Lee v. Lee's Estate

191 So. 661, 186 Miss. 636, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 269
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 30, 1939
DocketNo. 33851.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 191 So. 661 (Lee v. Lee's Estate) 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
Lee v. Lee's Estate, 191 So. 661, 186 Miss. 636, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 269 (Mich. 1939).

Opinion

*641 Ethridge, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from the Chancery Court of Issaquena County from a contested claim probated by the appellant, Mrs. Annie G. Lee, against the estate of Mrs. M. S. Lee, deceased, of which estate, E. T. Lee, the husband of the appellant, is the administrator.

The account represented a claim for board and lodging, laundry, etc., for Mrs. M. S. Lee, deceased, from the year 1929 until the year 1936. (During which latter year Mrs. M. S. Lee died). The claim was contested on the ground that some of the items were not properly itemized on the probated account; that there was no liability on the part of the estate for the board, lodging and laundry *642 of Mrs. M. S. Lee, deceased, during that period, on the theory that there was no liability against the estate for such board, lodging, and laundry, and that items for such support from 1929 until 1933 were barred by the Statute of Limitations of three years, including all items more than three years prior to the death of Mrs. M. S. Lee, deceased.

E. T. Lee, the administrator, prior to the death of Mrs. M. S. Lee, his mother, had managed a farm in Issaquena County, Mississippi, belonging to his mother, and prior to 1929 had lived principally on that place, in the home with his mother. Mrs. Annie Gr. Lee, the wife of E. T. Lee, had a home in Winnsboro, Louisiana, and prior to the time Mrs. M. S. Lee moved to her home, she had a suit of separate property under a Louisiana proceeding, in which the home became her separate property and not subject to the demands or debts of her husband, E. T. Lee. About the year 1929-, Mrs. M. S. Lee became sick or in ill health, and it was thought advisable for her to move into the home of the appellant, Mrs. Annie Gr. Lee, for proper care, attention, etc. E. T. Lee, the administrator, was the only witness who testified in regard to the matter, and he testified that Mrs. M. S. Lee, his mother, was unwilling to move into the home of Mrs. Annie Gr. Lee without paying a reasonable amount for her support and care, and that it was agreed that for board, lodging, laundry, etc., she would pay at the rate of $30 per month, but that there was no time for the durance of the contract and for its termination. The items with reference to board, laundry, etc., were made out for various periods of time. Items rendered among others similar, are as follows: Board, lodging, laundry, etc., 9,-ll-29 to 9-30-29, $19.34. Board, lodging, laundry, etc., October, November, December, 1929†, $90, and similar items all through the period, charges being grouped by months, varying in numbers in different charges of the account, but running at the rate of $30 per month. On these probated accounts, in *643 support of ■which the usual affidavit was made, there appeared various items of credit for different periods amounting to $911.30', and charges for the various items, including hoard, lodging and laundry, amounted to $2,-422.64. Among the items charged in the account, other than the hoard, lodging and laundry, were the following: Drug hill to Harper, $49.55. Drug bill, cash (Monroe) $5.50‘. Rubber sheets, Street’s Sanitarium, $4. Wash, November 27th to March 15th, 15 weeks at 501 cents per week, $7.50. Expense of' trip of Mrs. Godwin’s $4.25. Doctor bills, C. E. McConnell, $30. One feather bed remade, $4. One mattress, $4. Four pillows reticked, $1. And, then follows accounts for digging the grave, $5; casket and services of the Winnsboro Funeral Home, $67.50 and July 15, 1936, by a cash credit of $75'; November 20, 1936, by cash credit of $53; December 1, 1936, credit by cash, $31.8-7; and December 24, 1936, by cash, $33.43.

It appeared in the evidence that E. T. Lee, in operating or managing the place of Mrs. M. S. Lee, collected certain monies and deposited them in the bank at Winnsboro in an account carried in the name of Mrs. Annie G. Lee, but which account E. T. Lee testified was a joint account, and both he and Mrs. Annie G. Lee could check against the account, but that all monies placed in the account from the proceeds of the place of his mother were checked out by him, and his wife received no part of such funds deposited in that account. One check for $132, made payable to Mrs. M. S. Lee, for a right of way for an oil company was collected by E. T. Lee, which check was endorsed by E. T. Lee for her and for himself and collected. Another account for damages, occasioned by taking a right of way over property of Mrs. M. S. Lee, was made payable to Mrs. M. S. Lee and deposited in the account of Mrs. Annie G. Lee, and, as was testified to by E. T. Lee, was checked out -by him and no part thereof was received by Mrs. Annie G. Lee.

*644 The chancellor disallowed the probated claim of Mrs. Annie G. Lee, and this appeal is prosecuted from that decision.

It is contended by the appellees William A. Lee, Eugene M. Lee and Olivia Lee, who are grandchildren of the deceased (being children of the son of the deceased, who predeceased his mother), that the duty rested upon E. T. Lee to support his mother, and for that reason the claim of Mrs. Annie G. Lee could not’ be allowed. The statute referred to in the brief as the basis of this contention is the Civil Code of the State of Louisiana, Revision of 1870, Article 229, old Article 245, Code of Napoleon, 205-207, which reads: “Children are bound to maintain their father and mother and other ascendants, who are in need; and the relatives in the direct ascending’ line are likewise bound to maintain their needy descendants, this obligation being reciprocal”. This section does not, in our opinion, sustain the contention, for it is beyond dispute that Mrs. M. S. Lee owned property sufficient for her support, and that she was not in any legal sense in need. That term, as we believe, carries the meaning that persons in need are unable to support themselves and have not sufficient property for that purpose. It is not certain that the Louisiana Statute would control, because Mrs. M. S. Lee had a home and farm in Issaquena County, Mississippi, and her residence in Louisiana would not necessarily deprive her of her homestead rights in Mississippi under the circumstances involved in this record.

The Statute of Mississippi in regard to the duties of parents and children toward each other, in the way of support, in the case of need, is Section 5706, Code of 1930-, which reads as follows: “The father and grandfather, the mother and grandmother, and brothers and sisters, and the descendants of any pauper not able to work, as the board of supervisors shall direct, shall, at their own charge, relieve and maintain such pauper; and, in case of refusal shall forfeit and pay the county the sum of *645 ten dollars per month, for each month they may so refuse, to be recovered in the name of the county; and shall be liable to any person who supplies such poor relative, if abandoned, with necessaries, not exceeding said sum per month; and if any such relative be a non-resident he may be proceeded against by attachment, as in cases of attachment against debtors”.

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Bluebook (online)
191 So. 661, 186 Miss. 636, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-lees-estate-miss-1939.