Robberson v. Burton
This text of 790 So. 2d 226 (Robberson v. Burton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Gary ROBBERSON, Appellant
v.
Jewell Wheeler BURTON, Ricky Dewayne Fikes and Nancy Lena Wheeler Fikes, Appellees.
Court of Appeals of Mississippi.
Jak McGee Smith, Tupelo, for Appellant.
C. Michael Malski, for Appellees.
*227 Before McMILLIN, C.J., PAYNE, and LEE, JJ.
PAYNE, J., for the Court:
¶ 1. Gary Robberson appeals the judgment of the Itabamba County Chancery Court in which the chancellor refused to order a sale of the property in a partition action. Particularly, Robberson challenges the chancellor's reliance on evidence found in an unprobated will in his resolution of the dispute between the parties. We reverse and remand.
RELEVANT FACTS
¶ 2. Claiming to own an undivided one-fourth interest in certain real property, Gary Robberson filed a "Petition for Sale of Land for Partition" against Jewell Wheeler Burton, Ricky Fikes and Nancy Wheeler Fikes in the Chancery Court of Itawamba County, Mississippi. Later, the chancellor granted Robberson leave to add Edsel Burton and Lena Shae Gray as party defendants to his petition for partition. The property which is the subject of this appeal consists of two tracts of land lying in Itawamba County. The first tract (Tract I) is made up of twenty-two acres and located on the property is the home of Jewell and Edsel Burton. Tract II consists of twenty-seven acres of farm land. Both tracts were purchased by Jewell Wheeler Burton and her now deceased first husband, Charles Wheeler, in the 1960's. Charles executed a will in 1982; he died in 1988. In the will he bequeathed to his wife, Jewell, his share of two acres of the subject property containing their home and surrounding area on which they resided. Also in the will, Charles left equal shares of his interest in the couples' remaining acreage to his wife and daughter, Nancy, giving Nancy Wheeler a one-fourth interest in the total of Tract I and Tract II, not including the two acres specifically designated to Jewell. That will was never probated.
¶ 3. In 1991, Jewell remarried. Subsequently, she deeded all of her interest in both tracts of land to Lena Shae Gray, Nancy's daughter and Jewell's granddaughter. She retained a life estate in the home and the two acres devised to her in the as-yet unprobabted will. Nancy subsequently conveyed her one-fourth interest in the entire property, including the house and the two acres, to Ricky Fikes, her husband at that time. Robberson, first cousin of Ricky Fikes, acquired a deed from Ricky Fikes giving him record title to one-fourth interest in all of the subject property.
¶ 4. No live testimony was heard by the chancellor at the trial in this matter. Rather, attorneys for the parties set their arguments before the chancellor and admitted the deposition testimony of Jewell Wheeler Burton and Nancy Wheeler, two warranty deeds and Charles Wheeler's last will and testament for the chancellor to consider in making his decision.
¶ 5. In the opinion and judgment of the chancellor, he confirmed title of the two acres of land and the home located on the subject property in Jewell Wheeler Burton and Edsel Burton with the remainder to Lena Shae Gray. In making this ruling, the chancellor relied on the last will and testament of Charles Wheeler to vest title to this part of the property in Jewell Wheeler Burton. The chancellor went on to state as follows:
An examination of the various other documents which have been introduced into evidence reveals that Gary Robberson owns an undivided one-fourth (¼) interest in the remaining acreage, i.e., the 49 ¾ acres less the home and two (2) acres upon which the home stands. The remaining undivided three-quarters (¾) interest is owned by Lena Shea Gray, *228 subject to a life estate owned by Jewel Wheeler Burton and Edsel Burton.
The chancellor declined to order the sale of the property and instead ordered that the property, not including the two acres on which the home sits or the home itself, be appraised. The chancellor ordered that once a value is assigned to the property Jewell Wheeler Burton was required to pay Robberson one-fourth of the appraised value of the property. Robberson was thereafter required by the order to convey by deed his one-fourth interest in the property to Jewell for life with the remainder interest to be vested in Lena Shae Gray.
RESOLUTION OF THE ISSUE ON APPEAL
¶ 6. Robberson asserts that the chancellor's decision is erroneous because he relied on the last will and testament of Charles Wheeler which, at the time of the hearing before the court, had not been presented for probate. He argues that because the will, in which Jewell was bequeathed Charles's interest in the two acres and the home, was not effective as it had not been probated, then the two acres and the home ought to be included in the partition action.
¶ 7. Apparently unsatisfied with the outcome of the case, the Appellees, Jewell, Ricky and Nancy, urge this Court to remand this matter to the chancellor for findings of fact and conclusions of law. In advancing their position, the Appellees assert that the record on appeal is void of any evidence that the will of Charles Wheeler had not been probated or that Robberson was a bona fide purchaser of the property in question and thus entitled to protection from the probate of Charles Wheeler's will. The Appellees conclude that because the chancellor failed to make specific findings of fact and conclusions of law to support his decision that the matter ought to be remanded for further proceedings as this Court may require.
¶ 8. Robberson relies on Virginia Trust Company v. Buford, 123 Miss. 572, 86 So. 356 (1920), for the principle that a will not submitted for probate in Mississippi is not effective "as an instrument of title." Id. at 357. In Virginia Trust, the Mississippi Supreme Court held that where a will was not presented for probate, property must be handled as though the testator had died intestate. Id. Appellees argue that there was no evidence that the will had not been probated. It was their burden to prove that it had if they intended to rely on it as a muniment of title. Regardless, the deposition testimony of Jewell Wheeler Burton indicated that it had not been probated.
¶ 9. In partition of property cases where we find manifest error, we will we reverse the findings of a chancellor. Dunn v. BL Dev. Corp., 747 So.2d 284, 285 (Miss.Ct.App.1999). As the law provides, an unprobated will is ineffective to transfer title and we find that the chancellor committed manifest error in relying on the unprobated will of Charles Wheeler to confirm title in the two acres and the home situated on the land in question to parties other than Gary Robberson. Accordingly, we reverse the chancellor's ruling on that point.
¶ 10. Consequently, the two tracts of property in question should have been handled as though Charles Wheeler died intestate. When one dies intestate having a surviving spouse and a child, his interest in real property is divided evenly among his child and spouse. Miss.Code Ann. § 91-1-7 (Rev.1994). Here, Charles Wheeler died having one child and a surviving spouse. Thus, his one-half interest in the real property in question is divided half to his daughter and half to his wife, *229 leaving Jewell with ownership of three-fourths of the property and Nancy with one-fourth interest in the property.
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790 So. 2d 226, 2001 WL 808260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robberson-v-burton-missctapp-2001.