IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 2017-CA-01641-COA
IN RE ESTATE OF HARRY J. GREEN, APPELLANT
DECEASED: ELIDE CRISTINA GARRIDO
GREEN
v.
SHIRLEY COOLEY AND WILFORD GREEN APPELLEES
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 04/11/2018
TRIAL JUDGE: HON. C. MICHAEL MALSKI
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: LEE COUNTY CHANCERY COURT
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: MARK NOLAN HALBERT
CYNTHIA TRANELL LEE
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEES: CHRISTOPHER G. EVANS
NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - WILLS, TRUSTS, AND ESTATES
DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 09/10/2019
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:
BEFORE CARLTON, P.J., LAWRENCE AND C. WILSON, JJ.
LAWRENCE, J., FOR THE COURT:
¶1. Cristina Green appeals the decision of the Lee County Chancery Court to award eight
of her late husband’s properties to his sister, Shirley Cooley. The chancery court found that
Harry delivered the December 31, 2003 deeds to Shirley, and that Harry intended that Shirley
own the properties in question. We affirm.
FACTS
¶2. During his lifetime, Harry Green amassed a large estate consisting of various
properties. On December 31, 2003, Green had his attorney draft eight deeds that conveyed
the following properties to his sister Shirley:
1. 1201 Nixon Drive, Tupelo, MS
2. The “Main Street Warehouse,” Shannon, MS
3. The Monroe County Land, Nettleton, MS
4. The “Shannon Lot”
5. Temple Circle, Shannon, MS
6. The “White Lane Property,” Nettleton, MS
7. The “Two Houses and Green Valley Lab,” Shannon, MS
8. The Summit1
Shirley was not present when these deeds were signed. In fact, both parties agree that she
was at her home in Texas at that time. Further, there is no indication in the record that she
ever knew the transaction occurred in December 2003. After the deeds were properly
acknowledged before a notary public, Harry took the deeds with him for safe keeping. Harry
did not deliver the deeds to Shirley at that time, nor did he file them in the county clerk’s
office.2
1
The Summit property is not considered in this appeal. At trial, Shirley testified that
she signed a deed that transferred the Summit property back to Harry twice. She first signed
on January 15, 2004. Years later, in 2009, however, Harry came back to Shirley and told
her she needed to re-convey the property because he wanted to get a “homestead
exemption,” and build a home for him and Cristina. Because the Summit property was in
Harry’s name at the time of his death, it passed to Cristina and was not at issue at the trial
level. The chancellor, however, took this as a sign of Harry’s intent. Mainly, that if Harry
wanted the other properties in his name, he would have asked Shirley to sign the deeds and
record them like he did with the Summit property.
2
The December 31, 2003 deeds signed by Harry to Shirley were later filed in the Lee
County Chancery Clerk’s office on December 4, 2004 and were delivered to Shirley by
2
¶3. Later, on January 15, 2004, Shirley was visiting Harry and their mother in Mississippi.
Harry asked Shirley to come with him to his attorney’s office in Houston, Mississippi to sign
some papers. Shirley testified that she signed “everything that was put in front of [her].”
The record indicates that Shirley signed the following warranty deeds on January 15, 2004:
(1) 1201 Nixon Drive; (2) the Main Street Warehouse; (3) the Monroe County Land; (4) the
Shannon Lot; (5) Temple Circle; and (6) the Beauty Shop and House in Monroe County.
Shirley told the chancellor that Harry did not tell her anything about why he wanted her to
sign the deeds, but that she just trusted Harry. The warranty deeds signed on January 15 were
never properly acknowledged or filed. Harry took the deeds with him when he left, and those
deeds were never found.3
¶4. Harry met Cristina in 2003. On January 31, 2004, Harry married Cristina in Las
Vegas, Nevada. Cristina testified at trial that Harry “never told [her]” that Shirley owned any
of his properties, including the home on Nixon Drive that the newlyweds were living in.
