BLOUNT v. Blount

95 So. 2d 545, 231 Miss. 398, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 525
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1957
Docket40334
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 95 So. 2d 545 (BLOUNT v. Blount) 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
BLOUNT v. Blount, 95 So. 2d 545, 231 Miss. 398, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 525 (Mich. 1957).

Opinion

*403 Kyle, J.

This appeal is from a decree of the Chancery Court of Neshoba County in three cases which were consolidated for trial by agreement of the parties. The appellee, Mrs. Billie Ruth Blount, was complainant in each of the three cases. The first suit, docketed in the lower court as Cause No. 4391, was a suit for divorce and alimony filed by the appellee against her husband, the appellant Thomas H. Blount. The second suit, which was docketed in the lower court as Cause No. 4403, was a suit filed by the appellee ag’ainst the appellants Thomas H. Blount and his father, H. E. Blount, to set aside certain deeds of conveyance of lands executed by Thomas H. Blount to his father, which the appellee alleged had been executed for the purpose of defrauding the appellee of her right to alimony and support for her two minor children, and to require an accounting for personal property turned over to H. E. Blount by Thomas H. Blount, in which the appellee claimed an interest. The third suit, Cause No. 4446, was a suit filed by the appellee against the appellants, Thomas II. Blount and H. E. Blount, seeking to establish the appellee’s claim to an undivided one-half interest in the personal property transferred by Thomas II. Blount to his father immediately after the separation of the appellee from her husband.

The bill of complaint in the divorce suit was filed on June 1,1954. The bill alleged and the record shows that the complainant and the defendant, Thomas H. Blount, were married on September 14, 1947, and that they lived together, except for a short period of time, from that date until May 26, 1954. Two children were born of the marriage, Thomas Chandler Blount and Marcie Jean Blount, who were 4% years of age and 2 years of age, *404 respectively, at the time of the filing of the bill of complaint. The complaint alleged in her bill as ground for divorce habitual cruel and inhuman treatment extending over a period of approximately two and one-half years; and the complainant asked for a decree of divorce and for the temporary and permanent care and custody of the two minor children, and also for alimony and a support allowance for the support and maintenance of the two children. The complainant alleged in her bill that the defendant was the owner of approximately 900 acres of land in Neshoba County, a dairy barn and approximately 130 to 150 head of cattle, also tractors, a truck and other personal property, all of the value of approximately $100,000; and the complainant asked that a lien be impressed upon the property owned by the defendant to secure the payment of the alimony, and that she be awarded the immediate possession of the home, and that the defendant be enjoined from entering upon the premises and disturbing the complainant and the two children.

The day after the divorce suit was filed the chancellor signed an order fixing June 12 as the date for a hearing on the complainant’s application for the custody of the two minor children and for temporary alimony; and a summons was issued for the defendant commanding him to appear at the time and place stated in the order, to show cause why the custody of the two children should not be awarded to the complainant, and why the defendant should not be required to pay the complainant a reasonable sum of money for the support of herself and the two children pending a hearing of the case on its merits. The defendant eluded service of process, however, and the summons was never served. A supplemental order was entered thereafter fixing a new date for such hearing, but the defendant had left the state, taking the children with him, and no such hearing was held. The defendant was finally located in Cuba, Alabama, about the *405 middle of July, and the complainant filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in that state to obtain possession of the children. The writ was granted, and after a hearing the Alabama Court awarded the custody of the children to the complainant, who broug'ht them back to their home in Philadelphia. But three weeks later the defendant appeared at a street intersection in Philadelphia, with his face blacked and wearing overalls, and seized his 4%-year old son while he was seated in an automobile beside his mother, and escaped with the boy in a waiting truck; and a few nights later the defendant forced his way into the complainant’s home and obtained possession of his 2-year old daughter. On August 23 the chancellor signed an order directing the issuance of a writ of ne exeat. But the defendant had left the state again, and the writ was never served.

After four months of travel which carried him as far west as Albuquerque, New Mexico, and Las Vegas, Nevada, the defendant left his two children with comparative strangers in Marshall, Texas, and returned to Meridian, Mississippi, during the last week in November. He was immediately arrested and incarcerated in the county jail. A new writ of ne exeat was issued, and the defendant was required to execute bond in the sum of $10,000, conditioned that he would remain within the jurisdiction of the court; and after a hearing on December 6 the chancellor entered a decree awarding to the complainant the immediate custody of the two children and requiring the defendant to pay to the complainant the sum of $200 per month as temporary alimony for the support of herself and the two children.

The bill of complaint in Cause No. 4403 was filed on July 3, 1954. In her bill in that case the complainant sought to have the court set aside two deeds of conveyance of lands executed by Thomas H. Blount to his father on May 28, 1954, which purported to convey to the said H. E. Blount the 890 acres of land owned by Thomas H. *406 Blount at the time of the separation. The complainant alleged that the deeds had been executed by the said Thomas H. Blount with the deliberate design and purpose of placing the property beyond the ordinary process of the court, and for the purpose of defrauding and withholding from the complainant and her two minor children their property rights under the law; that the defendants, Thomas H. Blount and H. E. Blount, knew at the time the deeds were executed, or had reason to believe, that the lands described in the-deeds would be the subject of litigation which would arise out of the domestic differences that the complainant and the defendant Thomas H. Blount were having at that time; and that the purported transfer of the title to the lands had been made pursuan to a conspiracy by and between the defendant Thomas H. Blount and his father to perpetrate a fraud upon the complainant and the two minor children. The complainant also alleged in her bill that the defendant Thomas H. Blount had turned over to his father all of the cattle and other personal property, which had been accumulated through the joint efforts of both the complainant and the said Thomas H. Blount, and that the defendant H. E. Blount had possession of the cattle and the dairy equipment and was operating the dairy and was selling large quantities of milk, and also cattle and other farm produce; and that the complainant was entitled to a discovery as to the value, kind and amount of said property and to a decree adjudging that she had an equitable interest in all of said property. The complainant asked that the deeds of conveyance of the lands be cancelled and set aside, and that the defendant H. E. Blount be required to.

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Bluebook (online)
95 So. 2d 545, 231 Miss. 398, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blount-v-blount-miss-1957.