Jefcoat v. Powell

108 So. 2d 868, 235 Miss. 291, 1959 Miss. LEXIS 429
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 16, 1959
DocketNo. 41037
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 108 So. 2d 868 (Jefcoat v. Powell) 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
Jefcoat v. Powell, 108 So. 2d 868, 235 Miss. 291, 1959 Miss. LEXIS 429 (Mich. 1959).

Opinion

Hall, J.

John William Powell, a resident of Sunflower County, Mississippi, executed a last will and testament on January 12, 1929 in which he directed that all his just debts [295]*295and funeral expenses be paid and devised bis 200 acres of land as follows: To Ms seven cMldren each a particularly described share of land amounting to twenty-five acres each for seven of them and twenty-five acres to his second wife who was the stepmother of the children. Her share was also particularly described in the will. He died on September 9, 1932 and his will was duly probated by decree of September 20, 1932.

Within the time provided by law the widow, Mrs. Sarah Powell, renounced the will and elected to take the share which the law allows her as a widow. In the course of the administration of the estate it was necessary to sell forty acres of the land which included the twenty-five acres devised to her and fifteen acres of the land devised to one of the children and the remaining 160 acres, which lay in the form of a square, was taken charge of by the widow as a homestead. She continued in possession of this 160 acres up until the trial of this suit, but the proof establishes that a few years before 1949 she rented or leased the land to Floyd D. Jefcoat and reserved unto herself one room in the main dwelling house. Jefcoat and his cMldren moved into the house and occupied all of it except the one room reserved by the widow.

In 1946 Mrs. Powell had a written agreement prepared which she submitted to her stepchildren for their signature and whereby they would have agreed that she had the right to occupy the property and to collect all of the rents, income and profits-therefrom until January 1,1950 whether she remains unmarried or not, but the heirs declined to execute this proposed agreement.

Thereafter on July 19, 1949, Mrs. Sarah Powell was married to Floyd D. Jefcoat at Winona, Mississippi, some seventy miles away, and she and Jefcoat returned to the homestead and continued to live therein. The marriage license was bought in Winona and Mr. Jefcoat obtained the services of a justice of the peace to perform the ceremony, but they did not want to marry at or near the court[296]*296house, in the business section of town, hut drove out of town to a spot near the city cemetery where the ceremony was performed in the presence of many witnesses who were unable to tell about it. Both parties told the justice of the peace that it was a secret marriage and requested him not to tell it.

Upon their return to the land in question neither the widow nor Mr. Jefcoat told anyone of the marriage. She continued to be known in the community by the name of Mrs. Sarah Powell. For eight years after her remarriage she sent Christmas cards to one of the heirs and signed all of them Sarah Powell. She continued to sign homestead exemption applications by her former name of Mrs. Sarah Powell, in which applications she was described as a widow. She continued to carry her hank account at all times and to issue checks thereon in the name of Mrs. Sarah Powell. At the trial neither she nor Mr. Jefcoat was able to name a single individual in the community where they lived to whom they had told that they were married and it was the general reputation in the community where she lived that she was still a widow. All mail that she received was addressed to her as Mrs. Sarah Powell and none of the heirs learned of her second marriage until the latter part of 1957. On January 2, 1958 this suit was filed for a partition of the land.

Section 478 of the Becompiled Code of 1942 provides in part as follows: “Where a decedent leaves a widow to whom, with others, his exempt property, real and personal, descends, the same shall not be subject to partition or sale for partition during her widowhood, as long as it is occupied or used by the widow, unless she consent.” (Emphasis supplied.)

Upon the trial of the case the Chancellor held that under the evidence the land could not be partited in kind and that a sale thereof, and a division of the proceeds, would best promote the interest of the several owners and he also awarded a judgment against Mrs. Jefcoat for rent [297]*297on the land for the past eight years, holding that she fraudulently concealed her second marriage.

Prom this judgment Mr. and Mrs. Jefcoat appeal without supersedeas and it is strenuously contended by counsel for appellants that Mrs. Sarah Powell continued to be a widow after her second marriage. It will be noted from the above-mentioned Sec. 478 that the land is not subject to partition or sale for partition “during her widowhood.” In the case of LaBlanc v. Busby, 223 Miss. 415, 419, 78 So. 2d 456, this Court said: “During that time Mrs. Molly Palmer was in possession of the property as the surviving widow of the deceased, with the right to continue and occupy the property during her lifetime, provided she remained a widow. Sec. 1412, Code of 1930, Sec. 478, Code of 1942.” (Emphasis supplied.)

In the case of Medford v. Mathis, 176 Miss. 188, 193, 168 So. 607, this Court said: “We are of the opinion that the estate or right or interest vested by the quoted statute in the widow is more nearly analogous to a life estate than to any other to which it may be likened. She has the right to occupy and use the homestead during her life, provided she remain a widow, and she has, of course, the right to remain a widow.” (Emphasis supplied.)

In the case of Lackey v. Harrington, 162 Miss. 512, 516, 139 So. 313, this Court said: “The widow, having retained the property so far as it affects her rights, has title against the other tenants to occupy the same as a homestead, so long as she remains a widow regardless of the source from which the title of the cotenants is derived. ’ ’ (Emphasis, supplied.)

In the case of Miers v. Miers, 160 Miss. 746, 751, 133 So. 133, this Court said: “The year’s support, however, is of a temporary nature, while the homestead is designed as a permanent protection and support so long as the family exists, and the family, in the eyes of the homestead law, continues to exist so long as the widow lives and remains a widow, sections 1412 and 1766, Code 1930; where[298]*298fore we must hold that the year’s allowance cannot impinge upon the homestead,” and on page 752 of 160 Miss, the opinion further says: “Being entitled to the use and occupancy of the homestead, she is in consequence entitled to the rents thereof, and will so continue during her life or widowhood, unless she shall in the future otherwise elect and consent.” (Emphasis supplied.)

In the case of Dickerson v. Leslie, 94 Miss. 627, 633, 47 So. 659, this Court said: “She is entitled to continue to use and occupy the homestead, So long as she remains a widow, her rights are absolute.” (Emphasis supplied.)

In the case of Middleton v. Claughton, 77 Miss. 131, 135, 24 So. 963, this Court said: “The estate in common may be partitioned without the consent of the widow in two events; first, if she remarry, and, second, if during her widowhood she shall cease to occupy or use the descended estate.” (Emphasis supplied.)

In the case of Birmingham v. Birmingham, 53 Miss. 610, 613, this Court said: “We are of the opinion that the widow, in this case, under the third section of the Act of 1865 took a life estate in the entire tract of 160 acres, subject, however, to be defeated by her marriage.”-

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Bluebook (online)
108 So. 2d 868, 235 Miss. 291, 1959 Miss. LEXIS 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jefcoat-v-powell-miss-1959.