Estate of Herbert G. Rogers, III v. The Estate of Frederick Robbins Rogers, Mary Nell Rogers Brandt, North Mississippi Fish & Game Preserve Club, Inc., and Robbins Ellis Rogers

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedJune 20, 2023
Docket2021-CA-01269-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Estate of Herbert G. Rogers, III v. The Estate of Frederick Robbins Rogers, Mary Nell Rogers Brandt, North Mississippi Fish & Game Preserve Club, Inc., and Robbins Ellis Rogers (Estate of Herbert G. Rogers, III v. The Estate of Frederick Robbins Rogers, Mary Nell Rogers Brandt, North Mississippi Fish & Game Preserve Club, Inc., and Robbins Ellis Rogers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Herbert G. Rogers, III v. The Estate of Frederick Robbins Rogers, Mary Nell Rogers Brandt, North Mississippi Fish & Game Preserve Club, Inc., and Robbins Ellis Rogers, (Mich. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2021-CA-01269-COA

ESTATE OF HERBERT G. ROGERS, III APPELLANT

v.

THE ESTATE OF FREDERICK ROBBINS APPELLEES ROGERS, MARY NELL ROGERS BRANDT, NORTH MISSISSIPPI FISH & GAME PRESERVE CLUB, INC., AND ROBBINS ELLIS ROGERS

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 10/22/2021 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. STEPHEN TRAVIS BAILEY COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: UNION COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: CHANDLER ROGERS J. MARK SHELTON ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: WILLIAM HULL DAVIS JR. H. RICHMOND CULP III ROBERT E. QUIMBY MARY NELL ROGERS BRANDT (PRO SE) NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - WILLS, TRUSTS, AND ESTATES DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART - 06/20/2023 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:

BEFORE WILSON, P.J., GREENLEE AND SMITH, JJ.

WILSON, P.J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. For nearly sixty years, the Rogers family enjoyed visiting a cabin at Darden Lake in

Union County. Around 1960, Herbert Rogers Jr. became a member of the North Mississippi

Fish and Game Preserve Club (“Darden”),1 which owned Darden Lake and the surrounding

1 Darden began as an unincorporated association and was later organized as a nonprofit corporation. See infra ¶¶5, 10. In this opinion, we refer to both the nonprofit corporation and the predecessor unincorporated association as “Darden.” land, and built a cabin on the lakeside lot assigned to him. Herbert Jr., his wife, and his three

children used the cabin, and later his children’s families also used the cabin as his guests.

In 1984, Herbert Jr. took steps to ensure his children could continue to use the cabin after his

death. Herbert Jr. transferred his Darden membership and cabin to his son Frederick Robbins

Rogers (Fred). In consideration for the transfer, Fred signed an agreement requiring him “to

hold [the] membership in trust for the use and benefit of” him and his two siblings—Herbert

G. Rogers III (Herbert III) and Mary Nell Rogers Brandt (Mary Nell)—“during [Fred’s]

lifetime . . . or until the membership [was] disposed of by mutual agreement of” all three

siblings. The 1984 Agreement also provided that if Fred predeceased Herbert III and Mary

Nell, the membership would be transferred to either Herbert III or Mary Nell “to be held in

trust by them under the same terms and conditions of [the] Agreement.” For about thirty-five

years thereafter, the siblings and their children shared the cabin without any significant

disagreement.

¶2. That all changed in 2019 when Fred transferred the membership to his son Robbins

Ellis Rogers (Robbins). The Estate of Herbert III, who had passed away, immediately filed

suit in chancery court, alleging that the transfer to Robbins should be set aside because it

violated the 1984 Agreement. Mary Nell joined in the Estate’s request to set aside the

transfer, and she authorized the Estate to enforce her rights under the 1984 Agreement. In

response, the defendants—Robbins, Fred, and Darden—argued that the 1984 Agreement was

invalid or void ab initio. After a bench trial, the chancellor held that the 1984 Agreement

2 was void ab initio and that the transfer of the Darden membership to Robbins was valid.

