Dogan, Sheriff v. Cooley

185 So. 783, 184 Miss. 106, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 40
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 23, 1939
DocketNo. 33465.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 185 So. 783 (Dogan, Sheriff v. Cooley) 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
Dogan, Sheriff v. Cooley, 185 So. 783, 184 Miss. 106, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 40 (Mich. 1939).

Opinions

*109 Ethridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellee, Mrs. Mary L. Cooley, filed a bill in the Chancery Court of Grenada County against D. W. Dogan, Sheriff, and R. F. Carpenter, who was plaintiff in an *110 execution, alleging that on or about January, 1936, the complainant, appellee here, purchased from the Grenada Bank, through one of its trustees, the south half of northeast quarter of section 15 in township 21 of range 2, east, in Grenada county; and that at the time of the purchase she had the title thereto made in the name of her husband, J. Matt Cooley, for the reason that she was not able to pay in cash the entire purchase price; and the bank required notes and a mortgage on the land for the balance due thereon. At the time of this transaction the appellee was in the mercantile business, being associated with her sister. She was advised that having a debt of record would impair her credit. She made the cash payment of $500 on the purchase price of the land, and all the subsequent payments; and financed all farming operations on the place for the year 1936. The appellee avers that her husband did not invest a dollar in the farm, that his connection therewith was as her husband; and that it was the intention of her husband and herself to have the title placed in appellee as soon as this could be done without injury to* the business of appellee; and that in compliance with such agreement her husband, J. Matt Cooley, executed a deed to her to the said lands, which was made an exhibit to the bill.

It was then averred that at the July, 1936, term of the Circuit Court of Grenada County R. F. Carpenter secured a judgment against J. Matt Cooley, and caused an execution to be issued thereon, and placed in the hands of the sheriff, D. W. Dogan; and the complainant charged that pursuant thereto, and by virtue thereof, he has levied upon, and is threatening to sell the lands in question thereunder, and will do so unless restrained by the court.

The complainant further alleged that her husband, J. Matt Cooley, has never had an interest or equity in the lands, that he acted as the complainant’s trustee ; and that the vesting of the title in the said J. Matt Cooley did not mislead the said Carpenter, for the reason that the li *111 ability upon which the judgment was predicated had been incurred by the said J. Matt Cooley many years prior to the purchase of the land; and, further, that not only would the sale of the land under execution cause substantial and irreparable injury to her credit, but that a deed under the sale would be a cloud on her title, and that she would have no adequate remedy at law to protect her rights, etc.

One of the exhibits to the declaration was a deed from J. Matt Cooley to the complainant, dated October 27th, 1937, and acknowledged on the same day, to the lands described in the bill, in consideration of one dollar. The judgment under which the land was about to be sold was obtained in July, 1936, and enrolled in August, 1936, and was a lien of record on the date on which J. Matt Cooley conveyed the lands in question to the complainant, his wife.

On January 22, 1937, after filing the original bill as above stated, an amendment to the bill of complaint was filed, in which it was alleged that the complainant and J. Matt Cooley are husband and wife, living together as such, are householders, have a family, and are resident citizens of Mississippi; and that this status has existed for the past ten years or more; that the land described in the original bill constitutes their homestead, and is occupied as such, comprising an acreage of less than 160 acres, the value of which, after deducting the indebtedness thereon secured by a mortgage, does not exceed $3,000; and, further, that the lands constituted such homestead on November 1, 1936, which status has continued to the present date. Complainant avers that the above facts, in addition to other grounds alleged in her bill of complaint as reason for restraining the sale of such lands by the sheriff, entitle her to the relief prayed for in her original bill.

The answer to the bill denied that the lands constitute a homestead, but admitted the relationship of marriage *112 between Mary L. Cooley and J. Matt Cooley; denied that the complainant owned the lands here involved, alleging that the property was then, and remains, the property of J. Matt Cooley, subject to the sale for his debts; and denied that complainant ever obtained title to the property by reason of having advanced the purchase money therefor, if she did in fact do so; denied that his connection with said property has been that of complainant’s manager or agent, but averred that he managed and operated the farm as owner thereof; and denied that it was the purpose and intention of the complainant and her husband that the title to the land should be conveyed to the latter as trustee for complainant. They allege that if such were the intention of the parties, it would be an illegal act, a fraud upon the rights of creditors of J. Matt Cooley, a violation of the statutes against conveyances between husband and wife, and those prohibiting secret trusts between them; and that the effect was to convey the title therein, legal and equitable, to> the husband, J. Matt Cooley, rendering the lands subject to his debts.

On the hearing the complainant, Mary L. Cooley, testified in support of the allegations of the bill, over objection, that the reason the title was in her husband’s name was that she and her sister were in business, and she did not wish to embarrass her credit with the indebtedness, and so informed Mr. Adams, the officer of the bank, that she preferred not to sign the papers, but to let her husband sign them, and she would take care of the payments — that she had paid’ all the money for the purchase of the lands. The court admitted the evidence, subject to reserve ruling. And she testified that she did this for the reason that her sister was a partner in her business, and she did not think it would be right té have this debt outstanding against her, with which the officers of the bank agreed. She testified that at the time the execution was levied she and her husband, Mr. Cooley, were living out on the place, that Mr. Cooley was out *113 there at the time of the trial, and was still farming it; and that it constituted their homestead.

It further appeared from the testimony that J. Matt Cooley, husband of complainant, lived on the place and managed it; that through tenants a large crop of cotton was grown on the land in the year 1936, the bulk of the proceeds being applied to the making of permanent improvements on the place.; that some sixty bales of cotton were produced, of which half went to the owners and half to the tenants; that J. Matt Cooley, in selling the cotton, placed the money in the Bank of Grenada to the credit of Mary L. Cooley, but that he and a brother of his signed a note and deed of trust to the bank in which certain livestock on the place and the crops to be grown in 1936 were to be conveyed to the bank by J. Matt Cooley and his brother, and not by the complainant, Mary L. Cooley.

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Bluebook (online)
185 So. 783, 184 Miss. 106, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dogan-sheriff-v-cooley-miss-1939.