Elmer v. Holmes

199 So. 84, 198 So. 84, 189 Miss. 785, 1940 Miss. LEXIS 169
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1940
DocketNo. 34315.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 199 So. 84 (Elmer v. Holmes) 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
Elmer v. Holmes, 199 So. 84, 198 So. 84, 189 Miss. 785, 1940 Miss. LEXIS 169 (Mich. 1940).

Opinion

McGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of tbe court.

Mrs. F. W. Elmer, Jr., and her husband, F. W. Elmer, Jr., appellants, prosecute an appeal from a decree of the chancery court of Harrison county in favor of Mrs. Mary C. Holmes, appellee, confirming a decree of a sale pursuant to a decree ordering partition of land and settling the rights of the parties in favor of the appellee and against the appellants.

Mrs. Holmes filed her bill ag'ainst the appellants about December 22,1936, in which she sought to have confirmed as against the appellants her title to a lot in the city of Biloxi, Mississippi, having a frontage on the Gulf of Mexico about 96 feet, and running north 800 feet more or less to Water Street, with fixed east and west boundaries. The bill alleged that she was owner of the land as purchaser at a foreclosure sale ordered by the chancery court and confirmed by that court on November 9, 1935.

This lot was alleged to have belonged to F. W. Elmer, Sr., during his lifetime. Mr. Elmer, Sr., died intestate about December 23, 1926. Unquestionably, Elmer, Sr., had title to all of the land sought to be confirmed at the date of his death. The deed of trust through which she claimed title was executed by F. W. Elmer, Jr., Mrs. Annie Elmer Sichirich, Nina Elmer Scott, Margueryte Elmer, Cora Elmer Enochs and Inez Elmer Ebersole, all of whom were children and heirs at law of F. W. Elmer, Sr., at the date of his death and in whom the record title of F. W. Elmer, Sr., was vested at the date of this execution. The deed of trust was executed in favor of R. H. *793 Holmes, and prior to the initiation of the foreclosure proceedings had been assigned to the appellee, Mrs. Mary C. Holmes.

It was further alleged in the bill that the original loan of $13,000, upon the security of the deed of trust to the property, was used to pay all of the outstanding debts and probated claims of F. W. Elmer, deceased.. The parties executing the deed of trust were all of the heirs at law of F. W. Elmer, deceased, except Edward E. Elmer, who had, prior to the execution thereof, executed a separate deed of trust on his interest in this lot, which had been purchased at the foreclosure sale of Mrs. Ebersole.

The appellee alleged in her bill that she had obtained possession of all of the land except a residence upon the north side of East Beach Avenue in the city of Biloxi, known as 121 E. Beach Avenue, but that F. W. Elmer, Jr., and wife had paid rent to her in pursuance of a written agreement entered into by F. W. Elmer and filed in the deed of trust foreclosure proceedings, although she claimed that he had not paid all of the rent pursuant to that agreement.

The bill also alleged that Mrs. F. W. Elmer was claiming some interest or title to said property by virtue of parol gift from her father-in-law, F. W. Elmer, Sr., some time during the years 1918-1919, and by virtue of the occupancy of Mrs. Elmer, Jr., since that time. The bill still further alleged the payment of taxes by appellee on the entire property, redemption from tax sales, rental for part of the lot involved from the Elmers, as a charge against F. W. Elmer, Jr., as to his one-seventh interest in the property by subrogation and as to the money paid from the original loan by the heirs at law in discharge of the probated claims and indebtedness of F. W. Elmer, Sr., the details of which are unnecessary to set forth. Exhibits of the foreclosure proceedings, the agreement of F. W. Elmer, Jr., to pay rent, the deed of trust and other documents were attached and made a part of the bill.

*794 The answer of Mrs. Elmer, Jr., set up the claim to the lot, 121 E. Beach Avenue, and the residence, the lot being 41 feet on the G-ulf and running' back 168 feet, by virtue of a parol gift of the same to her by F. W. Elmer, Sr., in his lifetime, and the continued adverse possession of the same for more than ten years since the date of the gift in 1918 to the date of the filing of the bill herein, and denied all knowledge of the deed of trust or the foreclosure proceedings thereunder, as well as knowledge of any kind of claim of Mrs. Holmes until a short time prior to the filing of the bill here involved.

The appellants set up in their answer that on February 28,1986, Mrs. Holmes filed a complaint of unlawful entry and detainer in the county court of Harrison county, to which she and her husband had entered their appearance, and finally, after much pleading, on July 17, 1986, judgment was entered showing that Mrs. Holmes was not entitled to the possession of the land which Mrs. Elmer claimed, and alleged that the issue in the unlawful entry and detainer case was which of the parties owned the land in controversy; and that all of the matters and things set up in the bill of complaint as to the lot claimed by Mrs. Elmer were complete^ adjudicated by a court of competent jurisdiction. Finally, the Elmers answered further that they had been living on the property and using same as a homestead during all of the time since the parol gift and at the time the deed of trust was executed by F. W. Elmer, Jr.

The answer on the plea of res adjudicata was finally amended so as to set up the appeal in the unlawful entry and detainer suit, reported in 182 Miss. 171, 181 So. 325, the case being Holmes v. Elmer et al., and the final judgment of this Court was in Mrs. Elmer Jr.’s favor.

In discussion of the four points presented by the appellant for reversal of the decree of the court below, we shall state such facts as are applicable to the several points, without undertaking a full statement of the vo *795 luminous record, and shall adopt our own order for the consideration of these points.

(1) The court below held that Mrs. F. W. Elmer, Jr., was not a competent witness in her own behalf to establish her claim to a parol gift of the land to her by her father-in-law, although her evidence was made a part of the record and excluded. That part of her evidence which pertained to the character and circumstances of possession subsequent to the death of F. W. Elmer, Sr., was admitted. Hjer testimony was to the effect that sometime in 1919, F. ~W. Elmer, Sr., in the presence of her husband and herself told her that he would give her this lot then occupied by a tenant, and that she collected the rents from this tenant until during the latter part of 1919, when they moved into the house; and that F. W. Elmer, Sr., pointed out the lines, there being certain fences which enabled her to find the lines of this part of his original tract; also, that they occupied the place from that time until the death of Elmer, Sr., in 1926. The evidence concerning what transpired between her and her father-in-law prior to his death in 1926 was properly excluded by the court. It was an effort to establish a claim against his estate. If she had succeeded in this controversy, she would thereby have dimished the amount of land owned by him, and the value of his estate to the extent of the value of this house and lot.

By Section 15291 of the. Code of 1930, a person is not competent to testify as a witness to establish his own claim or defense against the estate of a deceased person. The heirs at law, including F. W. Elmer, Jr., by the execution of the deed of trust to Holmes in 1929, asserted that all of this lot, including that claimed by Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
199 So. 84, 198 So. 84, 189 Miss. 785, 1940 Miss. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elmer-v-holmes-miss-1940.