Marsalis v. Lehmann
This text of 566 So. 2d 217 (Marsalis v. Lehmann) 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.
Opinion
Lois L. MARSALIS & Judy Marsalis Clark
v.
Albert LEHMANN, Amy Lehmann Garraway, Louis Lehmann, Jr., Geoffrey Lehmann, & Lucy Lehmann.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
*218 John W. Prewitt, Sr., James L. Penley, Jr., Vicksburg, for appellants.
R. Kenneth Hudson, Gwin Lewis Punches & Hudson, Natchez, for appellees.
Before ROY NOBLE LEE, C.J., and ROBERTSON and BLASS, JJ.
ROY NOBLE LEE, Chief Justice, for the Court:
Lois Marsalis and Judy Marsalis Clark, proponents of the last will and testament of Mrs. Tamma Lehmann, deceased, appealed from a judgment of the Chancery Court, Claiborne County, Mississippi, sustaining the motion for summary judgment of Albert Lehmann, Amy Lehmann Garraway, Louis Lehmann, Jr., Geoffrey Lehmann, and Lucy Lehmann, contestants of the will. The judgment set aside the will, revoked letters testamentary to Lois Marsalis, ordered a full inventory and accounting by Lois Marsalis and distribution of the estate according to Mississippi laws of descent and distribution. The proponents have appealed to this Court and present four issues for decision.
FACTS
Mrs. Tamma M. Lehmann died August 21, 1984, in the Mercy Hospital, Vicksburg, Mississippi, at the age of ninety four years. On February 14, 1984, she executed her last will and testament naming as beneficiaries the appellants and appellees. She named her daughter, Lois L. Marsalis, Executrix of the will and the bulk of her estate was devised and bequeathed to Lois.
Mrs. Lehmann's husband died in 1972. They owned a home and property in Hermanville and had lived there for a number of years. Mrs. Lehmann continued to reside at the home in the Hermanville Community until October 1973, when she moved to Vicksburg and lived in the home of her daughter, Lois L. Marsalis, until her death. She was eighty four years at the time and was physically and mentally alert and able to tend to her own needs.
In 1979, Mrs. Lehmann broke her hip and, afterward, could walk only with the aid of a walker. She could move around the house but confined those movements primarily to her own bedroom and bathroom. She had a television set in her room, which she enjoyed, and when the family had guests, she joined her daughter and son-in-law and the guests in the den. The record reflects that Lois had a relationship of trust, love and affection with both parents and was attentive to their needs when they were well and she was devoted to caring for her mother when her mother's physical condition declined. Both parents had reposed trust in their daughter.
Mrs. Lehmann executed an oil lease in 1980 or 1981 for which she was paid approximately $31,000. In her deposition, Lois Marsalis was asked what she did with the proceeds of the lease money, and she testified:
Put them in did what my mamma told me, put them in the First National Bank Money Market. But Albert called up after becaused [sic] he leased land at the same time and he called up to the house and said, "I hope Mother is going to divide this money off this oil money." And I went back there and told Mamma, and Mamma says, "No." Said, "He leased his place and he got as much as I did." And says, "I am not going to divide it. It is for me and my use as long as I'm living, then it's for you and Buster."
The money was put in money market certificates in the joint names of Tamma Lehmann and Lois Marsalis. Lois attended to the business transactions of Mrs. Lehmann, explicitly following Mrs. Lehmann directions.
In 1981, Mrs. Lehmann told Mrs. Marsalis to give certain information to Mrs. Lehmann's long time attorney, Drake, in order to draw up a new will for her. Lois conveyed the information to Mr. Drake's office *219 and he drew the new will and sent it to Mrs. Lehmann. He executed the will on February 14, 1981, in the presence of Lois Marsalis and her husband, Buster Marsalis, and two attesting witnesses, Katherine and Dwayne Stagg. At the time of executing the will, Mrs. Lehmann's hearing was good but her eyesight was failing. She was mentally alert.
LAW
I.
THE LOWER COURT ERRED IN DENYING APPELLANTS THE OPPORTUNITY TO PRESENT EVIDENCE TO REBUT THE PRESUMPTION OF UNDUE INFLUENCE BY THE LOWER COURTS GRANTING APPELLEE'S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT.
Although four issues were presented on this appeal, issue number one is dispositive of the case and will be the only issue discussed.
Pertinent parts of the chancellor's finding of fact and conclusion of law follow:
Under circumstances where a confidential and fiduciary relationship exists, in this state it appears to be the well settled law that a presumption of undue influence arises which must be overcome by the proponents of a will by clear and convincing evidence. [citations omitted]
It is further well settled in Mississippi that once a presumption of undue influence arises, the proponents of a will must prove by clear and convincing evidence a lack of undue influence; further, part of the necessary proof is that a proponent must show good faith on the part of the grantee/beneficiary; grantor's full knowledge and deliberation of her actions and their consequences; and advice of (a) competent person disconnected from the grantee and devoted wholly to the grantor/testator's interest. Will of Polk supra, at 817-818.
It is also apparent under the authorities cited that there must be clear and convincing proof of each of these elements. In this case, as in McDowell, supra, it is clear by the testimony of Mrs. Lois Marsalis in her deposition that Mrs. Lehmann did not receive any independent advice or counsel prior to the execution of the will on February 14, 1981, or prior to the creation of the joint accounts and the deposit of $31,500.00 in oil lease proceeds.
The Court finds that the Defendant, Mrs. Marsalis has conceded this by her testimony at her deposition.
The Court therefore finds and concludes that a confidential and fiduciary relationship existed as between Mrs. Tamma Lehmann, the deceased, and Defendant Lois L. Marsalis beginning June 1, 1979, and continued thereafter until Mrs. Lehmann's death in August, 1984. Therefore, the Court finds that all transactions as between Lois Marsalis and Mrs. Tamma Lehmann from and after June 1, 1979, to the date of Mrs. Lehmann's death, as well as all transactions conducted by Mrs. Marsalis on behalf of Mrs. Tamma Lehmann during such time period are hereby declared to be void and set aside.
The law of undue influence, confidential relationships and burden of proof is equally applicable to inter vivos gifts and testamentary matters. [citations omitted].
It is apparent that the learned chancellor was of the opinion that Mrs. Lehmann did not receive any independent advice or counsel in the matters involved here and that he was strongly influenced by that view. This Court has modified the test for rebutting a presumption of undue influence and no longer requires the independent advice of a competent person but instead requires a showing of the grantor's "independent consent and action." Mullins v. Ratcliff, 515 So.2d 1183, 1193 (Miss. 1987). In Blissard v. White, 515 So.2d 1196 (Miss. 1987), Thera B. White died at the age of ninety one. She executed a will leaving her entire estate to one of her brothers, Dwight Blissard.
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566 So. 2d 217, 1990 WL 125783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marsalis-v-lehmann-miss-1990.