Goodwin v. McMurphy

435 So. 2d 639
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 11, 1983
Docket54192
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 435 So. 2d 639 (Goodwin v. McMurphy) 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
Goodwin v. McMurphy, 435 So. 2d 639 (Mich. 1983).

Opinion

435 So.2d 639 (1983)

Bertha GOODWIN, Evan Goodwin, Emma Goodwin, Loree Goodwin, John Milam & James M. Nash
v.
O.R. McMURPHY, C.H. McMurphy, Charles B. Goodwin, Lucille D. Goodwin, Vera Goodwin, Jones Harold Goodwin, Nora Milam & Mark Goodwin.

No. 54192.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

May 11, 1983.
Rehearing Denied August 17, 1983.

*640 Witherspoon & Compton, William B. Compton, Meridian, for appellants.

Wilbourn & Rogers, Don O. Rogers, Meridian, for appellees.

Before PATTERSON, C.J., and ROY NOBLE LEE and ROBERTSON, JJ.

ROY NOBLE LEE, Justice, for the Court:

O.R. McMurphy and nine other heirs-at-law of J.C.F. Goodwin and Emma L. Goodwin, his wife (Goodwins), both deceased, filed suit in the Chancery Court of Clarke County, Honorable William Neville, presiding, against Bertha Goodwin, Evan Goodwin, Emma Goodwin, Loree Goodwin, John Milam and James M. Nash, to establish their heir interests in Goodwins' lands (which would require cancellation of a Goodwins deed on the homestead property).

At the conclusion of the trial, the chancellor found that a deed from J.C.F. Goodwin to A.E. Goodwin, his son, upon which the defendants based their title, was not signed by his wife and was void. A decree was entered canceling the deed, and the defendants have appealed and assign the following errors in the trial below:

(1) The chancellor's findings of fact concerning the mother's signature or approval of the deed and the intent of the parent are manifestly wrong.

(2) The chancellor's findings are contrary to Mississippi Code Annotated § 89-5-13 (1972) concerning the validity of deeds recorded for over twenty years.

(3) The chancellor erred in not upholding the affirmative defenses as to adverse possession, the statute of limitations and laches.

I.

The appellants first contend the finding by the lower court that Mrs. Emma L. Goodwin, wife of J.C.F. Goodwin, did not sign the deed and did not authorize her signature on same, was manifestly wrong.

J.C.F. Goodwin and Emma L. Goodwin were the parents of thirteen children. Mrs. Goodwin died intestate in 1953, and Mr. Goodwin died intestate in 1955. Goodwin owned 117 acres of land in Clarke County, Mississippi, on which he and his wife resided as their homestead. Of the thirteen children, A.E., Bertha, Evan, Loree and Emma Goodwin were all single and lived with their parents on the homestead. Another son, Mack Goodwin, was single, worked away from home and came to the homestead on weekends.

Mr. Goodwin desired to provide a home for his single children, and, on December 16, 1952, he executed a deed covering the homestead to A.E. Goodwin, his oldest child. He obtained the deed form from the chancery clerk's office. It was filled in and completed by Gussie Goodwin Smith, another daughter, at the instruction and direction of Mr. Goodwin. The deed contained the following paragraph:

My 4 Single daughters, Bertha, Evan, Emma Lee Loree and one Single Son Mack shall have a home as long as each lives & stays single and want it for their home.

Gussie Goodwin Smith testified that she and Mr. Goodwin went to Quitman, obtained *641 the blank deed form from the chancery clerk, and drove back to the homestead where a description was taken from the original deed; she wrote the deed according to the direction of Mr. Goodwin; they returned to Quitman where they were advised that the deed would have to be acknowledged before it could be recorded; and then they drove to the home of W.E. Eddins, a justice of the peace, who notarized the deed without any questions concerning the signatures. The deed was executed December 16, 1952, but was not filed for record until December 8, 1953.

On June 2, 1959, A.E. Goodwin executed a warranty deed conveying the homestead property unto Bertha, Evan, Emma and Loree Goodwin, the single sisters,[1] which instrument was acknowledged before W.E. Eddins, justice of the peace, but was not filed for record until September 15, 1961. The instrument purported to convey "my interest in" the said land. A.E. Goodwin died in 1961 subsequent to execution of the deed.

Several of the brothers, sisters and nephews assisted the four single sisters from time to time in the upkeep of the home on the homestead; the four sisters paid taxes on the homestead from the date of A.E. Goodwin's death in 1961 until the present; the sisters have leased the land for farming; they have sold pecans from the land; they have raised cattle on the land; they have lived in the old home and have made repairs on it; they have built a barn on the land; they have sold timber from the land; and they leased the land for oil exploration and drilling in the fall of 1980. The oil company drilled an oil well on the land in the summer of 1981 without success. (The land was leased four times over the years). All of the original children, then living, shared in the proceeds of the oil leases.

On January 21, 1980, Bertha, Evan, Emma and Loree Goodwin executed a warranty deed conveying the land unto James M. Nash and John Milam, their nephews. The instrument was filed for record on November 12, 1980. On September 2, 1981, the appellees, being the other living children of the Goodwins, the spouses of deceased brothers and sisters, and the nephews, filed suit against Bertha, Evan, Emma Lee, Loree, James M. Nash and John Milam, charging that J.C.F. Goodwin executed the deed dated December 16, 1952, and required his daughter, Gussie Goodwin Smith, to sign the name of her mother, Emma L. Goodwin, to the deed; that Emma L. Goodwin had no knowledge of such actions and never consented or joined in the conveyance and that the deed of December 16, 1952, was void. Appellees denied the averments of the bill of complaint and charged that Emma L. Goodwin had adopted the writing of her name by Gussie Goodwin Smith as her own signature by touching the pen; and that the execution was acknowledged before Justice of the Peace Eddins in the Goodwin home. Appellants also claim that the sisters had acquired title to said lands by adverse possession.

Loree Goodwin, one of the single sisters, testified that she was present at the Goodwin home when the deed was signed; that her parents, J.C.F. Goodwin and Emma L. Goodwin, were present; that Justice of the Peace Eddins was present; that Evan Goodwin, Bertha Goodwin, and Gussie Goodwin Smith were present; that Gussie Goodwin Smith signed her mother's name to the deed while her mother touched the top of the pen; and that Justice of the Peace W.E. Eddins notarized the deed.

Evan Goodwin testified she was present at the Goodwin home when the deed was signed; that her parents were present; that Justice of the Peace Eddins was present; that she, Loree Goodwin, Gussie Goodwin Smith and Bertha Goodwin were present; and that Gussie Goodwin Smith wrote her mother's name out on the deed while her mother touched the top of the pen. (Bertha Goodwin was sick on the day of the trial and did not testify).

The appellants correctly argue that there is a presumption against bad motive, dishonesty, and fraud and that such charges *642 must be established clearly and convincingly, citing Griffith, Mississippi Chancery Practice, § 589 (2d ed. 1950) and Jones v. Minton, 244 Miss. 354, 141 So.2d 564, 565 (1962). They also contend there is a presumption that the certificate of an acknowledgment in a deed imports verity and truth and that such presumption can be overcome by clear and convincing evidence, citing 1 C.J.S. Acknowledgments, § 137; Mallory v. Walton, 119 Miss. 396, 81 So.

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Bluebook (online)
435 So. 2d 639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodwin-v-mcmurphy-miss-1983.