Legg v. Legg

168 So. 2d 58, 251 Miss. 12, 1964 Miss. LEXIS 322
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 12, 1964
DocketNo. 43150
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 168 So. 2d 58 (Legg v. Legg) 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
Legg v. Legg, 168 So. 2d 58, 251 Miss. 12, 1964 Miss. LEXIS 322 (Mich. 1964).

Opinion

Brady, Tom P., J.

These are the relevant facts in the above styled case. The appellant and appellee were married in 1933 and divorced on April 9, 1958, in the Chancery Court of Forrest County, Mississippi, Cause No. 18,594, at which time there was a property settlement, involving two lots, entered into between appellant and appellee. This property settlement was affirmed by the Chancery Court of Forrest County, in which appellant received one house located on a lot in the city of Hattiesburg, and the appellee received another house on an adjoining lot. At the time of their divorce appellant alone had purchased the lots and the houses situated thereon. After the first property settlement was affirmed by the chancery court, appellant and appellee were remarried. At the time of their remarriage appellant conveyed to appellee an undivided one-half interest in and to both lots in question, and the original commissioner’s deed authorized by the chancery court, which vested title in the appellee to lot, Municipal 509 Elizabeth Avenue, was destroyed.

A second divorce suit was brought by the appellee and a final decree was granted in said Chancery Court again divorcing the appellee from the appellant. Ten days after their divorce they were remarried on April 19, 1958, and it was apparently on this date that the appellant gave the appellee the deed conveying an undivided one-half interest in both properties. The record further shows that the two lived together for about eleven months, when the appellee went to California and resided with her daughter, who was married out there. After the daughter was married, the appellee went to Breckenridge, Texas, where the appellant picked her up and brought her back to Hattiesburg, where she resided in the same house with him until June, 1961.

[15]*15At the time the second divorce was instituted, it appears that she had not lived with appellant for over a year, and the appellant and appellee were cotenants in common of two lots situated in the city of Hattiesburg, being Municipal 507 Elizabeth Avenue, and Municipal 509 Eleziabeth Avenue. Each lot was forty feet in width and approximately two hundred feet in depth. There were two deeds of trust showing of record and on January 13,1962 a partition suit was filed, being* Cause No. 21,325 in the Chancery Court of Forrest County, styled Mrs. Cecile L. Legg v. Harvey Legg, et al., for the purpose of partiting said property known as Municipal 509 Elizabeth Avenue, Hattiesburg, Mississippi. Thereafter, on January 20, another partition suit was filed, being Cause No. 21,341 in the Chancery Court of Forrest County, styled Mrs. Cecile L. Legg v. Harvey Legg, for the purpose of partitioning the property known as Municipal 507 Elizabeth Avenue, Hattiesburg, Mississippi. On the trial of partition suits, Causes No. 21,325 and 21,341, by agreement of the parties and their counsel, were tried together. On this hearing it was further stipulated and incorporated in the record that it was admitted in the pleadings that the property involved is not susceptible ■ of a division in kind.

After the evidence was all in and both sides had rested, through negotiations of the parties and their attorneys, an agreed final decree was entered by the court on June 22, 1962, showing that both causes had been consolidated and that by agreement the complainant, Mrs. Cecile L. Legg, was to convey to the defendant, Harvey Legg, her entire undivided one-half interest in the properties involved in said causes under the following terms and conditions. “The defendant is to pay to the complainant, within thirty (30) days from this date, the sum of $4,200.00 cash, at which time the deed from Mrs. Cecile L. Legg to Harvey Legg, which has been duly executed and deposited in escrow with R. L. [16]*16Calhoun, attorney, shall be delivered to the said defendant, Harvey Legg. The said Harvey Legg is to pay all court costs in these causes, being Causes #21,341 and #21,325.” There was the further stipulation in the decree that in the event the defendant, Harvey Legg, “doés not pay to R. L. Calhoun, escrow agent of Mrs. Cecile L. Legg, the sum of $4,200.00 within thirty (30) days from the date of this decree, it is further agreed that the Chancery Clerk of Forrest County, Mississippi is hereby appointed as a special commissioner to sell all of the property above described in a public sale, to the highest bidder for cash, within legal hours, in the time, manner and form as under an execution sale, as required by law, and out of the proceeds of such sale, all costs incident to this proceeding shall be first paid and out of the remaining proceeds the same shall be divided equally between Mrs. Cecile L. Legg (appellee) and Harvey Legg (appellant).” (Emphasis ours).

The record further discloses that Harvey Legg failed and refused to make said payment of $4,200 within thirty days from the date of said decree. The special commissioner appointed in said decree, after fully advertising through his commissioner’s notice of sale, sold said lands as provided under the terms of said agreed final decree of June 22,1962, and filed his commissioner’s report of said sale on March 4, 1963. It is from this decree dated May 24, 1963, approving and confirming-said commissioner’s sale, that the appellant, Harvey Legg, has taken this appeal.

There are six errors assigned by the appellant, which are:

“1. The Court erred when it did not permit the appellant to show the property could have been partitioned in kind and did not find the property was not subject to being partitioned in kind or best interest of the parties.
[17]*17“2. The Court erred when the Court did not permit the Appellant to show the property was sold for a grossly inadequate price.
“3. The Court erred when the Court held that the partition was a voluntary and without the signatures of the parties being subscribed to the partition instrument.
“4. The Court erred when the Court held that the decree ordering the sale was final rather than interlocutory.
“5. The Court erred when the Court did not permit testimony to be adduced at the time of the final report of the special commission.
“6. The Court erred in approving the report of the special commissioner.”

The appellee filed a motion to dismiss the appeal on September 3, 1964, for the following reasons: First, an appeal cannot be taken from a court decree confirming a sale of the property under prior court decree, such confirmation not being a final decree of the court within the purview of the appeal statutes; and second, the agreed final decree between the parties in this cause was entered by the court on June 22, 1962 and no appeal therefrom will lie.

If the appellee’s motion to dismiss the appellant’s appeal is well taken, there would he no reason to consider the grounds urged in appellant’s assignment of errors, hut the motion to dismiss cannot be sustained for the reason that appellant’s appeal embodies grounds which are outside the stipulations and agreements made and entered into between the parties to this cause and which are not embodied in the final decree of June 22, 1962. It was not agreed between the parties that the sum of $4,500 hid by the appellee was the best and highest hid. This amount was open for determination and question, and was not concluded by the final consent decree of June 22, 1962. It follows, therefore, that an appeal therefrom is permissible by [18]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 So. 2d 58, 251 Miss. 12, 1964 Miss. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/legg-v-legg-miss-1964.