Moore v. Sykes' Estate

149 So. 789, 167 Miss. 212, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 128
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 2, 1933
DocketNo. 30692.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 149 So. 789 (Moore v. Sykes' Estate) 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
Moore v. Sykes' Estate, 149 So. 789, 167 Miss. 212, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 128 (Mich. 1933).

Opinion

Griffith, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

*215 Appellant owned and operated a negro boarding house in the city of Aberdeen. Homer Sykes, according to all testimony, boarded at said house. He was not related to appellant either by affinity or consanguinity; he had no children. And he had no near relatives living in that community. About the year 1922 his wife, who for two years theretofore had lived with him in a house owned by him in said city, had left him and had gone North, where she has since that time resided. Soon after her departure, Sykes went to appellant’s boarding house, and there remained and boarded until his death in 1930. Appellant petitioned the chancery court for a decree allowing her five hundred forty dollars for three years’ board claimed to be due her by Sykes at fifteen dollars per month, and for a sale of the house and lot owned by Sykes at his death. Katie Sykes, the absent widow of the decedent, resisted tbe petition, and on the hearing the chancellor denied the relief and dismissed the petition.

It appears from the chancellor’s opinion that he correctly adhered to the rule that, where a person not related or a. member of the family comes to another person to board, there is the presumption of an agreement or understanding that board will be paid, if the person so boarded is able to pay. Tarver v. Lindsey, 161 Miss. 379, 384, 137 So. 93. The chancellor referred, however, to the further presumption mentioned in that case, that, if the person boarded be shown to have been from time to time able to pay, then without countervailing proof the presumption of payment made will stand; and the chancellor held that the countervailing proof in this case was not sufficient to overturn that presumption. Appellant in her brief and argument points out and strongly presents the view that there is no dispute of the countervailing proof offered by the petitioner here, and that this proof was of the same nature and strength as that’which in the Tarver v. Lindsey case, and also in Loviza v. Lynch, 115 Miss. 694, 76 So. 629, was held to be sufficient to overturn *216 tlie stated presumption; and in that contention we think appellant has much the best of the argument.

But we are not satisfied to reverse and render decree -here as was done in the case first cited, and certainly we cannot be content to affirm — this because of the unsatisfactory condition of the present record, its failure in ,the full development of the facts, its lack of definiteness rin many of its important and perhaps controlling features. We are put in inevitable doubt as to what infer- : enees the chancellor may have been able to legitimately ,-idraw from the imperfectly developed evidence, and the . want of evidence, which could have been easily supplied by way of direct testimony, rather than leave salient fea- - tures suspended in mid-air to be reached by inference, or ¡.supplied by conjecture.

We may mention some of these important omitted features without which we cannot safely proceed, nor could ;the chancellor. But we cannot refer to all of them within the proper limits of a written opinion. First, we may notice that three or four witnesses were asked what in their opinion was a reasonable sum to be allowed for the board of this man, and the answers varied from eight to twenty dollars per month. If the chancellor had been able to find that eight dollars was a proper amount, we .might feel justified in affirming this decree when the several other facts were applied. If, however, he had found twenty dollars to be a correct amount, then the opposite result would follow. If fifteen dollars per month were found to be the proper amount, the case would be closer by far. Our point here is this:. It is common knowledge that, ordinarily, boarding houses have regular and established rates, and the reasonable presumption is that , a boarder at a boarding house which has for some time been in existence has agreed to pay the regular and established rate, but there is not in this record a word of what would be the best proof on this issue; namely, what ¡.the rates were at this house.

In the next place we may mention that if was shown *217 by two or three witnesses that appellant, in addition to her boarding house, kept some kind of a store, and it was said by them that Sykes assisted in this store by sometimes waiting on customers, particularly in handing out soft drinks, and also that he kept the books for appellant for this store. It is argued from this that thereby Sykes paid his board or a part of the amount thereof. But there is nothing in this record as to the size of this store, whether it was a mere road or street side soft drink establishment containing only a handful of articles, and the books of which, if any, were of no consequence, o-r whether it was an establishment of considerable size, necessitating a set of books of importance. And how could the chancellor with no more information than wa.s given him on that subject intelligently weigh that issue, and how can we tell what and how much of weight he gave to that store and bookkeeping matter? And yet its materiality in this case is obvious.

Again, it is shown that Sykes was often ill and was generally complaining of being sick. There is no showing whether he had a physician at any time or times, and whether he was put to expenses on account thereof, and how much; and whether he bought drugs and how much they cost. It was attempted in the most general and undependable way to show that he did some carpenter’s work but for whom, and how much he received, the record is silent; against which there is other evidence that he did no such work at all,* and that he was not physically able to' do such work. There is evidence also that he was a member of an orchestra or band and sometimes played for entertainments, and, although members of that organization were available and one of them testified, no’ definite evidence was produced as. to how often these engagements were filled or as to what was received therefor and when or whether actually paid. The only definite evidence of any earnings by Sykes was that for. four months each year he worked for a hardware concern at eleven dollars per week, which would give him *218 about forty-five dollars per month or for four months one hundred eighty dollars, which, if he had any other expense at all, would not pay his board for a year at fifteen dollars per month.

Without further pursuing the various features in the matter of the claim for board, although there are several other such features, we may add that the evidence in respect to the homestead exemption claimed by the absent widow is incomplete in several material respects. One of the requirements of the statute, section 1765, Code 1930, allowing the homestead exemption, is that the ex-emptionist, if under the age of sixty years, must be a householder; and the term “householder” means a person who has a family whom he keeps together and provides for and of which he is the head and master. New Orleans & G. N. R. Co. v. Walden, 160 Miss. 102, 133 So. 241.

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Bluebook (online)
149 So. 789, 167 Miss. 212, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-sykes-estate-miss-1933.