Dupree v. Williams

130 So. 93, 158 Miss. 103, 1930 Miss. LEXIS 21
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 29, 1930
DocketNo. 28596.
StatusPublished

This text of 130 So. 93 (Dupree v. Williams) 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
Dupree v. Williams, 130 So. 93, 158 Miss. 103, 1930 Miss. LEXIS 21 (Mich. 1930).

Opinion

Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant, H. A. Dupree, filed a bill of complaint in the chancery court of Pearl River county against Dr. *105 S. M. Williams, Mrs. Mollie A. Williams, J. A. Edwins, and the Pearl Eiver Comity Bank, alleging in substance, that from March to August, 1923, Dr. S. M. Williams was operating- a retail gas and oil station at Picayune, Mississippi, under the name of the Williams Service Station; that during that period .of time he purchased from the American Oil Company, through the appellant, as its agent, a large quantity of gasoline for which he owed a balance of one thousand, five hundred forty-three dollars and thirty-eight cents; that this indebtedness of Dr. Williams to the American Oil Company was transferred and assigned to the appellant; that while the said Dr. Williams was so indebted to appellant he fraudulently transferred to his wife, Mrs. Mollie A. Williams, certain real and personal property; that this real estate was after-wards transferred by Mrs. Williams to the defendant J. A. Edwins. It was further charged that these deeds were executed for the purpose of hindering and delaying the creditors of Dr. Williams in collecting their debts, and therefore were fraudulent and void as to the American Oil Company, and the appellant, its assignee, and prayed that they be canceled. There was also an alternative prayer that in the event the defendant J. A. Edr wins should be held to be an innocent purchaser for value of the said real estate, a decree should be, entered fixing a lien on certain notes held by the Pearl Eiver County Bank, and which had been executed by Edwins to Mrs. Williams in payment of the purchase price of said property. The bill of complaint further charged that Dr. S. M. Williams purchased the property from J. Williams, and that after having executed the conveyance to his wife, and shortly before the filing of the bill of complaint, he had altered the deed to him by forging the name of his wife as the grantee therein, so as to make it appear that it had been originally made to his wife, instead of to him.

The Pearl Eiver County Bank and J. A. Edwins filed answers to the bill, denying all the allegations of fraud *106 as to them, and, denying all knowledge of any fraudulent dealing's between Dr. Williams and his wife. Dr. S. .M. William's filed a separate answer, denying that he had ever had any dealings whatever with the American Oil Company or the appellant, denying that he had engaged in business under the name of Williams Service Station, or had anything whatever to do with the operation of the business, and denying that he had ever purchased any gas or oil from either the appellant or the American Oil Company, or in any other way contracted any indebtedness to them. He charged that the Williams Service Station was owned and operated by G-. 0. Williams, and that this fact was well known to the appellant and the American Oil Company, and denied all the allegations of the bill as to forgery of the deed, and as to the fraudulent conveyance of property to his wife. Mrs. Mollie A. Williams filed an answer in which she adopted the answer of Dr. S. M. Williams in so far as it related to any dealings between Dr. Williams and the appellant and the American Oil Company, and denied the charges of fraud against her.

Upon the filing of an answer by the defendant Dr. S. M. Williams, the appellant filed a supplemental bill, charging, among other things, that if the averments contained in the answer of Dr. Williams were true as to the original deed of conveyance having' been made to his wife, then the said defendant, Dr. Williams, was carrying on business with his wife’s property without any written agreement having been made and filed for record, and was under the law her agent in the conduct of said business, and that she (Mrs. Mollie A. Williams) was therefore liable to the plaintiff for the account sued on. After the filing of' this supplemental bill of complaint, Dr. Williams died, and the cause was revived against his heirs, but not against his personal representative, and thereafter Mrs. Mollie A. Williams and the children of Dr. *107 Williams filed their answer to the supplemental bill of complaint, thereby substantially reiterating the issues made by the former pleadings.

Upon the proof offered at the hearing- of the cause, the chancellor entered a decree expressly finding that during the year 1923 and thereafter the Williams Service Station was owned and operated by G. G-. Williams, and was not owned by Dr. S. M. Williams, and the said S. M. Williams was not engaged in the operation and carrying* on of the business in his own name or on his own account on the land, and in the buildings, or with the means of his wife, Mrs. Mollie A. Williams. He further found, however, that by writing two certain letters, which were introduced in evidence, the said S. M. Williams either assumed the indebtedness sued on, or by his actions in connection with the operation of the said Williams Service Station, he became liable for the indebtedness, and entered a decree awarding a recovery against the heirs of the said S. M. Williams for the amount of the indebtedness, to be enforced solely out of such nonexempt property as was received by them from the estate of the said S. M. Williams. He further found that the. evidence did not show any fraudulent transfer of1 property, by the said S. M. Williams to the defendant Mrs. Mollie A. Williams, and from the decree so entered the complainant, H. A. Dupree, prosecuted a direct appeal, while the heirs of the said S. M. Williams prosecuted a cross-appeal from the decree against them.

The finding of the chancellor that the YVilliams Service Station was owned and operated by G. G. Williams, and not by S. M. Williams, is supported by the great weight of the testimony, and this finding must be affirmed unless there was error in the exclusion of the testimony of the appellee Mrs. Mollie A. Williams. The appellant called the defendant Mrs. Williams as an adverse witness, but upon objection being interposed that she was not a competent witness to establish liability against her bus- *108 band, tlie objection was sustained, and tlie appellant assigns as error the exclusion of her testimony. In support of this assignment it is argued that if this testimony had been admitted the weakness in appellant’s proof might have been strengthened, and the deficiency therein supplied, thus enabling the appellant to establish that Dr. Williams owned and operated the Williams Service Station and contracted the debt sued on, and particularly to establish that- the conveyance from Dr. Williams to his wife was fraudulent and void as to the creditors of .Dr. Williams. Assuming for the purpose of this decision only that under the statute the witness was competent to testify against her husband, there is nothing in the record to show or indicate that the appellant was prejudiced by the refusal of the court to permit her to testify. The only question propounded to the witness wás about a matter that was otherwise abundantly proved, and which, in fact, was admitted by the pleadings. There -was no showing or statement in the record as to the general tenor and nature of the testimony the appellant expected to elicit from this witness, from which the court might determine its materiality, relevancy, and competency, and that such a showing is necessary has been repeatedly held by this court.

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130 So. 91 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
130 So. 93, 158 Miss. 103, 1930 Miss. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dupree-v-williams-miss-1930.