Breland v. Bryant

402 So. 2d 838, 1981 Miss. LEXIS 2145
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 19, 1981
DocketNo. 52694
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 402 So. 2d 838 (Breland v. Bryant) 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
Breland v. Bryant, 402 So. 2d 838, 1981 Miss. LEXIS 2145 (Mich. 1981).

Opinion

BOWLING, Justice, for the Court:

A recitation of the facts and issues in this case as shown by the record would make a good novel. The name of the plot should be “Land Is Thicker than Blood.” The case comes to this Court from the Chancery Court of Perry County. It involves several issues; mainly, an alleged fraudulently secured deed, a request for a bill of review, and the homestead status as to one tenant-in-eommon owner of the property. Appellant and appellee are son and mother.

On March 23, 1979, appellee filed her sworn Bill of Complaint in the Chancery Court of Perry County against appellant with the sole contention being that on October 4, 1975, appellant fraudulently induced appellee to relocate her residence to the home of appellant in Wilmer, Alabama. Appellee was 84 years of age at the time. She alleged that appellant carried her to the office of an attorney in Pascagoula, Mississippi, and secured appellee’s signature on a quit claim deed for appellee’s one-seventh interest in the land in Perry County. The other % interest was owned by the children of appellee and her deceased husband, Homer Breland, who died on December 5, 1970.

Appellant immediately employed attorney George M. Simmerman of Pascagoula, who had represented him on prior occasions. Attorney Simmerman filed an answer to the Bill of Complaint on April 16, 1979, in which all fraudulent and undue influence alleged by appellee in her Bill of Complaint was denied under oath. He affirmatively alleged he had paid all taxes on the property in question subsequent to his father’s death and had contributed substantially to the maintenance and upkeep of the property-

It developed that attorney Simmerman was ill with terminal cancer and at the April term of court made this known to the chancellor and to appellant. Due to his illness, the case was continued until the July 1979 term. When that time arrived, it was clear that Mr. Simmerman’s situation had deteriorated, and he had been confined for various periods of time in a hospital in Mobile, Alabama, undergoing specialized treatment. He informed the chancellor that he should be able to try the case in August. The chancellor then entered an order on July 31, 1979, setting the case for vacation hearing on August 28, 1979, with directions that if Mr. Simmerman was not able to try the cause, someone else should appear in his place.

[840]*840On the morning of August 28, 1979, ap-pellee appeared in court with her attorney. Neither appellant, his attorney Mr. Simmer-man, nor any other attorney appeared. Hereinafter we shall discuss the alleged reasons for this as set out in appellant’s Petition for a Bill of Review. The lower court directed that the cause proceed. On that same date, appellee filed an instrument merely styled “Motion,” which moved the court to set aside and hold for naught the purported deed in question for the reason that at the time of the execution of the deed, the land recited in the deed and the dwelling constituted the homestead of the complainant and her husband, Lewis L. Bryant; that she and the said Lewis L. Bryant were residing together in the dwelling situated on the land described in said deed, and the said Lewis L. Bryant, her husband, never joined in the execution of the deed as required by Section 89-1-31, Mississippi Code 1972 Annotated, and therefore, the purported deed was absolutely void. On the same date an “Order Sustaining Motion,” was executed by the chancellor stating that “the court having considered said motion, the evidence and testimony introduced thereon finds that said motion should be and it is sustained.” Testimony appears in the record taken at the same date from appellee and her husband Lewis L. Bryant. Their original marriage certificate was introduced into evidence showing that appellee and Bryant were married in Stone County, Mississippi, on July 21, 1972.

Evidence was introduced from appellee, whose sole testimony went, to the fact of her marriage to Bryant; that she and Bryant were living together at the “Old Place” in Perry County on the date the deed was executed by her to appellant. When asked whether or not Bryant joined in the deed, she gave no verbal response. It should be pointed out here that she gave no testimony whatever that in any manner touched on the sworn allegations of her Bill of Complaint, but on the other hand contradicted the allegations therein that she had moved to appellant’s home in Alabama and stated under oath that at the time the deed was executed she was living with Bryant at the “Old Place.”

Lewis L. Bryant then testified. He stated that he did not join in the execution of the quit claim deed on October 4,1975; that he was living with appellee on her place at the time as her husband. He further testified that it was his understanding that appellant was to take care of appellee for the rest of her life. As was shown by appellee’s testimony, Bryant gave absolutely no testimony or evidence regarding the Bill of Complaint they came to court to litigate. After receiving the above discussed “Motion” and entering the order thereon, the court executed a Final Decree on the same day [August 28, 1979] setting aside the deed executed by appellee to appellant on October 4, 1975, and ordered that the decree be recorded in the proper records in the Office of the Chancery Clerk. The only indication in the Final Decree as to the basis of the decree was the preamble which stated, “This Cause coming on to be heard on Bill of Complaint, Answer and oral and documentary evidence-; and having heard all of the same and now being fully advised in the premises, the court is of the opinion and so finds that the complainant is entitled to the relief prayed for in her bill.”

As stated above, there was no evidence or testimony whatever introduced before the court regarding the allegations of the Bill of Complaint or the sworn Answer denying its allegations. The decree does not reiterate the finding on the above discussed “Motion.” The order did recite that “her homestead rights in said property be restored unto her for all purposes.”

On April 17, 1980, appellant filed an instrument styled “Bill of Complaint in the Nature of a Bill of Review to Set Aside Decree.” This bill of complaint reviewed the history of the cause and particularly the medical situation of Attorney Simmerman, who died in September 1979, shortly after the Final Decree was entered as described above. He had been confined to a hospital for some time prior thereto. Appellant further alleged that he knew nothing about the hearing but on the other hand had been advised by Mr. Simmerman he would keep [841]*841him posted and advise him when to be in court. He was not aware that his solicitor had become ill to the extent of impending death. The prayer of the Bill of Complaint requested that it be considered a Bill of Review asking that the said final decree be set aside because of “mutual mistake, surprise or unintentional fraud,” and prayed for general relief.

Appellee filed a general demurrer to the Bill of Complaint and also an answer denying its allegations. The demurrer was overruled.

The cause came on for hearing on August 4, 1980. Appellant testified that he still lived in Wilmer, Alabama, but was born and raised in Perry County, Mississippi. He testified regarding the history of dealing with attorney Simmerman and particularly what he now knew about the situation in 1979, most of which he did not know until later. He stated that he learned about the August 18, 1979, Final Decree for the first time when he went to Perry County to pay taxes on the place in January, 1980.

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523 So. 2d 1033 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1988)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
402 So. 2d 838, 1981 Miss. LEXIS 2145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/breland-v-bryant-miss-1981.