Lipe v. Souther

80 So. 2d 471, 224 Miss. 473, 1955 Miss. LEXIS 510
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 23, 1955
Docket39680
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 80 So. 2d 471 (Lipe v. Souther) 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
Lipe v. Souther, 80 So. 2d 471, 224 Miss. 473, 1955 Miss. LEXIS 510 (Mich. 1955).

Opinion

*476 Ethridge, J.

This is a suit on appeal from the Chancery Court of Quitman County to impress a constructive trust upon certain lands in Quitman County which were conveyed to appellee Phyllis Lipe Souther by her mother and father, T. E. and Carrie Lipe, in a deed dated May 5, 1940. The bill is not based upon fraud or undue influence. It is grounded upon an alleged oral agreement by the grantee Phyllis Souther, with her two brothers, Roy E. Lipe, Sr. and Carl Lipe, and with the grantors, that she would hold one-half of the property in trust for her brother, Roy E. Lipe, Sr., and upon an alleged confidential relationship.

In 1940 and for many years before the date, T. E. Lipe was the owner of a large amount of farm land in Quitman and Tallahatchie Counties. He had three children, Roy E. Lipe, Sr., Carl Lipe and Phyllis Lipe South-er. From around 1923 to 1936 the land was owned in *477 varying proportions by Roy Lipe, Sr., Carl Lipe, and their mother, Carrie Lipe. At about the latter date a deed of trust on the property was foreclosed by an insurance company, and subsequently in 1937 or 1938, T. E. Lipe purchased the lands in question in his own name. He then began operating the farm as sole owner, although for most of this period his children, except Phyllis, assisted him in managing it, under the name of an unincorporated association or partnership known as Lipe Planting Company.

On May 5, 1940, T. E. Lipe and wife, Carrie E. Lipe, executed the warranty deed which is the subject of this suit. Complainants assert a constructive trust for their benefit in part of the lands conveyed to Phyllis. The deed was not filed for record until March 11, 1941. The deed recites, “In consideration of love and affection for our children and grandchildren, and in order to effect, during our lifetime, what we deem to be a proper division of our lands, ’ ’ the grantors convey their property as follows : The deed first convoys to Phyllis Lipe certain described lands in Quitman County. It then states: “Also unto our daughter Phyllis Lipe the lands in Quitman County, Mississippi described as follows,” describing certain other lands. The deed then conveys to Carl Lipe certain described lands.

The fourth granting part of the deed next conveyed to Phyllis, Carl and Roy Lipe, Sr. “as trustees, share and share alike” certain described lands, “and any and all other lands owned by us, or either of us in Tallahatchie County, Mississippi excepting the lands heretofore conveyed to our son, Carl Lipe.” Next the deed reserved a life estate in the grantors to the lands conveyed to the three trustees, with a right of survivorship in the surviving grantor for the period of the life estate. It then provides :

“It is intended to hereby vest, and we do now vest and convey, the remainder in fee simple in our children *478 as herein set out; provided, however, our son, Roy E. Lipe, Sr., is to have and to hold the land herein conveyed to him upon trust, and use herein limited and declared, to-wit:
“Por a period of ten (10) years from the date the remainder in fee vests, to farm, rent, lease, convey, sell, mortgage and do all things as if belonging to him, but all shall be done without the necessity of accounting therefor for the use of, and all rents, profits, proceeds and income shall be applied to the use of his children, Roy Edwin Lipe, Jr., Billy Ray Lipe and James Webb Lipe; and at the end of said term, if not previously conveyed, to convey the interest in said land herein conveyed to him to the said Roy Edwin, Jr., Billy Ray Lipe and James Webb Lipe, share and share alike.
“If Roy E. Lipe, Sr., shall have died before the expiration of the term of the trust herein created for Roy Edwin Lipe, Jr., Billy Ray Lipe and James Webb Lipe, then the trust shall be administered by a trustee appointed by, and acting under the direction of, the Chancery Court of Quitman County, Mississippi, and grantors nominate their son, Carl Lipe, as said trustee, if he then be living.”

The remainder of this deed of May 5, 1940, states that as a further consideration for the conveyance, the grantees assume and promise to pay all indebtedness owing by the grantors and secured by valid liens against the property, especially the debt owed t.o the Prudential Life Insurance Company of America. The deed states: 1 ‘ Said indebtedness and taxes shall be assumed and paid by the respective grantees herein in proportion to the present value of the lands herein conveyed to each of the respective grants,” and if the grantees should disagree as to their part of the indebtedness, the proper amount to be paid “by him or her” could be determined by the chancery court “the same as in proceedings for the partition of lands jointly owned.” Apparently the *479 debt to tbe Prudential Insurance Company, which was assumed by the grantees in this 1940 deed, including defendant Phyllis Lipe Souther, was for a substantial sum.

Roy E. Lipe, Sr., a son of Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Lipe, had three children: Roy E. Lipe, Jr., and James Webb Lipe, complainants in the chancery court, appellants here, and his other son, Billy Ray Lipe, was a defendant, appellee here.

Less than a year after he had executed the deed of May 5, 1940, and on January 6, 1941, T. E. Lipe made his last will and testament. By it he devised and bequeathed to his son Carl Lipe all of his stock in certain corporations, and all of his personal property which he should own at his death. He left the balance of his estate to be equally divided among his heirs. T. E. Lipe died in August, 1944. His son, Roy E. Lipe, Sr., died in March, 1949. On December 5, 1950, defendant Phyllis Lipe Souther conveyed to Billy Ray Lipe a portion of the lands which had been conveyed to her by her mother and father on May 5,1940, being the first described lands in that deed. The present suit was filed on May 8, 1953, by two of the sons of Roy E. Lipe, Sr., namely, Roy E. Lipe, Jr. and James Webb Lipe. Defendants were Phyllis Lipe Souther, their aunt, Carrie E. Lipe, their grandmother, Carl Lipe, their uncle, Billy Ray Lipe, their brother, and Eugene Thompson, trustee in a certain deed of trust on the property. The bill charged that their grandfather, T. E. Lipe, before he executed the deed of May 5, 1940, had decided to divide his lands approximately equally beween his three children; that it was agreed with the children to do this, and the deed was executed for that purpose; that at this time one of the sons, Roy E. Lipe, Sr., was heavily in debt with numerous judgments against him, and he was sick both physically and mentally; that for these reasons none of the family thought that it. would be “good judgment” to vest title to any property in Roy E. Lipe, Sr., so T. E. *480 Lipe conveyed to Phyllis two of the three shares of land and a two-thirds interest in the personal property, with one of the two shares of land and one-third of the personal property to be held by her in trust for the use and benefit of her brother, Roy E. Lipe, Sr. It was charged that this was the agreement in fact, and that Phyllis was holding that one share for the benefit of her brother and his heirs, two of whom were the complainants.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 So. 2d 471, 224 Miss. 473, 1955 Miss. LEXIS 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lipe-v-souther-miss-1955.