Collins v. Collins

625 So. 2d 786, 1993 WL 398696
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 7, 1993
Docket91-CA-0037
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 625 So. 2d 786 (Collins v. Collins) 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
Collins v. Collins, 625 So. 2d 786, 1993 WL 398696 (Mich. 1993).

Opinion

625 So.2d 786 (1993)

Houston COLLINS, Jr.
v.
Beverly COLLINS.

No. 91-CA-0037.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

October 7, 1993.

*787 James D. Shannon, Hazlehurst, for appellant.

Robert W. Lawrence, Crystal Springs, for appellee.

Before HAWKINS, C.J., and SULLIVAN and McRAE, JJ.

McRAE, Justice, for the court:

This appeal arises from a December 5, 1990, judgment of the Copiah County Chancery Court in a dispute over the conveyance of a title to real property. After a hearing, the chancellor dismissed Houston Collins' claim with prejudice and likewise, denied Beverly Collins' counterclaims for damages. Because the appellant comes into this Court with unclean hands, we affirm the chancellor's dismissal of his claims of fraud. On cross-appeal, we find that the chancellor correctly found that no actionable claim had arisen from Houston Collins' filing of a lis pendens notice, but reverse and remand on the issue of tortious interference with contract.

I.

Houston and Beverly Collins lived on property Houston owned in Hazelhurst. In December, 1984, Houston was tried and convicted for his third drug-related offense. He was sentenced as a recidivist to serve thirty years in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections. Concerned that the State might seize his property to satisfy several substantial fines which had been levied against him, Houston conveyed the property by deed to Beverly on July 11, 1985. Houston testified that at the time of the conveyance, his understanding was as follows:

*788 We talked about if I put everything in her name, you know, once I got out and once everything blowed [sic] over, everything would come back to me... .
* * * * * *
We had talked, on and off, several occasions and, finally, I decided to do something about it, because she was steady getting worried that the State was going to put her and the kids outdoors, because everything was in my name, and by it being in my name, all these lots, they was gonna seize it.

Whatever the parties' understanding, nothing about the reconveyance was put into writing.

In May, 1987, while Houston was incarcerated, Beverly sought and obtained a divorce. His efforts to have one of his convictions reversed was successful and he was released from prison in May, 1988. Houston then tried to resume his relationship with Beverly. She rebuked his overtures as well as his attempts to move back into his former home. Further, she obtained a court order requiring Houston to "stay away and refrain from abusing or harassing" her.

On August 15, 1989, Beverly entered into an agreement to lease the property to Fred Tanner and his fiance for $275.00 a month. While Tanner was working on the property prior to moving in, Houston confronted him and stated, "No one stays in this house, unless it's Bev and the kids. I'll burn this so and so down before anybody moves in it other than them." Consequently, Tanner never took possession or paid his rent under the terms of the lease.

On October 16, 1988, Houston filed a lis pendens notice in the office of the Copiah County Chancery Clerk describing the property and stating his claim of ownership "by virtue of a complaint to be filed forthwith in the Chancery Court of Copiah County, Mississippi to set aside quitclaim deed(s)."

The lis pendens notice remained on file for more than a year prior before Houston filed his complaint seeking cancellation of the deeds to the property conveyed to Beverly. Houston alleged that Beverly:

falsely and fraudulently represented and promised to plaintiff, Houston Collins, that if Houston Collins would execute a quitclaim deed of his interest in the property to Beverly Collins due to the pending criminal charges against the plaintiff, then the defendant would execute a deed back to plaintiff when he was acquitted and released from prison. That the representation and promise were made by defendant with the further intent not to fulfill the same and were made to induce plaintiff to attach his signature to the deed and to procure the deed and gain title to the property.

Beverly denied the charges raised against her and filed a counterclaim against Houston alleging damages resulting from his filing of the lis pendens notice without "forthwith" filing the complaint, and his tortious interference with her rental contract of the property. Beverly further asserted that the lis pendens notice constituted a cloud on her title and should be cancelled. She sought actual and punitive damages as well as attorney fees.

After a hearing, the chancellor rendered his opinion stating:

Now, what we have here is a situation which I think is pretty well governed by a little noticed but a much respected maxim, which Judge Griffin sets out in his classic work, and that maxim is something like this. That he who does the fraud may not borrow the hands of the Chancellor to draw equity from a source his own hands have promoted. Now, this thing was conceived in inequity. The purpose that Houston Collins had at the outset was to deceive somebody, and so, he has started the whole ball of wax going, and now he wants to come in here and wants the Court to assist him in undoing something that he has done.
I have to find that he has not met the burden of proving, by clear and convincing evidence, that there is fraud in this case. If there was any fraud, it was his trying to defraud the State of Mississippi by trying to get rid of this property and keep the State from getting to it... . I think, inasmuch as the plaintiff has failed to meet the burden of proof, that the court has to dismiss his complaint, with prejudice. Insofar *789 as the damages on the Counter-Claim are concerned, I am troubled by the filing of a Lis Pendens, ... nevertheless, I think these parties were at a point where something needed to be done to try to bring the matter to a head, and while I know she was inconvenienced and, perhaps, delayed in what she wanted to do, I am not going to award any damage for what's taken place here. I'm going to simply hold that the deeds that were executed by Houston back there in 1985, are good and valid deeds, and that I have not been shown any reason in the world why these deeds should be set aside, and so, the property will remain vested in Mrs. Collins, just as it is vested, by virtue of these three deeds.

The trial court dismissed Houston's complaint, denied Beverly's counterclaim for damages and attorney fees, and enjoined Houston from interfering with Beverly's quiet enjoyment of title to the property.

II.

In our view, Houston confronts the gates of justice with unclean hands. From the evidence presented, it is clear that he initially deeded the property to Beverly for the sole purpose of thwarting the State's ability to seize it in payment of fines levied against him. In Thigpen v. Kennedy, 238 So.2d 744 (Miss. 1970), we addressed an analogous situation where two lots were purchased by one Alvin Kennedy from Lula Terrell, but titled in the name of Naomi Thigpen to prevent, delay, or hinder Kennedy's wife in any claim she might have for alimony in their impending divorce action. Kennedy then sought to impose a resulting trust or, alternatively, a decree directing Thigpen to reconvey legal title in the property to him. We held that transfers of this nature and for such purposes are in violation of the statute of frauds, contrary to public policy, and subject to the clean hands maxim.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
625 So. 2d 786, 1993 WL 398696, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-collins-miss-1993.