Taylor v. Smith

54 Miss. 50
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 54 Miss. 50 (Taylor v. Smith) 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. Smith, 54 Miss. 50 (Mich. 1876).

Opinion

Simrall, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The complainants, the children and heirs of their deceased mother, Arachane M. Smith, née Taylor, exhibited their bill against De Witt C. Taylor, Isaac W. Taylor, and Littleberry W. Smith, Sen., praying relief on the following statement of facts: —

Their father, the defendant, Littleberry W. Smith, applied the distributive interest of his wife in the estate of her father, in the purchase of the several parcels of land described in the bill, and took the conveyance to himself. The amount thus applied was 112,259.30. Their father, L. W. Smith, bought another parcel of land, containing one hundred and forty-five acres, with the funds of his wife derived from the estate of Moses Cavett, deceased, of which estate she was a distributee, and took the deed in his own name. Some of these lands thus acquired were exchanged by L. W. Smith for other lands. In 1874, their mother, Arachane M. Smith, died. On June 10, 1874, the defendant, Isaac W. Taylor, obtained a decree against his co-defendant, L. W. Smith, in the Chancery Court of Noxubee County, for 112,829.45, under which decree the lands mentioned in the bill, and in respect of which relief is prayed, were sold to De Witt C. Taylor, for the inadequate sum of $551, — not more than the value of one year’s rental. This sale was made June 7, 1875, under a writ of venditioni exponas. After the land had been levied upon, under the writ of fieri facias, the complainants enjoined the sale; but their injunction was dissolved, and bill dismissed, on the ground that the debtor, L. W. Smith, had a salable interest in the land. The dismissal was without prejudice of the complainants’ rights. De Witt C. Taylor, the purchaser, is the brother of I. W. Taylor, the creditor, and both are [54]*54brothers of the complainants’ mother. Both had knowledge that their co-defendant, L. W. Smith, had acquired the land with the funds and means of his wife, and that she was in equity the owner. Some of the complainants are minors, and it is alleged that the land is the only homestead of the father and his minor children. No steps were taken by the sheriff, prior to the sale under the decree, to ascertain the homestead.

The prayer is, that the sheriff’s sale may be set aside, and his deed to De Witt C. Taylor be declared null and void; that L. W. Smith be required to convey the property to the complainants, subject to his rights as tenant by the curtesy, if the court shall be of opinion that he has such an estate; that the rights of all parties may be defined, so that the property will not be sacrificed if a sale should be ordered to satisfy the decree; that the rights of the complainants be preserved in conformity to the homestead law; and, if mistaken in the special prayers, then for such other and further relief as may be consistent with the facts. The demurrer assigns special causes: First, multifariousness. Second, that the complainants have no interest in setting aside the sheriff’s sale. Third, that the defendant, L. W. Smith, had a salable interest in the land, and that Isaac W. Taylor had an interest in the resulting trust, and should not have been joined as a defendant. The other special grounds are substantially embraced in those recited above. The demurrer was overruled, and appeal taken from that order.

The case made by the bill may be stated in this abbreviated form. The complainants, heirs of their deceased mother, claim a resulting trust in the land which was sold under the decree obtained against their father, by reason of the investment of their mother’s separate money or means in the purchase by their father. He held as trustee for their mother, to whose equitable estate they have succeeded by inheritance.

The creditor in the decree, and the purchaser at the sale under it, have no better rights than L. W. Smith, because they had knowledge of the use of the wife’s money in the purchase, and of her equity.

The husband, surviving the wife, became tenant by the [55]*55curtesy of her equitable estate. There was in him a complete vested life-estate, subject to his debts. Redus v. Hayden, 43 Miss. 614; Stewart v. Ross, 50 Miss. 776. This is conceded by the complainants.

But the complainants insist that, on account of the complication of the title, the land brought at the sheriff’s sale a grossly inadequate price; that the sale should, for that reason, be set aside; and that the court should restrict the second sale to the actual interest of the debtor in the property. The demurrer challenges the right of the complainants to bring that question into litigation, because they are not prejudiced, and have no concern in the sale of their father’s interest, or in the price that it may bring; and alleges, therefore, that the bill is multifarious, by mixing that subject with the other grounds of relief, which are said to be wholly independent, and disconnected therefrom.

It may be true that the complainants, who are remainder-men after the termination of the life-estate, are not concerned in the question whether the life-estate brought an adequate price or not, inasmuch as their right to the enjoyment of the property does not begin until that estate terminates. Yet they are deeply interested in having ascertained and clearly defined the character and quantum of estate that passed to De Witt C. Taylor, the purchaser under the decree. Their father, by the deeds which they exhibit, and which were recorded, was the ostensible owner in fee of the legal title. The levy of the sheriff, under the fieri facias, was upon all his right and title in the property. The deed to the purchaser was coextensive with the levy. So that De Witt C. Taylor, on the face of the muniments of title, was absolute owner of the legal estate.

The complainants stood upon very slippery ground. If they had not moved, but had remained passive until the death of their father, De Witt C. Taylor in the mean time might have sold the property, and his vendee, ignorant of the complainants’ equity, could have confidently relied upon the recorded legal title in their father, and insisted upon his rights as an innocent purchaser. The complainants, thus embarrassed and hampered, address an appeal to the Chancellor, to the effect: [56]*56“We are the real owners of the equitable title in remainder to this land. De Witt C. Taylor acquired no more by the sheriff’s deed than the estate by curtesy of L. W. Smith; but ostensibly he holds the absolute legal title in fee. He may sell the property to a purchaser ignorant of our rights. Against such a purchaser we could have no relief. Moreover, as time recedes from the date of the accrual of our title (1857), nearly twenty years ago, the memory of witnesses grows dim, and the evidences of our right fade away. Wherefore, interpose by declaratory decree, and establish our title. Either for the great inadequacy of price set aside the sale, and declare that on the second sale no more shall be offered to bidders than the life-estate of L. W. Smith, and no more than that shall be conveyed to the purchaser, or, if we cannot question that sale, declare that De Witt C. Taylor acquired merely the life-estate, and that the sheriff’s deed only operated to convey that. Confirm our title as equitable owners in remainder, and compel De Witt C. Taylor or L. W. Smith, or both, to convey the legal title in remainder to ns.”

The object of the bill is to set up a resulting trust subject to the estate by the curtesy of the father.

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Bluebook (online)
54 Miss. 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-smith-miss-1876.