Likewise, Cristina testified that her husband kept his business affairs secret. However, Lisa
Diallo, a deputy clerk for Lee County, testified that Harry told her his properties were in
Shirley’s name because he trusted her and his “wife [was] from across the water,” and he did
not want her to take the property. The chancellor specifically cited this fact in his opinion.
¶5. On November 26, 2004, Harry conveyed by quitclaim deed the ninth property, the
Harry that same month.
3
Copies of the signed, non-acknowledged, unfiled deeds were later found in the
attorney’s office, but the original deeds Harry took with him were never found.
3
Plantersville property, to Shirley. Like the deeds signed on December 31, 2003, Shirley was
not present and the deed was properly acknowledged. A few days later, on December 3,
2004, Harry traveled to Texas and delivered all of the December 31, 2003 warranty deeds
and the November 26, 2004 quitclaim deed to Shirley. Shirley testified that she “put the
deeds away,” and that Harry told her that in the case something happened to him, she would
“know what to do.” The December 31, 2003 deeds were recorded on December 4, 2004,
except for the Monroe County properties (White Lane and the Monroe County land). Shirley
actually filed the White Lane property and the Monroe County land warranty deeds after
Harry’s death in 2010.
¶6. Harry continued to pay taxes on the properties, do routine maintenance, and collect
rent. When Harry went to borrow money against the Plantersville property in 2010, however,
he asked Shirley to sign the papers required to do so. Shirley testified that Harry had also
borrowed against the home at 1201 Nixon Drive twice before. These transactions also
required her signature for approval. The chancellor’s opinion used these facts to support his
factual determination that Harry intended to transfer the properties to his sister instead of to
his new spouse.
¶7. Harry Green died on July 6, 2010. In 2007, Harry updated his will to devise all of his
property to his wife Cristina and his grandchildren. The property listed in the will included
the properties Harry deeded to Shirley on December 31, 2003. Because Shirley took control
of the properties after Harry’s death, Cristina filed a complaint for an accounting of the estate
4
and a declaratory judgment as to the owner of the property at issue. Cristina argued that the
deeds signed on January 15, 2004, were properly accepted by Harry, and the properties were
to pass as dictated by Harry’s will. The estate was never able to find the unacknowledged
original deeds signed on January 15, 2004, and those deeds were never filed in the land
records or the clerk’s office. Copies of the deeds signed that day were retrieved from Harry’s
attorney, but there is no record of Shirley ever signing a deed to convey the “Two Houses and
Green Valley Lab” back to Harry.
¶8. The chancellor found that, after reviewing all of Harry’s actions, he intended for
Shirley to possess the properties. As a result, the court found that Shirley was the rightful
owner of the eight properties in dispute.4 Cristina timely appealed the chancellor’s decision.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶9. Our review of the chancellor’s decision is limited. The findings of a chancery court
will not be disturbed “unless the [court] abused its discretion, applied an erroneous legal
standard, or its findings are manifestly wrong or clearly erroneous.” Matter of Estate of
Smith v. Boolos, 204 So. 3d 291, 305 (¶22) (Miss. 2016) (citing In re Estate of Baumgardner,
4
In the chancellor’s original memorandum opinion and judgment filed on November
7, 2017, he found that Shirley was the rightful owner of six properties conveyed on
December 31, 2003 (1201 Nixon Avenue, the White Lane property in Monroe County, the
Main Street Warehouse in Shannon, the Monroe County land, Temple Circle, and the
Shannon Lot). Later, on February 21, 2018, the chancellor entered a order clarifying his
memorandum opinion and judgment. In his clarifying order, the chancellor found that the
Green Valley Lab property belonged to Shirley. Additionally, he found that Shirley owned
the house and 9.5 acres in Plantersville. At the time of this appeal, Shirley was adjudged to
be the rightful owner of all eight properties.
5
82 So. 3d 592, 598 (¶15) (Miss. 2012)). Questions of law, and issues of constructive trusts,
we review de novo. Id.
