Estate of Miller v. Miller

409 So. 2d 715
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 10, 1982
Docket53008
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 409 So. 2d 715 (Estate of Miller v. Miller) 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
Estate of Miller v. Miller, 409 So. 2d 715 (Mich. 1982).

Opinion

409 So.2d 715 (1982)

In the Matter of the ESTATE OF Mrs. Eunie Elkins MILLER, Deceased, Mrs. Lena Bell Miller Watson, Administratrix
v.
Frank MILLER.

No. 53008.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

February 10, 1982.

Thomas A. Coleman, Ackerman, for appellant.

Coleman, Coleman & Coleman, Lee S. Coleman, West Point, for appellee.

En Banc.

ROY NOBLE LEE, Justice, for the Court:

Mrs. Lena Bell Miller Watson, administratrix of the estate of Mrs. Eunie Elkins *716 Miller, her deceased mother, and Mrs. Lena Bell Miller Watson, individually, filed suit in the Chancery Court of Choctaw County, Honorable Edward C. Prisock, presiding, to adjudicate herself to be the sole and only heir at law of Mrs. Eunie Elkins Miller and to confirm in herself title to certain lands in which she and her mother had total interest. At trial, the chancellor found that Frank Miller was the sole and only heir at law of J.D. Miller, his deceased father; that Frank Miller inherited an interest in the estate of Mrs. Eunie Elkins Miller, deceased, through J.D. Miller, her deceased son; and that Mrs. Watson and Frank Miller each owned an undivided interest in the subject property.

The assignments of error present the following questions for this Court: (1) Did the lower court err in holding that Frank Miller was the sole and only heir at law of J.D. Miller, deceased, and consequently, was entitled to an interest in the estate of Mrs. Eunie Elkins Miller, deceased; and (2) did the lower court err in failing to hold that Mrs. Lena Bell Miller Watson was the sole and only heir at law of Mrs. Eunie Elkins Miller, deceased, and entitled to the entire estate.[1]

PLEADINGS

Appellant instituted the suit by an instrument referred to as a petition for the appointment of an administratrix, therein praying for the adjudication of petitioner as sole and only heir at law of Mrs. Eunie Elkins Miller and the confirmation of petitioner's title to certain land as the sole and only heir at law of Mrs. Eunie Elkins Miller, deceased. The petition charged that J.D. Miller was appellant's brother; that he had never married; that he had never fathered any children out of wedlock; and that he had died intestate on January 31, 1963, survived by his sole heirs at law, Mrs. Eunie Elkins Miller, his mother, and Mrs. Lena Bell Miller Watson, the appellant. The petition further charged that Frank Miller, the appellee, in 1973 claimed to be the illegitimate son of J.D. Miller, deceased. Appellant prayed that the court determine, adjudicate and decree that J.D. Miller died intestate without having fathered any children, legitimate or otherwise; that she be declared the sole heir at law of her mother, Mrs. Eunie Elkins Miller, deceased; and that her title to certain lands in Choctaw County, derived in part from Mrs. Eunie Elkins Miller and J.D. Miller, both deceased, be confirmed in her as their sole and only heir at law.

The appellee answered the petition, denying all averments therein insofar as they disputed any interest of appellee in the estate and land involved. He further averred that he was the only child and sole heir at law of J.D. Miller, his father, and that he was vested with an undivided one-half interest in the land, subject of the suit, through his father, J.D. Miller. In addition, appellee filed a cross-petition to remove cloud and quiet title to his alleged interest in the said lands. Therein he again charged that he was the son and sole heir at law of J.D. Miller, who died intestate, and that he and appellant were the sole heirs at law of Mrs. Eunie Elkins Miller, the deceased intestate.

Appellant answered the cross-petition, therein denying that appellee had any rights whatsoever in the lands involved and that appellee was the son and heir at law of J.D. Miller, deceased. As matters of affirmative defense, appellant pled Section 15-1-7, Miss. Code Ann. (1972), being the ten-year adverse possession statute, and averred that appellee was barred under the statute from claiming an interest in the land and estate. She also set up the defense of laches, contending that appellee waited more than 17 years in which to present a claim to said land and to assert that he was the sole child and heir at law of J.D. Miller, deceased.

In his pleadings, appellee did not claim that he was entitled to inherit from J.D. Miller, deceased, as his illegitimate son, nor did he attack the constitutionality of MCA *717 § 91-1-15 (1972), providing for descent among illegitimates, upon equal protection grounds as discriminating against illegitimates. While the appellant did plead the adverse possession statute, Section 15-1-7, Miss. Code Ann. (1972), as a bar to the claim of appellee, she did not plead the six-year general statute of limitations contained in Section 15-1-49, Miss. Code Ann. (1972). The parties, in their pleadings, should have hit the issues of illegitimacy, unconstitutionality and statute of limitations head on like two wild rams during the mating season. Instead, they danced, bobbed and weaved like boxers in the ring, skirting those questions.

FACTS

Appellant's evidence was to the effect that J.D. Miller never married and that he had no children, legitimate or illegitimate. However, the evidence was overwhelming that Frank Miller, the appellee, was born October 2, 1939, and that his father was J.D. Miller, who was nineteen years of age, and his mother was Ethel Lee Sanders, who was sixteen years of age, at the time of his birth, and that they were unmarried. Subsequently, Ethel Lee Sanders was married to Grover Coleman on July 23, 1944, and he supported Frank Miller thereafter. Frank Miller became twenty-one years of age on October 2, 1960. J.D. Miller died on January 31, 1963. The suit sub judice was filed July 28, 1980, a period of approximately eighteen years having elapsed after Frank Miller had attained his majority.

DECREE

After the parties rested, the court held that it had been established by clear and convincing proof that Frank Miller was the sole and only heir at law of J.D. Miller. At that time, the following colloquy transpired between the chancellor and the attorney representing appellant:

BY MR. THOMAS COLEMAN:
Well, may I ask the relationship of that decision to Section 91-1-15 of the Code which provides that illegitimates may inherit only from their mother?
BY THE COURT:
The Court has held that is unconstitutional.
BY MR. THOMAS COLEMAN:
Your honor, there has been no request on the part of Mr. Miller that the Court hold the section unconstitutional, and I know of no decision in the Supreme Court of Mississippi so holding it unconstitutional. Our position would be that not bringing it up, he has waived whatever right he would have to attack the constitutionality of it.
BY THE COURT:
I do not know whether this answers your question or not, Mr. Coleman, but the Court holds that Section 91-1-15 is unconstitutional by virtue of the holding of the U.S. Supreme Court in Trimble v. Gordon.

The Court decreed that appellant and appellee were the sole heirs as law of Eunie Elkins Miller, deceased intestate, and that each was vested with an undivided one-half interest in the lands involved in the suit. The court also decreed:

6.

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Bluebook (online)
409 So. 2d 715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-miller-v-miller-miss-1982.