Phillips v. Ford

164 So. 2d 908, 250 Miss. 425, 1964 Miss. LEXIS 473
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 8, 1964
DocketNo. 43116
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 164 So. 2d 908 (Phillips v. Ford) 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
Phillips v. Ford, 164 So. 2d 908, 250 Miss. 425, 1964 Miss. LEXIS 473 (Mich. 1964).

Opinion

Rodgers, J.

This is an action brought in the Chancery Court of Carroll County by Earlie P. Ford, devisee in the will of Henrietta Williams, against Kyzer Phillips, to set aside three deeds given him by Henrietta' Williams a short time before her death. The chancellor held these deeds were obtained by undue influence and cancelled them. The appellant, grantee in the deeds, has appealed, and complains that there is no evidence to sustain the chancellor’s finding that there was a confidential relationship between Henrietta Williams and Kyzer Phillips, and that the overwhelming weight of the evidence is contrary to the facts found to exist by the chancellor in his opinion.

The evidence shows that in 1957 Henrietta Williams, a Negro widow, eighty years old, lived alone on a 200-acre farm near Carrollton, Mississippi. She was feeble and unable to attend to her stock, bring in firewood and do the necessary chores about the farm. Her feet were crippled so that she could not wear shoes, and her feet and legs were swollen. She stayed in bed most of the time.

The appellant lived on a farm nearby, in which he claimed to have an interest. He separated from his wife and claimed to have lost his farm. He then moved in the house with “Old Aunt Henrietta Williams.” He sold one of her cows, and said he gave her the money. He sold her timber, and admitted he kept the money. He obtained all of the money she had in the bank and claimed she gave it to him. He obtained a deed to forty acres of her land, and finally obtained deeds to all of her land. One of the deeds conveying 160 acres has contained therein the following paragraph: “This land is valued at the price of $1800.00 and is conveyed to [429]*429Kyzer Phillips under contract that he is to room, board, provide for and care for the Grantor for her lifetime, and is to bear all cost of her final illness and all funeral expenses.” The appellant, however, denied that he agreed to provide the grantor with room and board. In short, he took everything Henrietta Williams had and all he said she received in return was “she got a living out of it.” He claims he got the cotton crop he raised on the land but that she had no interest in it. The appellant was not a relative of Henrietta Williams. In explaining why he went to this old woman’s home, he said “she wanted my help, she said she didn’t want no money, and she changed the deed.” He said Henrietta Williams had no business to attend to “But me to just go there and live with her and I would come get groceries and kept her wood and everything that she wanted and she didn’t have anything to do but just sit there at home. She told me that she had a better time then than she had when her husband was living.” He testified she gave him money to buy whatever she needed when he did not have money. Finally, he said he had nothing to do with her cattle. “I couldn’t handle her business and see after my own.”

Earlie Ford took her sister Henrietta Williams to her home and sent for her niece to aid in caring for this old woman in her last illness. Henrietta Williams sent her niece to the bank to get some money for her use and it was discovered that her deposit had been withdrawn by Kyzer Phillips. She then sent for a lawyer to make her will so that her sister could have her land for taking care of her and pay the doctor: She made a will leaving her property to her sister.

The testimony shows that Henrietta Williams was old and sick when she made the deeds to Kyzer Phillips; that she had a “changeable mind” and “her mind was absent.” Another witness said “She didn’t appear like her mind was too good.” A neighbor who had worked [430]*430her land said ‘ ‘ She told me one thing two or three times' sometimes” and again she said “I though the reason she was not in her right mind the way she talked to me/ That is what I thought. ”

The lay witnesses for both sides testified to the mental condition of Henrietta Williams, giving their opinions as if they were expert witnesses, and since there was no objection to this testimony, it is a part of the record on appeal to this Court. Some of the witnesses for the defendant, appellant here, had an interest in the outcome of the proceedings with reference to the land' involved. One witness who went with appellant to obtain one of the deeds had a lien on cattle belonging to appellant, and as soon as the deed was obtained, the land was immediately hypothecated to the bank. This witness said “I just already had it (a trust deed) on the cattle and things and when this deal was made I decided to get the bank to take it over and pay me out. ’ ’

The chancellor was of the opinion that the evidence, showed a fiduciary relationship existed between Henrietta Williams and Kyzer Phillips, and that the burden of proof was upon Kyzer Phillip's to show that the deeds were obtained from her in good faith; that in view of the mental and physical conditions of grantor, and in view of the fact that the appellant admitted he did not pay any consideration for the property, he failed to meet the burden cast upon him, and the deeds were therefore cancelled.

The general rule on this subject is stated in 26 C. J. S., Heeds, § 62 (3) b., p. 769:

“A deed secured by influence which was undue as applied to a mentally weak grantor will be invalid, as where age and infirmity combine with inequitable circumstances to show 'undue influence; and, where the maker of a deed is so reduced by mental and physical weakness as to become the mere passive agent of the [431]*431dominating will.of another in executing the instrument, it may he regarded as the product of undue influence.
“Wherever, as a result of age, sickness, or other cause, there is a great weakness of mind, not amounting to total incapacity, in a person executing a conveyance, and it appears that there was either no consideration therefor or a grossly inadequate one, the conveyance may be set aside by a court of equity on a proper and seasonable application made either by the injured person, or his representatives, or heirs; but a deed will not be set aside as having been obtained by undue influence merely because of mental weakness of the grantor, unless it is shown that his will was overpowered. * * *”

The textwriter in 16 Am. Jur., Deeds, § 38, p. 461, has this to say: “Whether such improper influence was exercised must usually be inferred from the facts and circumstances of the particular case, such as the situation of the grantor and his relation to others, his condition of health and its effect upon body and mind, his dependence upon, and subjection to, the persons claimed to have influenced him and their opportunity to wield such influence.”

Again it is said in § 402, p. 665: “Where a presumption of undue influence is cast upon the grantee in a deed because of a confidential relationship existing between him and the grantor, the burden of repelling such presumption is cast upon the grantee. * * * It is sometimes stated that this burden must be met by satisfactory evidence or evidence that the transaction was in good faith and was equitable and just between the parties.”

This Court, in the case of Jamison v. Jamison, 96 Miss. 288, 51 So. 130, had before it the question of undue influence in a will case, and quoting from the case of Blackman v. Edsall, 17 Colo. App. 429, 68 Pac. 792, we said “The chief complaint and contention of the proponent is that the evidence presented, and upon [432]

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Bluebook (online)
164 So. 2d 908, 250 Miss. 425, 1964 Miss. LEXIS 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-ford-miss-1964.