ANALYSIS
¶10. Cristina argues three issues on appeal. Because her first two issues deal with
acceptance and delivery of the deeds signed on January 15, 2004, we consider them as one
issue. First, Cristina claims that the chancellor erred in awarding all eight properties to
Shirley because Harry had properly accepted the deeds signed on January 15, 2004. Second,
she argues a constructive trust was created when Shirley took possession of the properties,
and the properties should have been distributed as dictated in Harry’s will.
¶11. The laws of this State concerning the validity of deeds and the transfer of real property
are well settled. For there to be a valid conveyance of real property, there must be delivery
and acceptance of a valid deed. In re Estate of Hardy, 910 So. 2d 1052, 1054 (¶7) (Miss.
2005). Delivery constitutes a “transfer of [a deed] from the grantor to the grantee or his
agent or to some third person for the grantee’s use, in such manner as to deprive the grantor
of the right to recall it at his option, and with intent to convey title.” Id. at (¶8) (citing 23
Am. Jur. 2d Deeds §120, at 156 (1983)). Before delivery is complete, a deed is “without
force or effect and is merely a ‘scroll under control of the grantor who is free to withdraw
it, destroy it, or complete its execution by delivery.’” Morrow v. Morrow, 219 So. 3d 142,
146 (¶13) (Miss. 2013). The Mississippi Supreme Court has found that a deed that was
signed and acknowledged, but never delivered, was void for lack of delivery. Id. at 1055 (¶8)
6
(citing Grubbs v. Everett, 236 Miss. 698, 701, 111 So. 2d 923, 924 (1959)).
¶12. Cristina claims that the chancellor erred in awarding all eight properties to Shirley
because Harry had properly accepted the deeds signed on January 15, 2004. She argues that
Harry’s actions leading up to the conveyance on January 15, 2004 showed his intent was
always for the properties to return to him. Harry had the deeds that conveyed the properties
from him to Shirley (signed on December 31, 2003) and the deeds that transferred them back
(signed on January 15, 2004) created at the same time. Additionally, the short period of time
between the conveyances, Cristina argues, makes it clear that Shirley was not the intended
owner. The chancellor disagreed, and found that Harry’s actions indicated he wanted Shirley
to own the properties at issue. For two equally compelling reasons, we find that the
chancellor’s judgment should be affirmed and that Shirley is the rightful owner of the
properties.5
¶13. First, the chancellor factually found, after considering the evidence presented at trial,
that Harry intended the properties in question to be transferred to Shirley. We are bound to
affirm that factual finding unless it was manifestly in error or clearly erroneous. Here, ample
evidence supports the chancellor’s finding. The chancellor’s decision was based on “Harry’s
words, acts[,] and the circumstances surrounding the transaction.” From that, the chancellor
5
The dissent asserts that the majority “primarily relies” on the “new” theory that
Harry could not accept the January 2004 deeds because Shirley could not devise what she
did not own until December 2004. That statement is contrary to the language in this
sentence, where the majority clearly indicates “two equally compelling reasons” to affirm
the chancellor.
7
determined Harry “did not intend to, and thus did not accept, the conveyance” of the
properties. We agree. Cristina testified at trial that her husband was renting their home at
1201 Nixon Drive:
Q. -- y’all were renting the Nixon home
A. Yeah [. . . .]
This was during the time that Shirley was the owner of record for the 1201 Nixon Drive
property. Further, testimony proved that Shirley signed for deeds of trust as the owner of the
properties, and Shirley re-signed the deed to the Summit property after she had signed it
previously on January 15. In addition to all of this, the chancellor heard testimony that the
deeds Harry ultimately delivered to Shirley were the warranty deeds he signed on December
31, 2003. The January 15, 2004 deeds were not filed and were, in fact, never found. All of
these facts, coupled with the additional testimony and evidence at trial, support the
chancellor’s factual findings and conclusion of law and do not rise to the level of manifest
error or clearly erroneous. We therefore affirm the chancellor’s decision in this case.
