BRASSIELL v. Brassiell

87 So. 2d 699, 228 Miss. 243, 1956 Miss. LEXIS 509
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1956
Docket40178
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 87 So. 2d 699 (BRASSIELL v. Brassiell) 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
BRASSIELL v. Brassiell, 87 So. 2d 699, 228 Miss. 243, 1956 Miss. LEXIS 509 (Mich. 1956).

Opinion

*248 McGehee, C. J.

What is sought to be done in this proceeding is unknown to the legal jurisprudence of Mississippi. This is an interlocutory appeal from the action of the trial court in overruling a demurrer to the bill of complaint of the appellee, Cennie Brassiell. She alleges that when she was eight years of age, she and her brother Monroe Brassiell, Jr., who was fifteen or sixteen years of age, and her other brother, Willie Brassiell, who was eleven or twelve years of age, were in the care and custody of L. K. Ramsey and his wife Mamie Ramsey, who were then alleged to have stood in loco parentis to the said children; that Luther E. Brassiell and his wife, Mollie Brassiell, went to see the said Ramseys and told them that they, the said Luther E. Brassiell and his wife were childless; that they desired to take said children and adopt and raise them, as their own children, and make them their heirs; and that if the said Ramseys would turn said children over to them, the said Luther E. Brassiell and his said wife, it would be advantageous to thé children to be so adopted.

It appears from the bill of complaint that at the time of the death of the said Luther E. Brassiell, who died *249 intestate on the 7th day of January 1954, he owned the wy2 of SWA and S% of SE % of the SWA, Section 15, and the E% of the NW% of Section 22, Township 7, Range 17 East in Lauderdale County, and that he also owned about fourteen lots in the City of Meridian. The bill of complaint alleges that the chancery court of said county, being a court of equity, should regard that as done which ought to have been done, and that the complainant in the suit, Cennie Brassiell, is entitled to specifically enforce the alleged oral agreement between the said Luther E. Brassiell and his wife Mollie Brassiell, and the said L. K. Ramsey and his wife Mamie Ramsey, which has been fully performed between said L. K. Ramsey and his wife Mamie Ramsey and your complainant, and that the complainant is entitled to receive all of the property, both real and personal, which the said Luther E. Brassiell owned at the time of his death, as though she were his sole and only heir, and that the court should decree specific performance of the agreement of Luther E. Brassiell and his wife, to adopt the said complainant as their own child and to make her their heir.

Section 468, Code of 1942, provides, among other things, that: “When any person shall die seized of any estate of inheritance in lands, tenements, and hereditaments not devised, the same shall descend to his or her children, and their descendants, in equal parts, the descendants of the deceased child or grandchild to take the share of the deceased parent in equal parts among them. And when there shall not be a child or children of the intestate nor descendants of such children, then to the brothers and sisters and father and mother of the intestate and the descendants of such brothers and sisters in equal parts, the descendants of a sister or brother of the intestate to have in equal parts among- them their deceased parent’s share.”

It further appears that Luther E. Brassiell and his wife Mollie Brassiell left no child or children surviving *250 them, nor any descendants of a child or children; that they had left surviving them the appellants, John D. Brassiell, a brother of the whole blood, Ada Brassiell Pack, a sister of the whole blood, and Tommie Sears, the sole surviving child and heir-at-law of another sister of Luther E. Brassiell of the whole blood.

Section 1269, Code of 1942, prescribes the method for the legal adoption of a child — a right not known to the common law. This statute provides for the filing of a petition in the chancery court by those proposing to adopt a child, and provides that the petitioner shall state in the petition what gifts, grants, bequests or benefits he proposes to make or confer, if any, upon the person sought to be adopted; that the court shall hear the evidence and if satisfied that the allegations of the petition are true, and that the interests and welfare of the person sought to be adopted will be promoted by the adoption, may decree that such person be adopted by the petitioner, and that such person so adopted shall be entitled to all of the benefits proposed by the petitioner to be granted and conferred. In other words, the proceeding of the adoption of a child is purely statutory, and the method provided for by this statute, which was in force at the time of the alleged oral agreement, was the exclusive method whereby a child could be adopted with the right of inheritance from the adoptive parent or parents.

It further appears from the bill of complaint in the instant case that the said Monroe Brassiell, Jr., never did go to live with Luther E. Brassiell and wife, Mollie Brassiell, but chose to go to and live with one of his relatives; that the said Willie Brassiell went to live with Luther E. Brassiell and wife but only remained with them for a period of about one year; and that the complainant Cennie Brassiell went to live with Luther E. Brassiell and wife, where she remained and made her *251 home until both of them died, the said Mollie Brassiell having predeceased her husband, Luther E. Brassiell.

No proceedings for the adoption of the complainant were ever instituted by the said Luther E. Brassiell and wife, nor was there ever any attempt on the part of the complainant during their lifetime to enforce the specific performance of their alleged oral agreement to adopt the complainant and make her their heir, if such an agreement could have been enforced.

At the time of the bringing of the present suit L. K. Ramsey and wife and Luther E. Brassiell and wife were dead. The latter reared and educated the complainant, Cennie Brassiell, and gave her a college education, and she was engaged in the work of teaching school after the completion of her college education, which work she ceased to perform after the death of Mollie Brassiell, in order to administer to the needs of Luther E. Brassiell in his last illness and until the time of his death. But this is not a suit on a quantum meruit to recover the value of any services that she may have rendered in excess of the benefits that she received at the hands of the said Luther E. Brassiell and wife. Nor is there any allegation in the bill of complaint as to what her services may have been worth.

So far as the right of inheritance is concerned, it is the law. of this State that when a person dies intestate his or her property passes in the manner provided for by Section 468, supra, found in the code chapter on Descent and Distribution, unless there has been a statutory adoption of the child claiming the right of inheritance, and in the manner provided, for by the statute of adoption then in force.

In the case of Whitman v. Whitman, 206 Miss. 838, 41 So. 2d 22, the Court held that unless a decree of adoption exressly provides and adjudicates that the adopted child shall be and become the lawful heir of the adopting person, the child shall have no interest in his estate and *252 is not a necessary party to any suit involving that estate.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 So. 2d 699, 228 Miss. 243, 1956 Miss. LEXIS 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brassiell-v-brassiell-miss-1956.