John Poisso Jr. v. Deborah Poisso

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedJune 30, 2020
DocketNO. 2018-CA-01468-COA
StatusPublished

This text of John Poisso Jr. v. Deborah Poisso (John Poisso Jr. v. Deborah Poisso) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John Poisso Jr. v. Deborah Poisso, (Mich. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2018-CA-01468-COA

JOHN POISSO JR. APPELLANT

v.

DEBORAH POISSO APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/19/2018 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. JERRY G. MASON COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: LAUDERDALE COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: JOHN R. REEVES JAMES A. WILLIAMS ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: ELIZABETH R. DARSEY EARL P. JORDAN JR. NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - DOMESTIC RELATIONS DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 06/30/2020 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE BARNES, C.J., WESTBROOKS AND C. WILSON, JJ.

BARNES, C.J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. John Poisso Jr. appeals from the judgment of the Chancery Court of Lauderdale

County, which granted Deborah Poisso a divorce and divided their marital property that

consisted of numerous rental properties and other real estate. The sole issue on appeal is the

marital-property distribution. Specifically, John argues the chancery court erred in awarding

Deborah the following marital property: possession of “the Poisso Country Store,” most of

the parties’ rental property, and 120 acres of timber property located near Meridian,

Mississippi. John also claims he is entitled to excess funds from a 210-acre parcel

foreclosure. Finding no error, we affirm the chancery court’s judgment. STATEMENT OF FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. In April 1994, Deborah and John were married in Lauderdale County, Mississippi.

The parties separated in February 2010. No children were born of the marriage, but both

parties have children from previous relationships. At the time of the trial, John was sixty

years old, and Deborah was fifty-four years old. Over the course of the marriage, the parties

engaged in several money-making ventures and accumulated significant assets—they

operated a country store and acquired numerous parcels of real property outside Meridian,

Mississippi, on which they placed rental houses.

¶3. Deborah has taken courses at a community college, but she never received a degree.

John completed the sixth grade and cannot read or write well but testified that he had “[a]ll

kinds of skills” at making money. He has “fur trapped,” hauled paper wood, “built stuff,”

and had “store business” experience. In 1997 and 1998, Deborah leased an Amoco

convenience store from her father, and the business was lucrative. Deborah also owned a

bar on Center Hill Road. She leased it to John before they were married. Both parties

worked at the bar, and John continued to manage the bar for a few years after they married.

¶4. Both parties owned several parcels of property before their marriage. In addition to

a 14.2-acre parcel on Causeyville Road, which had a house and the bar, Deborah also owned

one acre with a house on Long Creek Road. John owned several parcels of timber property

in Newton County, totaling approximately twenty-two acres. Further, John owned forty

acres located at 2051-A Old Wire Road in Meridian, Mississippi, which he claimed to have

inherited from his father. On the acreage was an old two-bedroom log cabin/camp house,

2 which became the marital home, a cedar rental house, and a trailer.

¶5. In 1997, John and Deborah opened the Poisso Country Store and continued its

operation until they separated in 2010. The chancery court found that the store was a

substantial source of marital income. The store is located on “Sixteenth Section” land,

which the Poissos leased from the Lauderdale County Board of Education. In order to open

the store, Deborah testified she contributed $58,000 from the lease of her Amoco

convenience store, and she was primarily responsible for its management. She testified that

John did not contribute anything to commence operation of the store. John testified that

Deborah contributed $50,000 and that he reimbursed her $37,000 for the store. John

testified he never saw any profit from the store and received no proceeds. John claimed to

spend a substantial amount of time working at the store, usually arriving in the afternoon at

1:00 p.m. after trapping. Deborah primarily managed the store and worked daily from

6:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. six days per week. Deborah testified the store generated $40,000 to

$80,000 per month in profit.

¶6. In 1999, the parties began renovating the marital home by adding three bedrooms and

a bathroom. The parties were living in this home when they separated; John then moved

into the store. In 2001, John purchased eighty acres in Newton County from his sister for

fox pens. In July 2002, John purchased twenty acres in Grant Parish, Louisiana, at a

sheriff’s sale for $42,000. Two houses were located on the property—one being a rental

house. John remodeled the home and sold it for $78,000.

¶7. In May 2002, John bought a 210-acre parcel in Lauderdale County. Testimony about

3 the acquisition of the property is disputed. John claimed Deborah did not want to put her

money into this purchase and told John to borrow the funds. Contrarily, Deborah testified

that they both wanted the property. John testified he bought the property for $351,000

through a loan from Great Southern National Bank. John clear-cut 100 acres of timber and

thinned other timber. With these proceeds, he paid over $300,000 on the note. Four years

later, he thinned more timber and paid the balance of the note. He testified he took $16,000

he inherited from his father and “planted the 100 acres back in.” Deborah agreed that the

timber was cut and that the balance of the note was paid. However, she testified that a down

payment for the acreage was from funds generated by the store. She also testified that the

bank loan was for $365,000.

¶8. In October 2012, John conveyed the 210-acre parcel to his son Jonathan, in violation

of certain agreed orders from June and July 2010. John testified his son used the land to

obtain a $65,000 loan from BankPlus for John to pay $15,000 toward Deborah’s alimony

arrearage so John could be released from the county jail, where he was being held for being

in contempt of court. John also needed to pay off a balloon note at Great Southern to

prevent foreclosure on the Whitaker Road rental properties. John paid the alimony

arrearage; but ultimately John and Jonathan failed to pay the BankPlus loan, and the bank

foreclosed on the deed of trust. BankPlus eventually sold the 210-acre parcel for $25,323.26

more than the amount due upon the note. This figure was deposited into the chancery

court’s registry. Both Deborah and Jonathan requested it.

¶9. At the time of the separation, the parties had thirty-six rental properties, mostly

4 consisting of cedar houses that John had built and mobile homes. John obtained the cedar

in Mississippi and Louisiana, and he built the houses one at a time. Each house took about

two and one-half weeks to build, and he built all the cedar houses in about two years. John

testified that each cedar house cost approximately $25,000 to $27,000 to build. As an

example of how he funded these projects, John testified that for the Whitaker Road

properties, he borrowed $150,000 and used some of his money from fur trapping when the

loan was inadequate to cover the costs.

¶10. The parties owned the following rental properties at the time of separation: six houses

on Whitaker Road; four houses on Highway 496; four houses on Bolen Long Creek Road;

six houses on Mississippi Highway 19 South;1 nine mobile homes (Deborah testified only

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Bluebook (online)
John Poisso Jr. v. Deborah Poisso, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-poisso-jr-v-deborah-poisso-missctapp-2020.