¶14. Further, equally compelling is the argument by Shirley that she did not have the ability
to transfer title on January 15, 2004, since she did not legally own the properties until Harry
delivered the December 31, 2003 warranty deeds to her in December 2004.6 This Court finds
6
The dissent complains that this argument was first made during oral argument. The
dissent argues that this “new theory” should not be ruled upon by this Court. This is not a
“new theory” or a new assignment of error but is a question of law. It is new logic applied
to the same facts involving the law at issue in this litigation since the beginning—who owns
the properties, Harry’s intent, and the delivery and acceptance of the deeds in question. This
8
that Shirley was unable to legally perfect the January 15, 2004 conveyance because she did
not have title on that date. When Harry signed the original December 31, 2003 deeds, his
conveyance to Shirley was not complete until he delivered those deeds on December 3, 2004.
¶15. Conveyances of real property require both delivery and acceptance of a valid deed for
that conveyance to have legal effect. In re Estate of Hardy, 910 So. 2d 1052, 1054 (¶7)
(Miss. 2005). Delivery constitutes a “transfer of [a deed] from the grantor to the grantee or
his agent or to some third person for the grantee’s use, in such manner as to deprive the
grantor of the right to recall it at his option, and with intent to convey title.” Id. at (¶8) (citing
23 Am. Jur. 2d Deeds § 120, at 156 (1983)). Pursuant to this law, Shirley’s deeds dated
January 15, 2004 to Harry were never valid. She had no ownership interest to transfer on that
date, because Harry had not yet delivered the December 31, 2003 deeds to her which gave
her an ownership interest. While the chancellor did not specifically find this, this Court has
the authority, and indeed the mandate, to decide cases based on the law and not just what was
presented to us by the attorneys.
¶16. The supreme court and this Court have held numerous times that appellate courts may
“affirm a chancellor’s decision that reached the right result but for the wrong reason.” Timms
v. Pearson, 876 So. 2d 1083, 1086 (¶12) (Miss. Ct. App. 2004). See also Cummings v.
Goolsby, 255 So. 3d 1257, 1258 (¶8) (Miss. 2018). Therefore, following that precedent and
was merely an alternative argument put forth during oral argument on a question of law
central to the issues in this litigation.
9
logic, we affirm the decision of the chancellor based on new logic applied to the facts of this
case. The chancellor’s findings of fact as to Harry’s intent are supported by the evidence.
The law requiring delivery and acceptance before a conveyance is legally effective supports
the chancellor’s conclusions.
¶17. The dissent applies the doctrine of after acquired title in an effort to preclude the
argument made by Shirley’s counsel on appeal. The dissent would find that the chancellor
was manifestly wrong when he found that Shirley owned the properties. The dissent argues
that the January 15, 2004 transfer from Shirley to Harry became valid once Harry delivered
the December 31, 2003 deeds to Shirley on December 3, 2004 as a result of the after acquired
title doctrine. The doctrine of after acquired title provides:
Where a grantor who has no title, whose title is defective, or whose estate is
less than that which he assumes to pass, conveys by warranty or covenants of
like import and subsequently acquires the title or estate which he purports to
convey, or perfects his title, such after-acquired or perfected title will inure to
the grantee, or to his benefit, by way of estoppel.
Turner v. Miller, 276 So. 2d 690, 693 (Miss. 1973). The dissent claims that this doctrine fits
“this case perfectly” and, makes the chancellor’s judgment clearly erroneous. We disagree.
¶18. The doctrine of after acquired title derives from the principles of equitable estoppel.
Crooker v. Hollingsworth, 210 Miss. 636, 642, 46 So. 2d 541, 544 (1950). The doctrine
prevents harm to the grantee who, in theory, paid consideration for property they thought they
were buying from a grantor. If it turns out that the owner did, in fact, not own the property
at the time of the sale, but later acquires that property, the title is then vested to the grantee.
