London v. Braxton

102 So. 2d 683, 233 Miss. 514
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1958
DocketNo. 40777
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 102 So. 2d 683 (London v. Braxton) 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
London v. Braxton, 102 So. 2d 683, 233 Miss. 514 (Mich. 1958).

Opinion

Hall, J.

Kemp Braxton, Sr., died intestate in the year 1924 owning approximately 280 acres of land and leaving as his sole and only heirs at law his widow, Agnes Braxton, and six children. An effort was made between the parties to partite the land by agreement, which failed, and this resulted in a partition suit in 1925. In this suit, Agnes waived her claim to a full 160 acres homestead right and agreed to a homestead of 80 acres, described as the N% of the SE% of Section 2, Township 5, Range 6 E., and she retained an undivided one-seventh interest in the remainder of the land, the fee simple title to which remainder was divided among the heirs.

[518]*518In 1931, Agnes executed a deed to the Trustees of the Mt. Zion School covering two acres in the southeast corner of the 80 acres set apart to her as a homestead. Of course, the effect of this conveyance was only to vest in the trustees the title to an undivided one-seventh interest therein which she owned in the said 80 acres, but the title to this two-acre tract has become vested in the trustees by virtue of adverse possession and it is not involved in this suit.

In, 1935, the land in question was sold to the State for unpaid taxes for the year 1934, and on November 3,1941, Edward Julius London obtained a forfeited tax land patent from the State for this land.

Between the time of the tax sale and the acquisition of title by London, Agnes Braxton had died. London’s mother was one of her heirs, and the other parties mentioned in the pleadings are either heirs of the original Kemp Braxton or heirs or grantees of the other heirs still surviving.

This suit was brought by the surviving heirs against the London heirs, one of whom was Edward Julius London, and in this suit it was alleged that all the parties thereto were tenants in common and that the purchase by Edward Julius London was for the benefit of all the heirs and owners as tenants in common with him. The chancellor so found and held that the tenants in common were all entitled to their respective shares in the land in suit. We think that his holding in this respect was eminentlv correct. In the case of Smith v. Smith, 211 Miss. 481, 502, 503, 52 So. 2d 1, we said:

“He was beyond question a cotenant after the death of his father and under the finding of the court he must have been a cotenant when he went into possession. However even if he had been a stranger when he entered into possssion, such possession does not continue as if by a stranger so as to make it hostile after he became a co-tenant. Freeman on Cotenancy and Partition, Section 243, citing Carpentier v. Mendenhall, 28 Cal. 484, 487.
[519]*519“It is further contended by appellants that since the tax sale occurred in 1930, prior to the time when he became a cotenant, his acquisition of the tax title in 1942 related back to the date of the tax sale and did not inure to the benefit of his cotenants. The only authorities cited to support this contention are some which are based solely upon the relationship of landlord and tenant and which hold that a tenant has the right to acquire an outstanding claim adverse to his landlord which existed prior to creation of the relation of landlord and tenant. The reason for that holding is quite evident; the tenant may have put valuable improvements on the property or may have laid out a large investment looking toward the production of a crop on the premises and if the landlord’s title was not good he had a right to acquire the outstanding claim for his own protection. The relation of co-tenants, however, is entirely different. They are in a position of trust and confidence toward each other and the rule is well established in this State and supported by the great weight of authority elsewhere that when one cotenant acquires an outstanding tax title it inures to the benefit of all the tenants in common. This means that the transaction is controlled by the time he acquired the tax title and not the time when the tax sale occurred. ” See also Griggs v. Griggs, 218 Miss. 433, 67 So. 2d 450.

It is true Edward Julius London was not a cotenant with the other parties to the suit at the time of the tax sale, but his mother had died and he had become a co-tenant prior to his purchase from the State. So far as the record is concerned, he has never been in possession of the land, but was living in New Orleans at the time of the issuance of the tax patent, and later moved to Chicago, where he still resides.

In the original bill of complaint in this case, under the principle that “he who seeks equity, must do equity,” the complainants offered to pay to the said Edward Julius London their respective portion of any sums ex[520]*520pended by him in procuring the tax patent, and that offer has never been withdrawn in the pleadings. Several letters were introduced which were written by Edward Julius London to Kemp Braxton, Jr. As early as December 20, 1946, he said: “Well, uncle, it is up to you about the place. Yes, that was your mother’s place. I think it is more than right for you to get your share. All I want is the money I have paid out for taxes and the money it took from me to redeem the land and a child’s part. I do not want to have anything to do with it because I have a home of my own up here. I only want these children to have a home. I hope they will appreciate little I have did for them. You know I keep the taxes up on it every year, then I have to pay my note on my home up here and also pay my taxes too.”

On February 13, 1947, Edward Julius London wrote another letter to Kemp Braxton, Jr., again expressing the desire to have only a reimbursement for what he had put in the land, and he said: “For the rest I’ll give it to those little children. Do you think that fair enough? Now listen if that is too much what I am asking for you make an offer yourself because I want to do the thing that is right. Friendship means more than anything in this world to me. ... I know that is your mother and father’s place. I want you to have it.”

On May 17, 1951, while this suit was pending, Edward Julius London again wrote to Kemp Braxton, Jr., acknowleging receipt of a letter and expressing surprise that his people were using his name to fight in court. He said that he had not received a letter from them that year and that they had not mentioned to him what they were doing about the matter.

On November 15, 1951, while this suit was pending, Edward Julius London wrote a letter to the attorneys for the complainants in which he said that he had not lived on or reaped any benefits from the place, but that he had his money in it. He said that he thought Kemp [521]*521Braxton, Jr., should have the land because it was bis mother’s place, and said that he did not want to have any hard feelings over the land, and regretted that he had bought it from the State because some of his people do think hard of him about it.

On January 16, 1952, Edward Julius London wrote to Kemp Braxton, Jr., and said that he was out more money than anyone on the place, and had not been given any credit for protecting it.

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Bluebook (online)
102 So. 2d 683, 233 Miss. 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/london-v-braxton-miss-1958.