Taylor v. Grissom

95 So. 2d 541, 231 Miss. 451, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 530
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1957
DocketNo. 40515
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 95 So. 2d 541 (Taylor v. Grissom) 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
Taylor v. Grissom, 95 So. 2d 541, 231 Miss. 451, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 530 (Mich. 1957).

Opinion

Lee, J.

Mrs. Rossie Rogers Taylor filed her bill of complaint, in the nature of a bill of review, on October 5,1955, praying that the court set aside and annul its opinion and findings in a decree of date of October 7, 1953, wherein the court had annulled and set aside its decree of date of May 30, 1952. All previous pleadings in the cause were incorporated and made a part thereof by reference. The substance of the bill was that the petitioner had employed T. J. Wills as counsel; that she was unable to be present at a hearing of the original cause set for October 5, 1953, because of the death and burial of a foster brother the day before; that she relayed this information to her counsel, who agreed to procure a continance for several days; but that through fraud, mistake or accident, her counsel was unable to obtain the relief; that the court erroneously arrived at the conclusion that she was “toying with the court” and never intended to appear for the trial; that she sent one of her main eyewitnesses to Laurel or Paulding, Mississippi, but that, on arrival, the witness was informed that Attorney Wills had returned to Hattiesburg; that several weeks later her counsel advised by letter that he had procured a dis[453]*453missal without prejudice (she did not attach this letter to the bill); and that, on account of her limited finances and the necessity to work, it was sometime later, only after an independent investigation, that she learned that the cause had been dismissed with prejudice. She alleged that extrinsic fraud in the procurement of the decree of October 7, 1953, was practiced upon the court by failure to present the true and correct facts and circumstances of her failure to appear on October 5, 1953.

The demurrer of the respondent, Grissom, set up a number of grounds, which in effect contended that there was no equity on the face of the bill; the allegations of the bill were insufficient to show fraud; the alleged extrinsic fraud was a mere conclusion of the pleader; that if there was fraud, negligence or failure, it was the act of complainant’s attorney and agent and not of the respondent; and that the complainant had not exercised diligence in timely discovering the fact of dismissal after the rendition of the decree.

On final hearing, the court, by a decree of date of June 12,1956, sustained the demurrer. The complainant refused to amend her bill of complaint or plead further, and the cause was finally dismissed with prejudice. From the decree entered, the complainant appealed.

In chronological order this litigation unfolded substantially as follows: On January 27,1952, John Kepler Taylor, a prominent member of the Birmingham, Alabama, bar, died testate. He had a substantial estate, and his will, devising his property almost entirely to three sisters and a nephew, was admitted to probate on February 6, 1952. He did not' mention Rossie Cowen Rogers or state that he had a wife.

On May 30,1952, Rossie Cowen Rogers, also a member of the Birmingham bar, appearing as Rossie Cowen Rogers Taylor, filed a petition in the Chancery Court of Jasper County, praying that the Circuit Clerk of Jasper [454]*454County be directed to make a restored record nunc pro tunc as of September 17 and 18, 1932, of tbe marriage of Rossie Cowen Rogers to John Kepler Taylor. Sbe alleged tbat the marriage occurred in tbe town of Paulding on September 17, 1932, under tbe authority of a license issued by tbe clerk; tbat tbe ceremony was performed by Judge E. M. Lane, and was witnessed by Ruth Reaves Brown and Everette Francis Poe; tbat religious rites of marriage were celebrated between them by Rev. M. M. Jones on September 18, 1932, with tbe same witnesses, and was certified to tbe Circuit Clerk of Jasper County at Paulding; tbat Judge E. M. Lane died on November 10, 1943; and tbat tbe courthouse at Paulding burned on September 24, 1932, and tbe record of this marriage was destroyed. Sbe attached affidavits of tbe alleged witnesses to tbe marriage, and a certificate from the clerk of Ebenezer Baptist Church in Alabama tbat tbe marriage had been consummated at tbe church on September 18, 1932. Suggested forms of tbe proposed substituted record of marriage and the certificate therefor were also attached. Tbe petition appeared to have been sworn to before a notary public on April 17, 1952.

James 0. Grissom, circuit clerk, waived tbe service of process and consented tbat tbe cause might be beard instanter. He further certified that be bad made a diligent search of the records in bis office and be could not find any record of the issuance of this license or tbe celebration of tbe rites.

The chancellor beard the matter, and by decree, dated May 19, 1952, found tbe allegations of tbe petition to be true, and awarded tbe relief prayed for.

Tbe scene then shifted to Alabama. On August 4, 1952, Rossie Cowen Rogers Taylor filed a bill in tbe Circuit Court of Jefferson County, Alabama, in Cause No. 88,199 in Equity, contesting tbe will of John Kepler Taylor, deceased. She alleged tbat sbe was tbe widow of tbe decedent; tbat she was excluded from tbe provi[455]*455sions of the will as the result of undue influence by Dr. Lola Taylor, a sister of the decedent, and others; and that they deprived the complinant of access to her husband and conducted a campaign to alienate his affections from her. She set up that as the widow she was entitled to receive the personal estate of the decedent, homestead exemptions, and to dower to the extent of one-half of the value of the real estate.

The scene then shifted back to Mississippi. On October 15, 1952, James 0. Grissom, circuit clerk, filed his motion to vacate and set aside the decree dated May 19, 1952, which had directed him to make a restored record as of September 17 and 18,1932, of the marriage of Rossie Cowen Rogers and John Kepler Taylor. The motion enumerated all and sundry the allegations of the original petition, and alleged that each and all of them were untrue, to-wit: No marriage license was issued on September 17, 1932. No marriage was reported to the clerk. The courthouse at Paulding did not burn on September 24,1932, but burned on September 10,1932. The records after that date were not burned and the claimed records of September 17 and 18, 1932, were not burned at all. His admissions to the allegations of the original petition were erroneous. The decree was based entirely upon a a mistake of fact. It was procured as a result of the fraud of Rossie Cowen Rogers Taylor. She had subsequently filed a suit in the courts of Alabama, seeking to show that she was the widow of John Kepler Taylor by reason of the alleged marriage at Paulding, and concerning which, her suit had been filed in the chancery court; seeking to restore the records so as to show that she was the widow of the deceased Taylor by reason of such ceremonial marriage, and was seeking to obtain about $50,-000 from the estate of the decedent; and that she disclosed none of these matters, in the first instance, to the movant or to the court.

[456]*456Process for Rossie Cowen Rogers Taylor was issued October 15,1952, commanding her to appear at the courthouse in the town of Paulding, Mississippi, on November 24, 1952, and answer the motion. She was personally served with this process on October 21, 1952.

After hearing much evidence, oral and documentary, the chancellor, at the conclusion of the case, made an extended finding of fact substantially as follows: The courthouse burned September 10, 1952. All marriage forms and records were destroyed.

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Bluebook (online)
95 So. 2d 541, 231 Miss. 451, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-grissom-miss-1957.