. Birmingham, unto Percy E. Smith." In addition, he stated, "I further expressly waive any restrictions upon the sale of any stock previously owned by my grandmother in said bank." Appellant also joined in the "Petition for Discharge of Joint Executor and Executrix," and at that time made no objection to the petition nor contended that he was entitled to any part of the Bank of Olive Branch stock. Neither did appellant contest the right of *391 his father by will to bequeath the fifty-four shares to appellant's sister, Mrs. Moffatt.

However, in the early part of 1967, appellant, one of the remaindermen under the will of Mrs. Maggie Dunlap Birmingham, his grandmother, discovered that the Bank of Olive Branch was to issue some additional stock which the present owners of stock in the Bank could buy at the ratio of three new shares for each one which they presently owned. On April 19, 1967, appellant wrote the officers of the Bank of Olive Branch stating that as legal remainderman he was entitled to purchase one hundred sixty-two shares of stock and gave notice of this intent to exercise his right. A second letter was written the bank officers by the appellant's attorney on November 22, 1967.

When the dispute arose as to who had the rights to purchase the new stock, Mrs. Conger or the appellant, the appellant filed his petition in the Chancery Court for the construction of Section 3 of the will of his grandmother, Mrs. Maggie Dunlap Birmingham, and for determination of his rights in regard to the new issue of stock. Mrs. Annie Lee Birmingham Conger and Mrs. Margaret Birmingham Moffatt filed a joint answer. The Bank of Olive Branch filed a separate answer. In addition thereto, Percy Smith, Chief Executive Officer of the Bank of Olive Branch, was granted permission to intervene and filed a separate answer. Following the taking of testimony in the cause, Mrs. Conger and Mrs. Moffatt were allowed to amend their answer so as to allege that the appellant, Drue Dunlap Birmingham, Jr., was estopped from asserting any claim as a remainderman to the fifty-four shares of stock now standing in Mrs. Conger's name and represented by stock certificate No. 15.

In his opinion the astute chancellor made an extensive finding of fact. He concluded therefrom that the parties without exception had acted in a manner which was consistent with fee simple title being in Mr. Birmingham and Mrs. Conger. He found that the appellant was estopped to assert any interest in the fifty-four shares held by Mrs. Conger in her name and evidenced by stock certificate No. 15, and found Mrs. Conger to be the fee simple owner of the stock. From this decision the appeal was taken.

Appellant assigns three errors: (1) That the court erred in finding that there were grounds upon which to hold that an estoppel against the appellant's asserting his remainderman rights to one-half of fifty-four shares of stock represented by certificate No. 15; (2) that the court erred in not holding that the appellee Conger had only a life estate in the fifty-four shares of stock represented by certificate No.

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Bluebook (online)
222 So. 2d 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birmingham-v-conger-miss-1969.