Robbins v. Berry

57 So. 2d 576, 213 Miss. 744, 1952 Miss. LEXIS 421
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 24, 1952
DocketNo. 38273
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 57 So. 2d 576 (Robbins v. Berry) 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
Robbins v. Berry, 57 So. 2d 576, 213 Miss. 744, 1952 Miss. LEXIS 421 (Mich. 1952).

Opinion

Kyle, J.

This case is before us on appeal from an interlocutory decree of the Chancery Court of Simpson County confirming the title of the appellee, Otto Berry, to a 71-acre tract of land which was owned by J. O. Berry, now deceased, during his lifetime, and which was conveyed by J. O. Berry to Harvey Robbins by deed dated January 3,1939.

J. O. Berry died intestate on November 2,1948, and left surviving him his wife, Mrs. Lina Howell Berry, and nine children. After the death of their father the nine children conveyed their interests in the above mentioned 71-acre tract of land to their mother, Mrs. Lina Howell Berry. [746]*746On December 31, 1948, Mrs. Lina Howell Berry filed her bill of complaint in this cause against Harvey Robbins, J. D. Berry, Mrs. Gertie Yan Zandt, and G. C. Van Zandt, as defendants, and in her bill Mrs. Berry asked that the deed of conveyance that bad been executed by her bus-band, J. 0. Berry, to Harvey Robbins on January 3, 1939, conveying the above mentioned 71-acre tract of land to Harvey Robbins, be cancelled on the ground that the 71-acre tract of land at the time of the execution of the deed, constituted a part of the homestead of J. 0. Berry and his wife, Mrs. Lina Howell Berry, and that the conveyance of the 71-acre tract of land to Robbins was made without the complainant’s consent and without her signature and was therefore invalid. Mrs. Berry alleged in her bill that at the time of the execution of the deed by her husband to Robbins she had been forced to leave the home because of the threats and abuse of her husband and because of his excessive use of intoxicating liquors, that she was living apart from her husband for justifiable cause, and that she had not relinquished or abandoned her homestead interest in the 71-acre tract of land. In her bill she also asked for a cancellation of a deed to the same land executed by Harvey Robbins to J. D. Berry on September 22, 1939, and a deed from J. D. Berry to Mrs. Gertie Yan Zandt dated September 28,1939, conveying to Mrs. Yan Zandt the north 30 acres of the 71-acre tract, and a deed from Mrs. Yan Zandt to G. C. Yan Zandt dated December 1,1939, conveying to G. C. Yan Zandt the same north 30 acres of the 71-acre tract. She also alleged in her bill that on May 9,1940, J. D. Berry, Mrs. Gertie Yan Zandt and G. C. Yan Zandt had executed an oil, gas and mineral lease on the 71-acre tract to one Charles B. Gholson, which Gholson had later assigned to the Lion Oil Company; and she asked for an accounting for rents and for the monies received by the defendants from the oil, gas and mineral lease.

The defendants in their answer denied that the 71-acre tract of land constituted a part of the homestead of J. O. [747]*747Berry and his wife at the time of the execution of the deed to Harvey Bobbins, or that the 71-acre tract had ever been occupied by J. O. Berry and his wife as a homestead. The defendants in their answer averred that the complainant at the time of the execution of the deed was living apart from her husband of her own free will and choice, and without any coercion, threats or fear; and they denied that the complainant was living apart from her husband because of his cruelty or because of his excessive use of intoxicating liquors.

The proof showed that J. 0. Berry and Lina Howell Berry were married in 1899, and that they settled in 1904 on a 26-acre tract of land near Braxton, in Simpson County, where they continued to reside for a period of more than thirty years and reared a large family of children. The legal title to the 26-acre tract of land was taken originally in the name of J. 0. Berry, but in 1913 Mr. Berry conveyed the 26-acre tract of land to his wife. In 1918 Mr. Berry purchased a 71-acre tract of land, known as the “Bob Everett Place,” which adjoined the 26-acre tract on the east. The deed of conveyance of the 71-acre tract was made to J. 0. Berry. Thereafter the two tracts of land were treated as a single farm unit and constituted the homestead property of J. 0. Berry and his wife. The tillable portion of the 71-acre tract was cultivated by Mr. Berry, with the aid of his wife and children, and the woodland and waste lands were used for pasturage. The 26-acre tract and the 71-acre tract were separated by a wire fence, but there was a road from the main dwelling house through the entire farm. In 1930 the main dwelling house on the 26-acre tract was destroyed by fire, and the family moved into a house on the 71-acre tract, where they resided for several months while they were rebuilding the dwelling house on the 26-acre tract. In December, 1934, Mr. Berry and his wife conveyed to their son, Jimmie Berry, the 26-acre tract on which the main dwelling house was located, but in the deed of conveyance they reserved for themselves a life [748]*748estate in the 26-acre tract, and it was expressly stipulated that the grantee was not to have the possession or control of the property until after the death of Mr. Berry and his wife.

During the summer of 1935 Mrs. Berry left the family homestead and moved into a house on a 35-acre tract of land, which had been owned by her father during his lifetime, and which was situated about one-fourth of a mile northwest of the J. 0. Berry dwelling house. She testified that she was forced to leave the family homestead because her husband had become addicted to the excessive use of intoxicating liquor, and while under the influence of intoxicating liquor was cruel and abusive in his conduct toward her and often threatened to do her great bodily harm. Her testimony on this point was corroborated by the testimony of other witnesses. As a result of Mr. Berry’s gross misconduct toward her, Mrs. Berry lived apart from her husband during the remaining years of his life. Mr. Berry during that time visited his wife frequently and carried her firewood, vegetables, green corn and other produce of the farm. He often ate the midday meal at Mrs. Berry’s house, and occasionally when he was sick he would go to her house and stay there during his illness so that she could nurse him and care for him. They continued to maintain friendly relations toward one another; but Mrs. Berry never went back to the home on the 26-acre tract of land. She testified that she had talked about going back many times, and that if Mr. Berry had been willing to give up the habit of getting drunk she would have gone back.

On January 3, 1939, Mr. Berry sold the 71-acre tract of land to Harvey Robbins without Mrs. Berry’s knowledge or consent. Mrs. Berry testified that sometime thereafter an effort was made to get her to sign the deed of conveyance, hut she declined to do so.

The chancellor after hearing the testimony of the witnesses found that the complainant was entitled to the relief prayed for in the hill'of complaint and entered a [749]*749decree cancelling the deed of conveyance of J. 0. Berry to Harvey Bobbins, and the later deeds executed by Bobbins to J. D. Berry and by J. D. Berry to Mrs. Gertie Van Zandt and by Mrs. Gertie Van Zandt to G. C. Van Zandt; and the chancellor granted an appeal to this Court to settle the principles of law involved in the case. After the trial in the lower court Mrs. Berry conveyed the 71-acre tract of land to her son, Otto Berry, and on March 21, 1950, Mrs. Berry died, while the case was pending in this Court on appeal. Thereafter the suit was revived in the name of Otto Berry, as complainant. The case was heard on appeal at the September 1950 term of the court, and the decree of the chancellor was reversed because no process had been served on the Lion Oil Company which had been named as a party defendant. See Robbins v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 So. 2d 576, 213 Miss. 744, 1952 Miss. LEXIS 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robbins-v-berry-miss-1952.