Herbert III’s Estate appealed.

¶3. For the reasons discussed below, we hold that the 1984 Agreement is valid and

enforceable and that Fred breached the Agreement by transferring the Darden membership

to Robbins. We also conclude—subject to Darden’s rules and restrictions regarding

membership transfers—that Mary Nell may elect to specifically enforce the Agreement.

Therefore, we reverse the judgment of the chancery court and remand the case for further

proceedings consistent with this opinion. We affirm the chancery court’s judgment to the

extent that it dismissed Herbert III’s Estate’s claims for damages and other relief.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Darden

¶4. The North Mississippi Fish and Game Preserve Club Inc., commonly known as

“Darden,” is presently organized as a nonprofit corporation. Darden owns property

consisting of approximately 1,300 acres in Union County, including Darden Lake. Subject

to Darden’s rules and regulations, its members may use the property for hunting, fishing, and

recreational purposes, and each member has the exclusive right to use and occupy a

designated lot and cabin on the property. Darden is popular but exclusive—it is limited to

a maximum of fifty members.

¶5. Darden’s predecessor was formed in 1929 as an unincorporated association, and its

members were issued stock certificates. The reverse side of the stock certificates set forth

3 certain rules and conditions of membership. The earliest stock certificate in the record is a

certificate issued to Fred in 1984. The certificate stated that it conferred upon the member

the “right and privilege to [Darden’s] properties . . . for hunting, fishing and recreation, as

provided by [Darden’s] Constitution and By-Laws . . . and such rules and regulations as may

be deemed expedient and necessary and duly adopted by [Darden’s] Executive Committee.”

The “title to” the Darden’s property was held by a trustee for the benefit of all stockholders,

and the stock certificate made clear that “[n]o stockholder” possessed title to or “any

individual and separate interests in the lands of said stockholders.”

¶6. Each member was allowed to build a cabin on his designated lot, subject to the

“approval,” “reasonable regulations,” and “control” of Darden’s Executive Committee. Each

cabin was “considered [to] be the individual and personal property of the member.” The

member could remove or sell his cabin; however, if a cabin was sold to a non-member, it had

to “be immediately removed.”

¶7. The stock certificate stated that except for hunting and fishing guests, a member was

allowed to have “any number of guests at any time, . . . subject to the regulations and rules

governing the same adopted by the Executive Committee.” Each member was allowed a

limited number of hunting and fishing guests, as “determined by the Executive Committee.”

With the exception of a member’s wife and unmarried dependent minors, all of a member’s

relatives were considered “guests” for purposes of Darden’s rules. The certificate stated that

no guest was permitted on the property unless accompanied by a member; however, this

4 particular provision was not strictly enforced.

¶8. The certificate provided that no stockholder could “sell out or dispose of his interest

in [Darden] or subsequent corporation[] to any third party without first giving to his . . . co-

stockholders the right to purchase his interest therein upon the basis of actual investment plus

six [percent] interest thereon per annum during his period of investment.” In addition, the

certificate provided that a stockholder could sell his stock and membership in Darden only

to a person who had “been duly approved and recommended by the Executive Committee,

and elected by the stockholders.” The certificate also provided that a stockholder could

“bequeath” his stock and membership in Darden, “or his estate [could] sell the same,” to a

person who had been approved and recommended by the Executive Committee and elected

by the stockholders.

¶9. Finally, each stockholder expressly agreed to “be bound by all of the provisions of

[Darden’s] Constitution and By-Laws . . . , and all rules and regulations of the Executive

Committee . . .

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Estate of Herbert G. Rogers, III v. The Estate of Frederick Robbins Rogers, Mary Nell Rogers Brandt, North Mississippi Fish & Game Preserve Club, Inc., and Robbins Ellis Rogers, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-herbert-g-rogers-iii-v-the-estate-of-frederick-robbins-rogers-missctapp-2023.