Bradley v. Bradley

185 So. 2d 655, 1966 Miss. LEXIS 1518
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 25, 1966
DocketNo. 43942
StatusPublished

This text of 185 So. 2d 655 (Bradley v. Bradley) 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
Bradley v. Bradley, 185 So. 2d 655, 1966 Miss. LEXIS 1518 (Mich. 1966).

Opinion

ETHRIDGE, Chief Justice:

This case involves the use of part of the proceeds of condemned land, where the partial taking had the effect of destroying the usable value of the balance, to reconstruct certain improvements on the remaining land for its necessary and continued use by the life tenant. We hold that on the particular facts the chancery court was warranted in ordering investment of part of the condemnation award to rebuild on the other land the destroyed improvements.

I.

Earl C. Bradley, by his will probated July 7, 1958, appointed his son, Amos Bradley (appellee) as executor without bond, and waived ■ inventory, appraisement and accounting. He devised all of his estate except the home place to this son without [656]*656any condition. 'As to the home place, the will provided:

II. I hereby give, devise, and bequeath unto my son, Amos Bradley, my home-place where I now live in Alcorn County, Mississippi, being twenty-four acres, more or less, in the Southeast Quarter of Section 3, Township 2, Range 7 etc., in Alcorn County, Mississippi, the same to be his during his natural life, and the remainder at his death to my other children, Syble Howell, Rady E. Bradley, Sue Lee Scott, J. R. Bradley, Mary Sellers, Rose Emma Davis, Edna Earl Ervin, Martha Helen Daniels, James K. Bradley, T. A. Bradley, and M. C. Bradley, share and share alike; and if either of my said children should predecease my said son, Amos Bradley, then the share of the said child dying prior to the death of the said Amos Bradley shall go to the children of said child so dying in equal shares.

This twenty-four-acre tract was not located on a public road. Testator had acquired and owned at his death a private road which led from the home place to the public road on the north. After Earl Bradley died in 1958, Amos Bradley, the life tenant, and his wife used the property by farming a' small portion of it, and raising livestock and chickens. Amos rented to another the main house, but there was a little two-room cabin which he and his wife used as a place to spend the night. They had a home in Corinth, and every afternoon after work they went to the land, tended the livestock and spent the night in the two-room house, feeding the livestock the next morning and returning to Corinth, only a few miles away, for work.

In 1964 the State' Highway Commission filed a condemnation suit to take a right of way for a limited access highway, running north and south through the land. The Commission took 5.92 acres for the highway, leaving 2.34 acres on the west side and 12.19 acres on the east, upon which the main dwelling is situated. The right of way destroyed the private road from this tract running north to a public road, the water line connected with the city’s water system, the fences, a small pond, and the two-room house, used by Amos and his wife.

Amos Bradley filed a petition in chancery court, making the eleven remainder-men defendants. He averred the above facts, and that the highway department appraised the property at $13,750, which appeared to be a reasonable compensation; that a substantial part of the award would constitute damages to the property not taken; and that petitioner was entitled to enjoy the full fruits of a life estate arid to use from the award funds necessary to replace fences, build a pond, a small residence, re-establish water connections, and obtain a means of access. Petitioner also asserted that it had been necessary for him as life tenant and executor to employ counsel to advise him about handling the funds to be received, and they should be managed under supervision of the chancery court, especially since there may be contingent remainder-men. He asked for a reasonable solicitor’s fee for legal services rendered for the executor and life tenant in the condemnation proceedings and the presentation of this cause, and that the court authorize the expenditure of a necessary portion of the proceeds of the condemnation award to erect these improvements on the remaining land.

A month later Amos Bradley again petitioned the court, stating that the Commission had paid $13,750, and pursuant to chancery decree the clerk had invested the funds in a savings and loan association; that the life tenant was entitled to full use of the land during his life and the profits from it, and, on account of the complexity of the situation, it was necessary to bring these proceedings into chancery court and to employ a law firm to represent him for an agreed fee of $1,000. The petition averred certain costs for [657]*657the proposed necessary reconstruction on the remaining' land, and asked the court to direct it. The remaindermen denied the petition, and asserted that the entire proceeds of the condemnation award should be invested, with the interest only going to the life tenant.

The chancery court held: It was the testator’s intent that his son Amos should have the use of the twenty-four acres during his life. He could not foresee that the Commission would take a portion of the land and disturb its use by the life tenant. The testator’s will should be carried out as far as practicable, and in order to do that, certain adjustments must be made in the use of the property. Application of some of the funds in question was necessary. The life tenant should be placed in as nearly the same position as he was prior to the Commission’s taking the property, and to do so, it was necessary to build fences, construct a stock pond, replace a small frame dwelling, and drill a well, with a pump and pump house. The court found these improvements are not only for the use and benefit of the life tenant, but also for the remaindermen. The question of obtaining a means of access to the property was held in abeyance, at petitioner’s request, subject to further order of the court. The clerk was directed to deduct from the proceeds ($13,750) held by him the sum of $3,135.05 to be used as follows:

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185 So. 2d 655, 1966 Miss. LEXIS 1518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-v-bradley-miss-1966.