Harrison v. G. & K. Investment Co.

115 So. 2d 918, 238 Miss. 760, 1959 Miss. LEXIS 546
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 7, 1959
DocketNo. 41344
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 115 So. 2d 918 (Harrison v. G. & K. Investment Co.) 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
Harrison v. G. & K. Investment Co., 115 So. 2d 918, 238 Miss. 760, 1959 Miss. LEXIS 546 (Mich. 1959).

Opinion

Ethridge, J.

We have here an appeal from an interlocutory decree of the Chancery Court of Pike County, appointing a receiver to take the possession and control of 160 acres of land in an oil field. Appellee asserts a fractional interest in the minerals, under an oil, gas and mineral lease. Ownership by appellants of the remaining interests therein is not challenged. This appeal with supersedeas was granted by a Justice of this Court, after it had been refused by the trial court. The issue involves the rule of estoppel of a husband to claim as an heir of his deceased wife, after marriage during her lifetime to another person without a precedent divorce.

On December 6, 1958, G. & K. Investment Company, a Mississippi corporation, filed a bill of complaint in the Chancery Court of Pike County against George M. Harrison and others, asking that the oil, gas and mineral leases on the entire interest claimed by the defendants be set aside, insofar as the leases cast a doubt, cloud or suspicion on the fractional leasehold estate in the 160 acres of land, allegedly owned by appellee, G. & K. Investment Company, and for other relief.

G. & K. Investment Company claims ownership of a leasehold interest covering an undivided one-seventh interest in the oil, gas and minerals in, on and under the Ny2 of the NW% of NW% and the NW% of SWy of Section 14, Township 2 N, Range 8 E, in said County [766]*766(hereinafter referred to as the 60 acre tract), and ownership of a leasehold interest covering an undivided one-eighth interest in the oil, gas and minerals in, on and under the NE% of NW%, SW% of NW% and Sy2 of of NWx/4 of said Section, Township and Range (hereinafter referred to as the 100 acre tract); all of which land was patented by the United States Govern-men to Ebenezer Bryant, but which 60 acre tract was thereafter conveyed by the patentee to his wife Omega Bryant, both of whom died intestate many years ago.

. The leasehold interest claimed by the appellee G. & K. Investment Company was alleged to be under and by virtue of an oil, gas and mineral lease executed by Joseph 'William Knox, as lessor, on May 12, 1958, to Louis H. Magee, as lessee.

Thereafter the said oil, gas and mineral lease was duly assigned by the said Louis H. Magee to the appellee G. & K. Investment Company.

The lessor of the said Louis H. Magee, to wit, Joseph William Knox, in executing the oil, gas and mineral lease is claimed by the appellee G. & K. Investment Company to have been the surviving husband sole heir at law of Alpha Bryant Knox, who died on August 12, 1934, owning the undivided interest in the 60 acre tract and in the 100 acre tract hereinbefore mentioned; and that the said Alpha Bryant Knox inherited from her father and mother, Ebenezer and Omega Bryant, a one-seventh undivided interest in the 60 acre tract and a one-eighth undivided interest in the 100 acre tract.

The appellee alleged that an oil well was then in production on the common property, and asked that a receiver be appointed to take charge of and control the entire 160 acre tract on the ground that the appellee was “in actual and imminent danger of loss of property” and that “irretrievable and irreparable injury” to the complainant G. & K. Investment Company would result if a receiver were not appointed.

[767]*767The allegations of the application for the appointment of a receiver were denied, and it was averred by the defendants that neither Joseph William Knox nor the appellee owned any interest whatsoever in the land or minerals. A hearing on the application for the appointment of a receiver was set by a fiat of the court for January 8, 1959. On the day before the hearing, the defendants George M. Harrison and others, filed a sworn answer to the bill of complaint of the appellee, which did not waive answer under oath.

At the hearing of the application for the appointment of a receiver a motion was filed by the defendants to dismiss the application for a receiver, to sustain their plea in bar of the suit, and to dismiss the bill of complaint. The application for receivership was heard and on January 21, 1959, the trial court addressed a letter to all of the attorneys advising them that he had decided to appoint a receiver of the property, and requested that a decree be drawn accordingly. This was done on January 24,1959, and the decree was so entered.

At the time of the signing of this decree the defendants moved the court for acceptance of a bond in lieu of receivership, as is provided for in the discretion of the court under Section 1358, Code of 1942, granting such power to the court, but this motion was overruled.

An interlocutory appeal from this decree was requested by the defendants but the same was denied and the appeal with supersedeas was granted by a Justice of this Court, and the amount of the bond in lieu of receivership was fixed by such Justice in the amount of $62,500, and the bond was accordingly given and approved.

The oil well or wells were in production on the 160 acres of land at the time of the hearing of the application for appointment of a receiver, but the proceeds from the production of oil through these wells are being held in abeyance, at least as to the fractional inter[768]*768est claimed by the appellee G. & K. Investment Company, pending the outcome of this litigation.

It appears that Joseph William Knox, through whom the appellee claimed as the ultimate lessee, married Alpha Bryant Knox in August 1923; that they lived together as husband and wife until August 11, 1928, at which time the said Alpha Bryant Knox was committed to the Mississippi State Insane Asylum at Jackson, Mississippi, as an insane person.

On March 23, 1929, Joseph William Knox, while married to Alpha Bryant Knox, entered into a ceremonial marriage with one Lucile Brown in violation of the laws of the State of Mississippi. He continued to live with Lucile Brown until her death. During the lifetime of Lucile Brown, on March 27, 1930, Joseph William Knox went to the said State Insane Asylum and carried Alpha Bryant Knox before a notary public on Lynch Street in Jackson, Mississippi, and caused her to sign a waiver of the service of process on her in a divorce proceeding which was filed and heard during a term of the Chancery Court of Forrest County, Mississippi, on March 31, 1930. Although the said Joseph William Knox had lived with Alpha Bryant Knox for approximately 5 years before she was committed to the Insane Asylum he obtained a decree of divorce in the Chancery Court of Forrest County, Mississippi, where he resided, on March 31, 1930, and in which decree it was adjudicated that Alpha Bryant Knox was hopelessly and incurably insane, and which fact he contended was true at the time of the marriage, but unknown to him — a good ground for divorce. A certificate from Dr. C. D. Mitchell, Superintendent of the said State Insane Asylum, to the effect that Alpha Bryant Knox was in fact hopelessly and incurably insane, was marked filed on April 1, 1930, the next day after the granting of the decree of divorce from her at the instance of the said Joseph William Knox. Whether or not this certificate of Dr. Mitchell formed the basis of the adjudication by the [769]*769chancellor in the decree of the day before that Alpha Bryant Knox was hopelessly and incurably insane is not shown. But the decree also adjudicated that she was insane at the time of her marriage to Joseph William Knox, and that the latter did not know of such fact.

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Bluebook (online)
115 So. 2d 918, 238 Miss. 760, 1959 Miss. LEXIS 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-g-k-investment-co-miss-1959.