Pitchford v. Howard

45 So. 2d 142, 208 Miss. 567, 1950 Miss. LEXIS 275
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 13, 1950
Docket37421
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 45 So. 2d 142 (Pitchford v. Howard) 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
Pitchford v. Howard, 45 So. 2d 142, 208 Miss. 567, 1950 Miss. LEXIS 275 (Mich. 1950).

Opinion

*573 Smith, J.

This is an appeal from the Chancery Court of the First Judicial District of Hinds County, involving a transaction concerning a house and lot in the City of Jackson conveyed to Mr. Howard by Mrs. Pitchford, to be reconveyed to her by him later, upon compliance with the terms and purpose of an oral agreement to that end. For convenience, we will refer to the actors by name, since Mrs. Howard seems to have been more or less inactive in promoting the compact.

Mrs. Pitchford filed her original bill with certain specific alternate prayers. 1st, that her deed to Mr. Howard, which was dated October 17, 1947, be held to have been procured by fraud, and that as a result of such fraud a constructive trust arose in her favor, and that Mr. Howard holds the title to the property in trust for her, and he and his wife, Mrs. Helen E. Howard, be required to reconvey it to her by a valid deed, or upon their failure to do so, that a Commissioner of the Court be appointed to do so; 2nd, in the alternative, if it be held that there was no such constructive trust, that the court hold that said deed was obtained by fraud and deceit, rendering it null and void, and the same be cancelled, and the title to the property quieted and confirmed as against Mr. and Mrs. Howard; 3rd, or in the alternative, if the court hold against both the foregoing prayers, then that the court render a decree against them for the full value of the property less the amount of the deed of trust, $4,500, executed by Mr. and Mrs. Howard to the Liberty National Life Insurance Company, less any payments thereon, less the sum of $1,380.88 received by Mrs. Pitchford out of said loan, less the legitimate expense of closing the same with the said insurance company; 4th, and if not entitled to this alternative relief, that the court hold that $3,500 was not paid her, and is still owing to her, and a lien be fixed on the property for said amount, and if not paid within a reasonable time a *574 Court Commissioner sell it “ to satisfy either of said alternatives found”.

Mr. and Mrs. Howard filed a so-called special and a general demurrer to the original bill. The special demurrer was grounded upon complaint that the relief sought by the first prayer of Mrs. Pitchford is an attempt to enforce a constructive trust in lands created solely by an oral agreement, in violation of the Statute of Frauds, Code 1942, Section 264, and Section 269, Code 1942,'said oral agreement being void and unenforceable; she is not entitled to the relief sought by the first alternative prayer, because she has “elected to affirm the agreement allegedly obtained by fraud ’ ’, nor has she offered to restore them to status quo as required before rescission may be allowed; she is not entitled to the second alternative prayer because “said prayer is foreign to the facts set forth in complainant’s bill of complaint, which facts affirmatively show that there was never any agree-i ment or intention on the part of either complainant or defendant that defendants should pay to complainant the additional sum of $3,500.00, or any other amount to perfect defendant’s title to the property in dispute.”

The grounds of the general, demurrer were that there is no equity on the face of the bill; that Mrs. Pitchford does not come into court with clean hands; and that the averments of her bill show that the situation developed from her effort to cheat and defraud the Liberty National Life Insurance Company of $4,500 under the false pretense that defendant H. H. Howard was the owner of the property, in violation of public policy and Section 2149, Code 1942, with the result that H. H. Howard and Mrs. Pitchford were in pari delicto and she is, therefore, entitled to no relief.

The Chancellor rendered two opinions, one dated October 21,1948, and the other January 28, 1949. In the former he upheld the contention of Mr. and Mrs. Howard that he and Mrs. Pitchford were in pari delicto, and she did not come into court with clean hands, and that the *575 transaction was within the inhibition of the third section of the Statute of Frauds. The demurrers were sustained. The order thereon contained this provision: £ £ Demurrers should be sustained, and Bill dismissed, since the nature of the case admits of no amendment if a substantial restatement of it is the controlling element of the litigation. And ordered.”

In the later opinion, the Chancellor held there was no semblance of a constructive trust, nothing to result by implication or operation of law in favor of Mrs. Pitchford, stating that “The bill narrates in detail a complete oral and express agreement between the parties, even to the consideration to be paid the Defendant for carrying out the alleged 'scheme’ to obtain the money, and reconvey the property to complainant”. The demurrers were again sustained. The Bill was dismissed, with decree accordingly, after Mrs. Pitchford filed a written motion for leave to file either an amended or supplemental bill, or to amend the original bill, which motion was overruled.

It is, of course, necessary to set out a summary of the pertinent and salient portions of the allegations of the bill bearing upon the rulings of the Chancellor on the demurrers, which admit the facts well pleaded.

Mrs. Pitchford was a widow. She had bought the property involved about a year before the events chronicled in the original bill. The purchase price was $8,200 of which she paid $5,000 in cash, and assumed a debt secured by a trust deed thereon in favor of a bank in the City of Jackson. She had reduced this assumed debt substantially when the occurrences in the litigation had their inception. The amount was repayable in monthly installments. She moved to Jackson from Tchula, and was occupying the property involved as her home. Her acquaintance with Mr. Howard began with an automobile purchase from him by Mrs. Pitchford, leading to frequent dealings with him in servicing her car. Out of this association grew a close *576 friendship, frequent visits to her home in Jackson by Mr. Howard, where he was treated almost as a member of the family, resulting in her reposing trust and confidence in him.

Learning of Mrs. Pitchford’s intention to return to Tchula, after about a year’s residence in Jackson, Mr. Howard inquired if she intended to sell or rent her Jackson home, and was informed she had tried to sell it, and failed but that she did not intend to rent it. Whereupon Mr. Howard began to importune her to rent the property to him for the monthly payments due the bank in Jackson, offering to keep it in good repair, and pay the taxes until Mrs. Pitchford should sell or request repossession. Because of the family association and her implicit confidence in him she finally was persuaded to rent the property to Mr. Howard on his suggested terms. She returned to Tchula on June 2, 1947, and Mr. and Mrs. Howard moved into the Jackson property.

A few months later Mrs. Pitchford decided to purchase a home in Tchula, for which she needed more cash than she possessed, and so she sought an additional loan from the bank holding the trust deed already on the property, of which only about $2,600' was unpaid at the time; and from other lending agencies in Jackson, but was refused because she did not reside in Jackson.

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Bluebook (online)
45 So. 2d 142, 208 Miss. 567, 1950 Miss. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pitchford-v-howard-miss-1950.