OLMSTEAD ET UX. v. Olmstead

103 So. 2d 399, 233 Miss. 621, 1958 Miss. LEXIS 424
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1958
Docket40821
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 103 So. 2d 399 (OLMSTEAD ET UX. v. Olmstead) 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
OLMSTEAD ET UX. v. Olmstead, 103 So. 2d 399, 233 Miss. 621, 1958 Miss. LEXIS 424 (Mich. 1958).

Opinion

Hall, J.

This is an appeal from a decree of the Chancery Court of Lauderdale County setting aside a deed executed by *624 Mrs. Tabitha Olmstead to her son Clarence Olmstead and his wife Mrs. Lnra Olmstead.

The bill of complaint was filed on March 1, 1957, and seeks a cancellation of the deed in question solely on the ground that the defendants had promised in the deed and took the same subject to a covenant to support and care for the complainant for the duration of her life, and that the defendants had failed to do so and that such failure constituted a fraud upon the rights of complainant.

The deed in question was executed by the complainant on August 6, 1949, and provided that in consideration of the love and affection which the grantor bore to her son Clarence and in further consideration of the agreement of said son to support her during the remainder of her life so long as she shall be in the home with him “ (which privilege I shall have during my lifetime to exercise or not as I see fit) ”, the grantor conveyed to the said son a life estate for the duration of his lifetime and of his wife Lura. It then described approximately 5 or 6 acres of land on which the grantor’s home was situated and then provided that at the death of the survivor of the said Clarence and Lura the title to said property shall revert to the grantor’s right heirs in fee simple.

At the time of the execution of this deed in 1949 the complainant was a widow, her husband having died about 1941. Clarence had always lived in the home with her. He was a single man at the death of his father and continued to reside in the home, which was the property of the mother, on up until the present time. In 1945, with the consent of his mother, Clarence married and brought his wife into the home with the mother, and at the time the deed was made Lura had been living in the home about four years and apparently they all got along fine together. The mother testified that Clarence has not been mean to her or mistreated her.

On November 7, 1955, the complainant suffered a par.alyptic stroke. One of her sons at that time resided with *625 in less than a quarter of a mile from the home and she also had three daughters, one of whom lived in Birmingham, one in Dallas, Texas, and one in Waxahachie, Texas. All of the children were immediately notified of their mother’s stroke, and all of them came. This placed the three daughters in the home and it seems from the record that Mrs. Curtis, who lives in Dallas, Texas, remained there the greater portion of the time. In their testimony they painted a very ugly picture of how Clarence constantly neglected and mistreated his mother, and they included his wife in the same category. Mrs. Curtis came in January and remained at Clarence’s home for eight weeks when, at his instance, her mother was carried to Dallas to spend a while with her. One of the best evidences as to how Clarence and his wife treated the sisters and the mother is a card which Mrs. Curtis sent to Lura shortly after her return to Dallas, which reads: ‘‘Thank you. It was so nice of you to be so kind to us while we were there. Lura I love you and Lottie both for being so nice to Mama. It means so much to me to see she is so well taken care of. I regret that I can’t be near to do the little things for her. Hope you all have gotten some relief from the heat by now. It was nice and cool here for a few days, but it is back hot again. Thanks again for being no nice. Lots of love.”

Apparently at the time this letter was written all of the parties were well satisfied with the treatment which both they and their mother had received in the home of Clarence and his wife, but later on Mrs. Curtis heard about the deed in question and obtained a photostatic copy thereof, and then the attitude of all the children suddenly changed, and it is apparent that they are the ones who encouraged the filing of this suit.

They tried to make it appear that when Mrs. Olmstead went to Dallas she was literally forced out of the home by Clarence, but the record shows that Clarence owned a Nash automobile which was arranged so that one-half *626 of the front seat could he let back to connect with the rear seat so as to make a bed, and Mrs. Curtis, who insisted on her mother going to Dallas, requested Clarence to use his automobile to carry Mrs. Curtis and her mother out there, and he finally agreed to do so.

At the conclusion of the trial the court dictated an opinion in the record cancelling the deed in question, during the course of which he commented on the fact that the deed provided ‘ ‘ so long as I shall be in the home with him (which privilege I shall have during my lifetime to exercise or not as I see fit)”, and the court remarked that this was a ridiculous provision in the deed. "We do not think so. To us it is perfectly apparent that Mrs. Olmstead thought that she might want to go at times to spend a while with some of the other children and she particularly dictated this provision to be put into the deed for the purpose, as we see it, to prevent her from having been held to have waived the right to still be cared for in the home and not to have abandoned the same should she decide to spend a week, a month, or longer with one of the other children.

It is well settled by the Mississippi authorities that the grantor is not entitled to cancellation of a deed which was executed in consideration of an agreement to support her, but such grantor’s remedy is by a suit for damages for breach of the agreement to support. In the case of Dixon v. Milling, 102 Miss. 449, 453-4, 59 So. 804, this Court said: “It is claimed that appellant failed to care for and support his mother during the latter part of her life, and it is admitted that for a time after the execution of the deed he did properly take care of her. Have the appellees the right to rescind and cancel the deed of conveyance because of the failure of a part of the consideration which they claim induced them to execute the same ? It is stated is 13 Cyc. page 593, that want or inadequacy of consideration by itself, or a subsequent partial failure of consideration, is no ground for setting *627 aside a deed. In the case of Day v. Davis, 64 Miss. 253, 8 South. 203, the following is announced as the rule relative to the right of a grantor to set aside a voluntary deed: ‘A voluntary conveyance of land cannot be vacated, at' the instance of the grantor thereof, upon the mere ground that it was made without any consideration; nor will such grantor be permitted to dispute the existence of the consideration expressed in the deed.’

‘ ‘ There have been various decisions of the courts relative to the right of a grantor to vacate a deed for failure of consideration, where such consideration consisted of a promise by the grantee to support and care for the grantor during the remainder of the grantor’s life. In connection with this, it is stated in Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, vol. 2, par.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 So. 2d 399, 233 Miss. 621, 1958 Miss. LEXIS 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olmstead-et-ux-v-olmstead-miss-1958.