Carter v. Sunray Mid-Continent Oil Co.

94 So. 2d 624, 231 Miss. 8, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 488
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 22, 1957
DocketNo. 40303
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 94 So. 2d 624 (Carter v. Sunray Mid-Continent Oil Co.) 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
Carter v. Sunray Mid-Continent Oil Co., 94 So. 2d 624, 231 Miss. 8, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 488 (Mich. 1957).

Opinions

McGehee, C. J.

[16]*16This is an appeal from a final decree of the Chancery Court of Wilkinson County sustaining a demurrer to an amended hill of complaint and dismissing the same upon the complainants having declined to plead further. The suit involves the construction of the will of Mrs. Celete F. Sims executed on March 30, 1899, at a time when what was commonly'known as the “Two Donee Statute” of this State, Section 2436, Code of 1892, was in full force and effect, the same not having been omitted from the Code until 1930.

The testatrix ivas a. widow who died in October 1899, leaving as her surviving children, W. R. Sims, a son, who was then married and living with his wife and one child, ..and three adult unmarried children, John C. Sims, Carrie L. Sims and Mary Sims. The father had died many years prior thereto. There had been conveyed to W. E. Sims his portion of the inheritance, a home had been built for him on his separate land, and the house had been .furnished with the assistance of his mother.

At the time of the execution of the will and also at the time of the death of the testatrix, the only children other than W. It. were unmarried and living in the plantation home with their’ mother in Wilkinson County. The will devised .the lands which comprised the plantation at the’time of the execution of the will, and the present ownership of those lands is the subject matter of this suit.

The bill of complaint, as amended, alleges the foregoing facts, and further that the testatrix at the time of the ■ execution .of the will “was concerned that the home and plantation remain intact to be held in common jointly for all of her said, unmarried children as a class until the time of the. death of the last survivor; that the husband of the' said testatrix had died when said children were young, and for more than twenty years she had assumed full responsibility for their care and main[17]*17tonance; (and) that the testatrix further desired that if one or more of such children should marry and have children that the plantation and home should continue to remain intact and that title should vest in such grandchildren” — as the bodily heirs of her son John, and of her daughters Mary and Carrie. But since the will, however, appears as an exhibit to the amended bill of complaint, we must look to the provisions of the will to ascertain the desire and intention of the testatrix, since the ..allegations of the amended bill are not controlling as to what the testatrix desired, when the will itself was made an exhibit to the pleading which was being considered on demurrer.

The pertinent provisions of the entire will to be considered on the issues here involved are numbered for convenience and to avoid some future repetition of the language of each clause in full, and are as follows:

Clause (1) “I devise and bequeath all my real estate as follows, equally to my son John C. Sims and my daughters Carrie L. Sims and Mary Sims in common as long as they remain single ; ’ ’

Clause (2) “but upon the marriage of either of them, ten acres of said land including the dwelling, barn, outhouses and orchard but not including the negro cabins to go exclusively to those remaining single, & they may select the said ten acres to be exclusively owned by them, if another of said three devisees shall marry then said ten acres shall go exclusively to the one remaining single, but if all three should many then said ten acres shall again be the common property of all three. And in either case the remaining land excepting the said ten acres shall be the common property of all three, whether married or'single”.'

Clause (3) “If either of my said three devisees shall die without, leaving bodily heirs living at the death of said devisee then said real estate shall go .to the surviv[18]*18ors, or if two of them die without bodily heirs then the said land shall go to the survivor, ’ ’

Clause (4) “provided that if my son John C. Sims shall survive both his sisters, and they both shall die without bodily heirs, then the said John C. Sims shall take the said ten acres, above mentioned as his exclusive property, and the balance of the land shall be equally divided between my two sons John C. Sims and W. E. Sims;”

Clause (5) “and provided further that if either of my said three devisees John C., Carrie L. or Mary shall die leaving bodily heirs, the said heirs shall take the deceased parents share”

Clause (6) “and upon the death of the survivor and last of said three devisees leaving no bodily heirs, if there shall at that time be bodily heirs living, of one or both of the three devisees, first dieing (sic) then said last of said three devisees may devise his share,” (Italics ours)

Clause (7) “but if such survivor die intestate, (leaving no bodily heirs) the share of such survivor shall go to the bodily heirs of those leaving bodily heirs;”

Clause (8) “upon the death of all three of said devisees leaving no bodily heirs living at their deaths, the survivor may devise said land,”

Clause (9) “but if the survivor die intestate, (leaving no bodily heirs) said land shall go to W. E. Sims if then living,”

Clause (10) “but if he be then deceased it shall go to my heirs in fee simple.”

The amended bill of complaint alleges, and the demurrer admits, that on June 23, 1900, John C. Sims died without having been married and without leaving bodily heirs; and that on March 3, 1901, Mary Sims died without having married and without leaving bodily heirs' The amended bill of complaint then alleges, as [19]*19a conclusion of the pleader from tlio provisions of the will and the deaths of John C. Sims and Mary Sims under the circumstances aforesaid, that “thereupon the share of the said Carrie L. Sims in the common estate was increased from a one-third interest in said joint life estate to the full interest therein as the last survivor, with a remainder in fee to her bodily heirs, if any, under the provisions of the will that ‘if two of them die without bodily heirs then the said land shall go to the survivor, * * * and provided further that if either of 1113»' said three devisees John C., Carrie L., or Alary shall die leaving bodily heirs the said heirs shall take the deceased parent’s share * * ; (and that) upon the death of all three, of said devisees leaving no bodily heirs living at their deaths, the survivor may devise said land, but if the survivor die intestate (also leaving no bodiH heirs) said land shall go to AY. R. Sims if then living, but if he he then deceased it shall go to my heirs in fee simple’.”

The amended bill of complaint further alleged “that the said Carrie L. Sims, whose share in such real estate then consisted of the entire joint life estate vested in her as the surviving named devisee, married Alexander AAullard Carter on April 3, 1901. That the said Carrie L. Sims Carter died testate on August 12, 1948, leaving as her bodily heirs the. complainants, who are her children b3r the said marriage, to-wit: Celete Carter, John S. Carter, Herman S. Carter, Alexander AY. Carter, and Airs. H. L. Lewis, Jr.”

On November 21, 1930, the said Airs. Carrie Sims Carter executed a conveyance to J. C.

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Bluebook (online)
94 So. 2d 624, 231 Miss. 8, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-sunray-mid-continent-oil-co-miss-1957.