Ogle v. DURLEY

77 So. 2d 688, 223 Miss. 32, 1955 Miss. LEXIS 349
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 7, 1955
Docket39442
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 77 So. 2d 688 (Ogle v. DURLEY) 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
Ogle v. DURLEY, 77 So. 2d 688, 223 Miss. 32, 1955 Miss. LEXIS 349 (Mich. 1955).

Opinion

Gillespie, J.

On April 1, 1941, Mrs. Lucy Y. Wilson died testate. By her will she devised to her son, T. Webber Wilson, a 476 acre farm in Tate County, known as the Featherston Place. The following codicil was added to her will: “Since writing my will, I have reasons for adding this, that after all taxes are paid, I want Webber to divide equally the income of the farm with Rosa Mai Durley, his sister, as long as she lives.” After Mrs. Wilson’s death, T. Webber Wilson took possession of the farm, and on April 3, 1943, leased the same to Harold Ogle for the year 1944 at a rental of $1500, which lease was subsequently extended for the years 1945 and 1946. By agreement, $100 was deducted from the 1944 rent, and $200 from the rent in each of the years 1945 and 1946 *35 for certain improvements made by Ogle, the tenant. For the year 1947, Ogle paid $1300 rent for the Featherston Place.

On January 31, 1948, T. Webber Wilson died testate, and by the terms of his will, he devised to his wife, Lucye Farrar Wilson (now Mrs. Lucye Farrar Harper) a life estate in the Featherston Place, with the remainder to his niece, Mrs. Jane Wilson Starnes. His will contained the following provision: ‘1 Of course, she (referring to his wife) understands that $100 per year of said farm income is to be given to my sweet sister, Mrs. W. Gr. Durley, as I have always done since mama’s death.”

On February 7, 1948, Mrs. Lucye Farrar Wilson entered into a written rent contract with appellant, Harold Ogle, leasing the Featherston Place for a five-year period at an annual rental of $1500 per year, that is, for the years 1948 through 1952, and by the terms of this lease Ogle was to build a barn sixty feet long, thirty-six feet wide, with concrete foundation, and with a fourteen foot shed on the south side. This lease contract was signed at the home of the appellee, Mrs. W. Cr. (Rosa Mai) Durley, whose husband witnessed the document and advised his wife it was a good lease.

On January 20, 1950, Mrs. Lucye Farrar (Wilson) Harper entered into a lease with appellant Ogle extending the lease contract of February 7, 1948 for an additional five years, beginning on January 1, 1953, in which lease Ogle contracted to keep the tenant houses and dwelling house in as good state of repairs as of the date of the lease. Mrs. Harper paid to Mrs. Durley one-half of the rents, less taxes, for the five years 1948 through 1952.

On January 21, 1953, the appellee, Mrs. W. Gr. Durley, filed suit in the chancery court against Mrs. Lucye Farrar Wilson Harper and appellant, Harold Ogle. The bill charged that the Featherston Place was a very fertile, productive, and well-improved farm; that the fair *36 rental value would be not less than $3500, and if reasonable diligence was exercised, it would yield an annual rental of $5,000; that complanant had a right to one-half of the income from said lands under the will of Mrs. Lucy T. Wilson and that Mrs. Harper was charged with the responsibility to see that said lands were properly managed, preserved, and protected, and was charged with the exercise of reasonable diligence and prudence so that said lands would yield the maximum income; and that the act in making the last mentioned lease was a fraud on the complainant. No facts constituting fraud were alleged, unless it could be inferred from the amount of rent provided for in the lease. The prayer of the bill was for the cancellation of the lease and for a mandatory injunction compelling Mrs. Harper to receive and obtain a fair and reasonable annual rental for said land.

The answer of Harold Ogle, among other things, averred that Mrs. Lucye Farrar Harper had the sole and exclusive control of the farm, with the exclusive right to rent and lease the same, and that the lease to Ogle was valid and Mrs. Durley had no rights except to receive one-half of the rents, whatever the rent might be. Ogle’s answer then set up the prior leases under which Ogle averred that he had spent large sums in improving the farms; that the lands were not naturally fertile, and denied that $1500 a year was not a fair and reasonable rent; that there had been no bad management on the part of Mrs. Harper, and denied that Mrs. Harper could have, by the exercise of reasonable diligence, obtained a higher rent, and denied that complainant was entitled to any relief. Ogle’s answer made the contention that he had a valid and binding lease for the five-year period beginning January 1, 1953, and contended that complainant was not a proper party to bring the suit for the cancellation of the contract.

*37 Mrs. Lucye Farrar Harper answered, adopting part of the answer of Ogle. Her answer denied that by the exercise of reasonable diligence and prudent business practices the rent for the Featherston Place should be not less than $3500; denied that she had badly managed the farm; and denied that $1500 per year was grossly inadequate, unfair, or unreasonable for said place. She emphatically denied that she had performed any act of any kind that would constitute a fraud on the complainant; and that appellee had accepted one-half the rents from year to year under the lease beginning in 1948 between Ogle and Mrs. Harper, and appellee had thereby approved and acquiesced in the control of the property by Mrs. Harper.

The case was tried during the crop year of 1953. Numerous witnesses were introduced by both parties on the question of what would be a fair rental value of the Featherston Place. Some of the witnesses were of the opinion that $1500 would be a fair rental and some of them were of the opinion that $5000 would be a fair rental. The chancellor held that $3600 would be a reasonable rental for the year 1953. His findings as to the rental value were not manifestly wrong. All of the witnesses heard by the chancellor as to the rental value of the Featherston Place based their opinion on what a reasonable rent would be for 1953 under conditions in 1953, not in January, 1950, when the lease was made. Furthermore, the witnesses for appellee did not take into account the cost of keeping the improvements in repair, as Ogle was required to do under the lease in question.

The proof showed that Mrs. Durley did not know that Mrs. Harper had made the additional five-year lease effective January 1, 1953, until shortly before this suit was filed. The proof shows further that Mrs. Harper had no farming experience and was inexperienced in land values, and never sought the advice of any person qualified to give advice on land or rental values before *38 entering into the last five-year lease. In other words, she used her own judgment without seeking any advice, and the chancellor could have found that she lacked ordinary skill and judgment in handling the rental transaction.

The lower court rendered an opinion which appears in the record. The court therein found that by the terms of Mrs. Wilson’s will the Featherston Place had an equitable charge against it in favor of Mrs. Durley for one-half of the net rents; that the will gave constructive notice to the world of such charge; that $3600 would be a reasonable annual rental for the Featherston Place. The final decree then recited that the rental for the last five-year period beginning January 1, 1953, as provided by the lease, was' unreasonable and grossly inadequate, “and is a fraud on the

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 So. 2d 688, 223 Miss. 32, 1955 Miss. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ogle-v-durley-miss-1955.