Kellner v. Kellner

129 So. 2d 391, 241 Miss. 53, 1961 Miss. LEXIS 318
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1961
DocketNo. 41806
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 129 So. 2d 391 (Kellner v. Kellner) 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
Kellner v. Kellner, 129 So. 2d 391, 241 Miss. 53, 1961 Miss. LEXIS 318 (Mich. 1961).

Opinion

McElroy, J.

This is an appeal by Mrs. Anne D. Kellner, Administratrix of the Estate of Ernest Kellner, Sr., deceased, from the Chancery Court of Washington County. The appellees filed suit to. set aside certain deeds or be subrogated to certain liens of deeds of trust made by the [56]*56deceased, and the appellant and deceased. The chancery court entered an order sustaining the rights of the appellees to be subrogated under said deeds of trust. Thus this appeal.

The late Ernest Kellner, Sr., a longtime resident and practicing attorney of Washington County, Mississippi, died intestate on September 1, 1959, leaving as his sole heirs-at-law his widow (appellant here) and his five adult children (appellees).

For many years and until March 10, 1955, Ernest Kellner, Sr. was the owner of certain property in Washington County, Mississippi, which we shall designate as the “little house” and the “big house.” The deceased and the appellant were married, divorced and remarried.

In 1953, Mr. Kellner, Sr. borrowed $15,000 from the Standard Life Insurance Company of the South, for which he gave his installment promissory note, secured by a deed of trust covering the “big house”, dated July 1, 1953, and a pledge of the rentals thereon. The proceeds of the loan were used to convert the “big* house” into rental apartments. The appellant had knowledge of this transaction.

March 10, 1955, Mr. Kellner, Sr., conveyed the “little house” to the appellant, which stated that it was being deeded “by love and affection.” In 1955, the “little house” was enlarged and improved so that Mr. Kellner, Sr. and appellant might reside in it instead of one of the apartments of the big house. The cost of improvements was $10,000, less certain adjustments. Mr. Kellner paid the contractor $5,164.19 on February 9, 1955, and after the work had been completed, Mr. Kellner and appellant borrowed from Edyth Y. Quinn, Trustee under the will of Q. N. Quinn, deceased, the principal sum of $7,500, evidenced by their four joint and several promissory notes and a deed of trust on the “little house” (then appellant’s property), dated November 4, 1955. The deed [57]*57of trust was duly filed and recorded on November 17, 1955.

The loan check of Edyth T. Quinn, Trustee, in the amount of $7,500, marked “for secured loan to Ernest Kellner and wife”, was made payable to J. Robertshaw and was endorsed by Ernest Kellner, Sr. and Anne D. Kellner. This cheek was dated November 4, 1955. From this check the Washington County Building & Loan Association paid itself the sum of $1,642.49 in discharge of a balance of a prior indebtedness against the “little house”, issued its check, dated November 12, 1955, to Mr. Kellner, Sr. for the balance, $5,857.51, which was deposited to his account in the First National Bank on the same date. On November 15, 1955, Mr. Kellner paid the contractor the balance of $4,581 for the improvement of the “little house”, then the property of appellant.

On October 24, 1955, Mr. Kellner, Sr. wrote and subscribed a holographic will, reading: “ I give all my property of every kind to my beloved wife.” This instrument was signed by Mr. Kellner, Sr. On July 30, 1957, Mr. Kellner, Sr. wrote and subscribed the following holographic instrument “I hereby revoke any and all wills therefore written by me,” which was signed. On May 30, 1958, a quitclaim deed signed by Mr. Kellner, Sr. reciting “in consideration of my love and affection for my devoted wife Anne D. Kellner, and for other good and valuable considerations” conveyed to appellant the “big house.”

For more than a year before the death of Mr. Kellner, Sr., appellant was the record owner of both the “little house” and the “big house.” They did not pass to her by reason of his death.

After the death of Mr. Kellner, appellant was appointed, qualified, and has ever since acted as Administratrix of his estate. The estate comprised $14,285.44. The secured claims of Standard Life Insurance Company were probated, allowed and paid from funds of the estate [58]*58by appellant as administratrix in the amount of $6,665.07, and of Mrs. Quinn’s in the amount of $4,480.

A petition was filed in the chancery court by the appellees which sought to set aside the deeds of Mr. Kellner, Sr. to the appellant, or to be equitably subrogated to the liens of the said deeds of trust. The petition set forth in part, as follows: ‘ ‘ * * * as to the big house, the defendant accepted the gift thereof burdened with the encumbrance of that certain deed of trust in favor of Standard Life Insurance Company of the South, dated the 1st day of July, 1953, as the same appears of record in Book 518, at page 439, of the land records of Washington County, Mississippi; in the office of the Chancery Clerk of said county; that after the death of Ernest Kellner, Sr. the defendant collected the rents and profits derived from said property and, despite the fact that said rents and profits were pledged to secure the payment of the indebtedness owing to Standard Life Insurance Company and secured by said encumbrance, failed to apply same to the payment of said indebtedness, thereby causing said indebtedness to become in arreas and subject to acceleration; that, thereafter the defendant, by her agents and attorneys, induced said mortgagee to probate in Cause No. 22,083 on the Probate Docket of this Court the note evidencing the unpaid balance of said indebtedness as a claim against the Estate of Ernest Kellner, Sr. and wrongfully caused same to be paid and discharged out of funds of said Estate belonging to these complainants, notwithstanding that the original proceeds of said indebtedness had been applied to the payment of the cost of improvements made in said big house; that as a result of the aforesaid actions of defendant, she has been unjustly enriched at the expense of said Estate and these complainants, and has been permitted to do by indirection what she could not lawfully do directly, to-wit: cause the said Estate to exonerate the big house from the indebtedness with which it was burdened when she [59]*59accepted it as a gift from Ernest Kellner, Sr.; so that these complainants are equitably entitled to be subrogated to the lien of said deed of trust * * * as to the little house, defendant was the owner thereof by inter vivos gift from the deceased, Ernest Kellner, Sr., when on or about the 4th day of November, 1955, she voluntarily joined with said decedent in executing promissory notes and a deed of trust, evidencing and securing a loan in the principal sum of $7,500.00, the proceeds of which loan were applied to the payment of the cost of improvements made on said little house * * * after the death of said Ernest Kellner, Sr., defendant, by her agents and attorneys, induced the owner and holder of the notes evidencing the unpaid balance of said indebtedness to probate same as a claim or claims against the Estate of Ernest Kellner, Sr. * * * and wrongfully caused same to be paid out of funds of said Estate belonging to the complainants, thereby causing said Estate to exonerate the separate property of defendant from the burden of an indebtedness and encumbrance which defendant voluntarily created and unjustly enriching defendant at the expense of said Estate and these complainants; so that these complainants are equitably entitled to be subrogated to the lien of the said deed of trust * * *”

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Bluebook (online)
129 So. 2d 391, 241 Miss. 53, 1961 Miss. LEXIS 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kellner-v-kellner-miss-1961.