Low v. First Nat. Bank & Trust Co.

138 So. 586, 162 Miss. 53, 80 A.L.R. 112, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 102
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1932
DocketNo. 29622.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 138 So. 586 (Low v. First Nat. Bank & Trust Co.) 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
Low v. First Nat. Bank & Trust Co., 138 So. 586, 162 Miss. 53, 80 A.L.R. 112, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 102 (Mich. 1932).

Opinion

*57 McGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

D. D. Low, resident citizen of Sharkey county, Mississippi, died on the 19th day of January, 1930; On the 28th day of December, 1929, he executed his will and trust agreement in which the First National Bank & Trust Company of .Vicksburg, Mississippi, was named by him as executor and trustee of his estate. At the time of his death, he owned two valuable plantations containing three thousand two hundred acres of land, amply equipped with farming implements and live stock with which to cultivate open lands. The pleadings reflect that the lands are in a high state of cultivation with houses and all the set-up usual and incident to the operation of a Delta plantation.

Under authority of item 2 of the will, the executor operated the plantation for the balance of the year 1930; and continued the operation during the year 1931.

Items 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 of the will read as follows:

*58 “Item 2: If I should die at a period of the year too late to arrange for the renting of my real estate in Sharkey county, Mississippi, or at a period of the year when the crops on the land owned by me will be in process of cultivation, or will not have been harvested, then and in that event my executor and/or trustee is authorized and empowered to expend such a sum or sums as may be necessary to make and complete the making, harvesting and marketing of said crops but.in no event shall my executor and/or trustee operate said properties or any part thereof beyond another crop.
“Item 3. My executor and/or trustee is hereby authorized and empowered to rent, demise and lease for a period or periods beginning on or after the end of the calendar year of my death, my real estate holdings in Sharkey county, Mississippi, for such a time and upon such terms and conditions and for such consideration as it may deem wise and to the best interest of my estate, and to continue to rent, demise and lease said real estate holdings for such periods and on such terms and conditions and for such consideration as it may deem wise and to the best interest of the estate so long as the said trustee may exercise control over the same.
“Item 4: I authorize and empower my said executor and/or trustee to sell and convey, with or without warranty, for cash or on such terms as it may deem to the best interest of my estate, and for such consideration as it may determine, all of the "real estate of which I may die seized and possessed situated in Washington county, Mississippi.
“Item 5. I authori-ze and empower my executor and/or trustee to sell and to execute such bills of sale and other instruments necessary to convey and deliver all of the personal property which I may own at the time of my death, except such as is specifically bequeathed in this' will. Said personal property need not be sold as a whole, but may be sold separately, and for such a price, *59 biit not less than its market value, and on such terms as my executor and/or trustee may determine.
“Item 6: In the event my said executor and/or trustee is offered an opportunity of disposing of my lands in Sharkey county, Mississippi, for not less than one hundred ($100) dollars per acre it is hereby authorized and empowered to sell and convey said lands and to receive and receipt for the purchase price thereof. Said sale may he made with or without warranty, for cash or part cash and upon such terms for deferred payments as may be determined by said executor and/or trustee.”

By item 9 of the will, the National City Savings Bank '& Trust Company of Vicksburg, and its successor, was Earned by the decedent as trustee, and provided that the remainder of his property, real and personal, was to constitute a trust in favor of his six minor children; and it was directed that the trust-estate should be set apart equally to the said children, the details of which are unnecessary to set forth here.

Item 10 of the will has this clause: “The trustee shall hold, manage, care for and protect the trust estate all in accordance with its best judgment.”

It was alleged that the executor and trustee will continue to operate the plantation in the year 1932 in opposition to the terms of the will.

The answer of the executor and trustees sets up that it is impossible to sell the lands for as much as the minimum price of one hundred dollars per acre; that it is impossible to lease the lands, because no lessee can be found who is financially able to rent the lands; that the lands are in a good state of cultivation, with all the necessary farming equipment, including tenants in the houses upon the land; that in the event the land cannot be sold under the terms of the will for as much as is required (and no one can be found wdio is able and willing to lease the lands), in that event, the tenants will remove from the place, the lands will grow up in weeds *60 and bushes, and there will be a general depreciation of the value of the land; that the live stock and equipment for the operation of the place, if sold at that time, would entail great loss, as the property cannot be sold for its value because of financial depression — in substance and effect, that most probably there will be a partial destruction of the value of the land in that it will be changed from cultivated to uncultivated land, and that there will be a general depreciation in so far as the value and productiveness of the plantations are concerned. The executor and trustee offered to make a formal transfer of the property to the trustee subject to the use of it for the completion and harvesting of the crop of 1931; and the trustee and executor made their answer a cross-bill, and prayed that they be allowed to invade the trust expressed in the will so as to permit the properties to be operated by the trustee until conditions were such that the provisions of the will might be complied with.

To this cross-bill a demurrer was filed raising the question, generally, that the court, under the facts, was not authorized to invade the will and set aside the expressed intention of the testator by having the place operated by the estate through its trustee. The court overruled the demurrer to the cross-bill and granted the prayer thereof, directing that the executor transfer the property to the trustee so as not to interfere with the crop of 1931; directed that the trustee be authorized and empowered, if a purchaser under the terms of the will could not be found by the time it was necessary that preparations for the crop of 1932 be begun, and no renter prior to said time could be- reasonably found that was able to rent and operate said property at a reasonable rental on its own account and without aid from said estate, then, in that event, the trustee was authorized to operate the property for the year 1932, and thereafter until such renter might be found, or that the property be sold under the terms of .said will pending the further orders *61 of the court; and directed that the trustee he authorized and empowered to handle, manage, and use all property belonging to the estate necessary in the operation of said property.

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Bluebook (online)
138 So. 586, 162 Miss. 53, 80 A.L.R. 112, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/low-v-first-nat-bank-trust-co-miss-1932.