Hancock v. Reedy

180 So. 81, 181 Miss. 830, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 123
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 11, 1938
DocketNo. 33041.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 180 So. 81 (Hancock v. Reedy) 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
Hancock v. Reedy, 180 So. 81, 181 Miss. 830, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 123 (Mich. 1938).

Opinion

*837 McGcwen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Mrs. Nell Johnson Hancock and Mrs. Josephine Johnson Rice, appellants, filed a petition for the removal of *838 Mrs. Catherine Alexander Reedy, administratrix de bonis non and trustee of the estate of J. N. Johnson, deceased. Without detailing the allegations of the petition, in brief it charged a state of facts which showed incompetency of the acting administratrix and trustee, gross mismanagement, and a violation of certain provisions of the will in the management of the trust estate, and that the administratrix and trustee was hostile toward the petitioners who were named beneficiaries under the terms of the will of the decedent.

The will of J. N. Johnson conveyed several thousand acres of land in Washington and Sunflower countries in trust to his daughter, Mrs. J. L. Alexander, the mother of the appellee herein, who was named as trustee, and provided that in case she predeceased him, or resigned, or was unable to serve, his grandchild, Lloyd C. Alexander, would be trustee with all the rights, powers, and privileges granted in the will, and that if both of these predeceased him, then the chancellor of that district should have the power to name another trustee with the same powers and limitations as originally imposed upon the trustee named; and stipulated that the chancellor must name one of his children or grandchildren as such substituted trustee, if possible to do so. Lloyd- Alexander died December 2, 1933, and Mrs. Alexander died February 11, 1931. Thereupon the chancery court appointed the appellee, Mrs. Catherine A. Reedv, as successor to her mother, both as trustee and administratrix. The three surviving’ children of the testator filed a petition praying the court to revoke the order appointing Catherine Alexander and praying that Mrs. Nell Johnson Hancock be appointed by the court. Subsequently the court granted the petition, removed Catherine Alexander and appointed Mrs. Hancock. Hpon that order, appointing Mrs. Hancock, appeal was prosecuted to this court, and a very full statement of the case up to that time is found in Alexander et al. v. Hancock, 174 Miss. 482, 164 So. 772, 165 So. 126, wherein this court reversed the chancellor, re *839 moved Mrs. Hancock, and directed the chancery court to appoint Catherine Alexander, who in the meantime had married Reedy. That judgment of this court was entered on December 9, 1935, and in January, 1936, Mrs. Catherine Alexander Reedy was appointed administratrix de bonis non and trustee in obedience to- the decree of this court. Pursuant thereto she qualified as such. In 1937 Mrs. Hancock and Mrs. Rice filed the petition herein, and, after hearing the evidence, the chancery court found that the petitioners were not entitled to any of the relief prayed for and dismissed the petition, from which an appeal is prosecuted here.

1. The appellants urge upon this court that the evidence shows that Mrs. Reedy was thoroughly incompetent to discharge the duties imposed by the will; that she had violated the express provisions of the will by immediately upon entering the office of trustee leasing about 3,000 acres of land to her father, J. L. Alexander, for three years, ending December 31, 1938', at an annual rental of $12,000 and the upkeep' of the place, it being asserted by the appellants that it was the intention of the testator that the lands should be operated by the trustee personally — by directing the cultivation of the place through tenants and share croppers, in order that mortgage debts of the estate might be paid, and that these children of the testator might have the net profits growing therefrom distributed to them.

2. They contend further that the trustee, immediately upon assuming office, sold the personal property belonging to the estate, consisting of mules and machinery, to her father, and did not reinvest the profits of the sale of the personal property as directed by the will, but used the money for other purposes not authorized therein.

3. They further suggest that the trustee violated the terms of the will by making small distributions to the beneficiaries of a life interest in the net income of the property without first having paid the debts.

4. They contend that the evidence of the testator in *840 the court below shows that she is thoroughly incompetent, and the court erred in not removing her for that reason.

By the terms of the will the children of the decedent, with the exception of Mrs. Cocke, were to live upon the place, and the trustee was directed to discharge the liens by the operation of the place, and the net income was to be disbursed equally among the four daughters during their lifetime, and at their death the fee was fixed in the grandchildren of the testator. By item 2 of the will the trustee was required to keep an accurate account of expenses and costs of operation of the property, including repairs, replacements of destroyed property, and expenses of growing crops thereon. By item 4 of the will a legacy of $10',000' was devised to two nieces, and provision was made for the payment of the legacies with the request that the payment be deferred until the indebtedness secured by liens was paid. Item 5 provided for the division of the net profits of each year’s operation among Mrs. Alexander, Nell Johnson, Josephine Johnson, Baronece Jenkins Kimbrough, and Ester Jenkins Jones, this distribution to continue until the specific bequest of $10,000 had been made. After the bequest to the two nieces had been fully paid, the trustee was directed to divide the net profits into four equal parts, one-fourth each to Minnie Lee Alexander, Nell Johnson, ■Josephine Johnson, and Kate Cocke. By item 8 of the will the trustee was vested with the right to sell or mortgage the personal property therein conveyed whenever in her judgment the same was advisable, after the death of the decedent, provided the profits of the said sale or mortgage were invested in other personal property necessary to be used on said plantation or on improvements therein. B.y item 10’ the trustee was authorized to. renew any. lien but not enlarge it. The trustee was prohibited from .executing a deed of trust or mortgage on the crops growing, or to be grown, in any year in excess of an amount which would equal reasonable rent *841 on said land. By item 11 the annual distribution of the net profits of the land was to continue during the natural life of all the children named, and in Case of the death of any, the children of such were to be paid the distributive share of the deceased parent. By item 13 the testator made it clear that it was his intention to devise to his four children a life interest in the net income from the property in trust, subject to specific bequests, with the fee in said property to vest in his grandchildren living at the time of the death of their mother, each grandchild to share equally. Item 14 provided that when all the children had died and the youngest grandchild had become of age, the property might be divided in kind or partitioned between the grandchildren then living. Item 17 provided that $50,000 of life insurance be applied by the trustee on the payment of his debts. By item 18 he provided that his children might live on the land, except Mrs. Cocke.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 So. 81, 181 Miss. 830, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hancock-v-reedy-miss-1938.