Bonds v. Bonds

84 So. 2d 397, 226 Miss. 348, 1956 Miss. LEXIS 406
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 1956
DocketNo. 39822
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 84 So. 2d 397 (Bonds v. Bonds) 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
Bonds v. Bonds, 84 So. 2d 397, 226 Miss. 348, 1956 Miss. LEXIS 406 (Mich. 1956).

Opinion

McG-ehee, C. J.

The petitioner, Annie Bonds, instituted this proceeding under Sections 1270 to 1272 inclusive, Code of 1942, to have herself declared one of the heirs at law of Martin Bonds, Sr., deceased, who was at the time of his [355]*355death on March 9, 1941, a resident citizen and householder of Tunica County, Mississippi, and who then owned in fee simple and occupied as his homestead and place of residence the SW% of the SE% of Section 30, Township 4, Range 10 West in said county.

The trial court held that the appellee was the lawful widow of Martin Bonds, Sr., and that the appellant Martin Bonds, Jr., had not occupied and farmed the land under a claim of ownership either on his own behalf or on behalf of himself and his sister or her children in such a manner as to constitute an ouster of the widow so as to make any of the statutes of limitations applicable. No partition or other relief was sought by the petitioner except that she asked to be declared to be one of the heirs at law of Martin Bonds, Sr., and entitled to a one-third undivided interest in the land in question.

There was a ceremonial marriage between the petitioner Annie Bonds and Martin Bonds, Sr., on March 9, 1929. They lived together for about one year when she moved to the home of her daughter about one mile from the forty acres of land here in controversy. She continued to live separate and apart from Martin Bonds, Sr., and in the home of her daughter until the latter moved to Memphis in 1953. They were never divorced. She had been married at least three times prior to her marriage with Martin Bonds, Sr. Her first husband died. She didn’t know either at the time of her marriage to Martin Bonds, Sr., or at the time of the trial of this case, whether or not her second and third husbands had obtained a divorce from her and she only knew that she had not obtained a divorce from either of them. The appellants were unable to overcome the presumption in favor of the validity of her marriage to Martin Bonds, Sr., and the trial court therefore correctly indulged the presumption that her second and third husbands, whose whereabouts were unknown, had each obtained a divorce [356]*356from her and that therefore she was lawfully married to Martin Bonds, Sr.

During the year 1934 Martin Bonds, Sr., who was then about 81 years of age, had become in default on the payment of his annual installments on an indebtedness to The Federal Land Bank of New Orleans on the forty acres of land, and was unable to pay the taxes thereon or to farm the land. Thereupon his son, the appellant Martin Bonds, Jr., assumed the responsibility of operating the farm, meeting the annual payments to the Federal Land Bank, and for the payment of the taxes. He has continued to meet these obligations each and every year since 1934, and has continued to occupy and farm the land every year. It was not until the year 1952 that the petitioner asserted for the first time her claim to a one-third undivided interest in the land as a tenant in common of the appellant Martin Bonds, Jr., and as a tenant in common of the appellants Lorenzo McG-aha and Mary McG-aha Parrott, who were the sole heirs at law of Florence Bonds McG-aha, one of the two children of Martin Bonds, Sr., by a former marriage.

The petitioner, Annie Bonds, attended the funeral of Martin Bonds, Sr., when he died on March 9, 1941, and testified at the trial of this proceeding that she was told at the funeral by some person that she had no interest in the forty acres of land, and she concedes that she made no claim to any interest therein until the year 1952 when Mr. Andrew Jepson told Mr. Louis Harris, on whose farm Annie Bonds lived with her daughter, that “I had come into possession”. The petitioner testified that this was the first time she had ever had any idea that she had any interest in the land.

Thereupon her daughter’s husband contacted the appellant Martin Bonds, Jr., advised him that he had learned that Annie Bonds inherited a one-third undivided interest in the forty acres of land, and the result was that Martin Bonds, Jr., entered into a written lease [357]*357from her for the year 1952 for the one-third interest claimed on her behalf and thereafter paid her the $130.00 rent agreed upon. Annie Bonds paid her portion of the taxes for that year. This was about eleven years after the death of Martin Bonds, Sr., and during which period Martin Bonds, Jr., according to his testimony, claimed the land for himself and his sister Florence Bonds McG-aha until her death in 1946, and thereafter for himself and her two children, Lorenzo McG-aha and Mary McG-aha Parrott. During all of that period of more than ten years following the death of Martin Bonds, Sr., the appellant Martin Bonds, Jr., occupied the land, cultivated and made crops of cotton and corn, etc., thereon every year, appropriated the proceeds for the purpose of paying the annual installments on the debt to the Federal Land Bank, and the taxes, etc., while recognizing that his sister owned an undivided interest therein until her death in 1946, and that thereafter her children owned such interest. Neither Florence Bonds McGaha nor her two children ever occupied the land after the death of Martin Bonds, Sr., on March 9,1941.

The appellant Martin Bonds, Jr., did not pay his sister any rent at any time, and, referring to his sister and her children, he testified that he told them that he would “give them some rent and I told them that they couldn’t look for a whole rent as I would have to keep up on the mortgage and the house.”

Whether a reasonable rent for'the use of their interest in the land would have exceeded the amounts being paid to the Federal Land Bank, and for taxes, and in maintaining the improvements each year, was not shown. Nor is it shown that the appellant Martin Bonds, Jr., ever paid his father any rent during the years from 1934 until his death in 1941 other than to the extent of paying for him the annual payments to the Federal Land Bank and the taxes, etc., although he testified that [358]*358during that period he rented the land from his father. He was then asked “Q. Did your daddy have an arrangement that you take over the farm and pay the Federal Land Bank, the taxes, and, if there is anything made on the farm, that you would give him some? A. That is right.” There was no written rental contract in that behalf, and his tenancy was therefore one from year to year, and could have been terminated on sixty days notice prior to the end of any year, by his father prior to his death in 1941 or by the heirs at law thereafter, hut no such notice was ever given.

While the appellant Martin Bonds, Jr., testified that he was claiming the land during the ten years immediately following the death of his father in full recognition of the interest owned by his sister until her death and by her children thereafter, the wife of the said appellant and a representative of the Federal Land Bank both testified that he was claiming it as his own, and the appellee Annie Bonds testified that she knew that he was claiming it as his own during this ten year period while she was living only a mile away, and that she was not claiming any interest therein for herself until the year 1952 when she learned for the first time that she owned a one-third undivided interest therein as the widow of Martin Bonds, Sr.

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Bluebook (online)
84 So. 2d 397, 226 Miss. 348, 1956 Miss. LEXIS 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bonds-v-bonds-miss-1956.