Southern Cotton Oil Co. v. Gober

6 So. 2d 919, 192 Miss. 729, 1942 Miss. LEXIS 52
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 23, 1942
DocketNo. 34898.
StatusPublished

This text of 6 So. 2d 919 (Southern Cotton Oil Co. v. Gober) 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
Southern Cotton Oil Co. v. Gober, 6 So. 2d 919, 192 Miss. 729, 1942 Miss. LEXIS 52 (Mich. 1942).

Opinion

McGehee, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This appeal is from a decree sustaining the petition of the appellee, Mrs. Lima Gober, widow and sole heir-at-law of S. H. Gober, deceased, for an award to her of the sum of $1,000 representing the proceeds of a fire insurance policy collected by her as administratrix of his estate on certain households goods which had been previously destroyed by fire, and for which the claim against the insurance company was pending at the death of the said *733 S. H. Gober; and also asking that a certain note which was signed by the said S. H. Gober and his wife, Mrs. Lima Goober, for the principal snm of $2,400' dne the T. F. Hinton estate, and secured by a deed of trust on real property at Florence, Alabama, but which writings were executed at Corinth, Mississippi, as recited therein, and as shown by the probate thereof against the estate of S. H. Gober, deceased, be held to be the debt of said S. H. Gober alone, and payable out of the assets of his estate, insofar as the same are sufficient for that purpose, instead of the appellee being required to pay the same individually, in order to protect from sale the property at Florence, Alabama, on which the Hinton estate still holds the deed of trust as security for the payment of said indebtedness, and which real property is now owned by the appellee.

At the time of S. H. Gober’s death he and the appellee were not living together; but the proof discloses that sometime prior to their separation, she applied to a local insurance agent for the $1,000 policy on the household goods as her own, that this request was made in the presence of her husband, and that she paid the insurance premium. When the policy was delivered to her by the agent, she made complaint that it was payable to her husband; but she was advised by the agent that it was customary that such a policy be payable to the husband. Then, a year later, when the policy was renewed, she paid the premium, and again raised the issue as to whether or not it should be payable to her; and it is shown that the only reason the policy was not payable to her was the fact that the agent advised her that it was unnecessary. Objection was made to the testimony of the agent as to what the appellee said to him in the presence of her husband when she requested him to issue the insurance “on her household goods.”

We are of the opinion that this testimony was competent to show that she was asserting ownership and exercising control over the property with the acquies *734 cence and approval of her husband in his lifetime. Donovan v. Selinas et al., 85 Vt. 80, 81 A. 235, Ann. Cas. 1915D 645; Ford et al. v. American Home Fire Ins. Co., 192 Miss. 277, 5 So. (2d) 416.

Under all of the circumstances we are unable to say that the chancellor’s finding of fact was manifestly wrong in holding that the household goods belonged to the wife, and that she was entitled to the insurance collected thereon.

The appellants, as creditors of the estate, also challenged in their answer to the petition of the appellee her alleged right to have the $2,400' note declared to be the sole debt of S. H. G-ober, deceased; and the proof disclosed, without dispute, that the real property at Florence, Alabama, was conveyed to S. H. Gober and Lima Gober by T. M. Rogers and wife on December 21, 19'34; that T. F. Hinton, now deceased, began advancing money to the Gobers on January 31, 1935, for use in paying for the construction of a residence on his property, and continued to make such advances by check each month, from January to June, 1935, inclusive, amounting to the sum of $5,357.10, the first of which said checks was for the sum of $1,000, payable to “Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Gober,” and the remainder of them to the said S. H. Gober; that beginning in July, 1935, the appellee, Mrs. Lima Gober, made monthly payments to the said T. F, Hinton from July 8; 1935; to April 20', 1938, inclusive, as shown by her personal checks in his favor, aggregating the total sum of $4,071.66; that in addition to the above mentioned checks, she transferred and assigned unto the said T. F. Hinton, on January 24, 1938, certain deferred payment notes aggregating $1,960 and representing the balance then due on the purchase price of certain real estate which she had sold to one Lloyd Ray, at Red Bay, Alabama; that these assigned notes were later paid to the said T. F. Hinton, of to his estate, after his death; that it is unknown whether or not the said T. F. Hinton advanced more than the said sum of $5,357.10 (represented by the *735 cancelled checks found among his effects after his death), with which to pay for the residence on the Florence, Alabama, property, belonging to the Gobers, but the proof did disclose that the note and deed of trust now in question, which were executed as a renewal of some former indebtedness, the evidence of which could not be located or accounted for, were executed on March 14, 1938, as a renewal for a balance of $2,400', “for cash advanced to buy the following property” (describing the property at Florence, Alabama), and that the appellee, Mrs. Gober, had paid the sum of $4,452.20, to the said T. F. Hinton, including the $1,960 worth of deferred purchase money notes of Lloyd Ray, assigned to said Hinton by the appellee, prior to the execution of the said $2,400 note and deed of trust; and that thereafter she paid to the said T. F. Hinton the sum of $1,500 on March 24,1938, and $79.46 on April 20, 1938-, as shown by her personal checks, introduced in evidence, making a total of $6,031.66 in payments by checks and assigned notes.

In other words, the proof clearly establishes the fact that from the time the residence was completed on the property at Florence, Alabama, the title to which was being held by S. H. Gober and Lima Gober, as aforesaid, the indebtedness in favor of the said T. F. Hinton seems to have been dealt with as that of Mrs. Gober, since she immediately began making the monthly payments thereon with her own personal checks, and continued to do so in the manner hereinbefore set forth, at a time when she owned other property, and was earning a regular income, and while her husband was insolvent. Moreover, on July 6,1939, the husband, who had paid nothing on the indebtedness to Hinton, conveyed to the wife whatever interest he had in the property at Florence, Alabama, for “$10.00 and other valuable considerations.”

The appellee invokes section 8272, Alabama Code of 1923, Code Ala. 1940', Tit. 34, sec. 74, which provides that, “The wife shall not, directly or indirectly, become a surety for the husband.” She contends that, neverthe *736 less, she was a mere surety for her husband in regard to this indebtedness. But without regard to the Alabama statute, and the deeisions of the Supreme Court of that state, the fact remains that the liability of the wife on the $2,400 note in question is governed by the laws of Mississippi, since the note was executed at Corinth, Mississippi, as recited on the face thereof, and the estate of the said T. F. Hinton is entitled to collect the said note from either or both of the signers thereof, and is entitled to recourse against the property described in the deed of trust securing the same, and should be required to resort to said security for the payment thereof, the same being more than ample for that purpose, before looking to the assets of the estate of the said S.

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Related

Ford v. American Home Fire Ins. Co.
5 So. 2d 416 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1942)
Donovan v. Selinas
81 A. 235 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1911)

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Bluebook (online)
6 So. 2d 919, 192 Miss. 729, 1942 Miss. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-cotton-oil-co-v-gober-miss-1942.