10
The courts, however, “will not give effect to estoppel where the parties are equally well
informed as to the essential facts, or where the means of knowledge were equally open to
them.” Id. (citing 19 Am. Jur., p. 742). Additionally, “a party who invokes [the doctrine]
must have lost something or [been] placed at some disadvantage by the conduct of the other
party.” Id. Cristina would have to show that somehow Harry lost something or was placed
at disadvantage and that she should therefore own the properties by invoking the equitable
estoppel doctrine on his behalf. It is hard to imagine how Harry was taken advantage of, or
was not aware of everything going on in these transactions, when he orchestrated and caused
every move.
¶19. As with many aspects of the law, the equitable estoppel of after acquired title doctrine
has several exceptions, some of which directly control in this case. Three such exceptions
are as follows:
(1) When a quitclaim deed conveys only the grantor’s present interest, it
does not convey any after acquired title;7
(2) When a grantee knew of the deficiencies in the grantor’s title, no after
acquired title is conveyed;8
(3) The doctrine will not be applied where the parties are equally well
informed as to essential facts, or the means of knowledge were equally
open to them.9
7
McLaurin v. Royalties Inc., 231 Miss. 240, 95 So. 2d 105 (1957).
8
Crooker v. Hollingsworth, 210 Miss. 636, 46 So. 2d 541 (1950).
9
Buchanan v. Stinson, 335 So. 2d 912, 914 (Miss. 1976).
11
All three of these exceptions apply in this case.
¶20. First, the transfer of the Plantersville property was by quitclaim deed and not a
warranty deed. Second, Harry was certainly aware that Shirley’s title which was the subject
of the January 15, 2004 deeds was deficient. Harry never delivered the original December
31, 2003 deeds to Shirley as required by law. He caused the deficiency. Therefore, if Harry
knew of that deficiency since he never delivered the deeds to Shirley, then he cannot claim,
through Cristina, the after acquired title doctrine. Finally, as to the “equally well informed”
exception, the record indicates that Harry was intricately involved in every aspect of the
transfers and orchestrated each and every step. He originally had his attorney make the
December 31, 2003 deeds, he signed those deeds and had them dully notarized, and then took
the deeds with him. Still in possession of those deeds, he had Shirley sign a completely
identical set of deeds conveying the December 31 properties back to him. Those deeds were
not notarized, and he took those deeds with him as well. Further, Harry was the original
grantor in the December 31, 2003 deeds and the grantee of the January 15, 2004 deeds and
held in his possession both sets of deeds. Cristina, party to neither set of deeds, was never
a grantor or grantee and should not be allowed to claim an equitable estoppel doctrine in an
attempt to claim title to properties that she bought from no one. The chancellor factually
found Harry had intended to transfer to Shirley.
¶21. The equitable estoppel doctrine was not designed for such purposes but rather to
transfer ownership when a grantor (in January 2004—that would be Shirley) purports to sell
12
an interest to an uninformed grantee (Harry) and later obtains title that is not owned at the
time of the sale but later is obtained. Harry was acting as both grantor and grantee over the
course of these transactions and had full knowledge of the actual ownership interest of all
parties, including the deficiencies in Shirley’s title, and he actually authorized and facilitated
both transactions. There is simply no way he was not equally well informed. To the
contrary, his actions, as found by the chancellor, showed he was very well informed. Harry
never filed the January 15, 2004 deeds that Cristina attempts to use as a basis for her
ownership. He filed the deeds conveying the land in question to Shirley. Further, he
delivered the original December 31, 2003 deeds (nine months after holding both sets of
deeds), which the chancellor found not only completed his conveyance to Shirley, on
December 3, 2004, but also was indicative of his intent in these transactions. The dissent’s
argument of after acquired title was never raised by the parties and simply does not apply to
the facts of this case and the clearly set forth exceptions under Mississippi law.
¶22. As to Cristina’s second issue, we decline to consider whether the trial court erred in
not imposing a constructive trust. A constructive trust is “a judicially imposed remedy used
to prevent unjust enrichment when one party wrongfully retains title to property.” Presbytery
of St. Andrew v. First Presbyterian Church PCUSA of Starkville, 240 So. 3d 399, 405 (¶27)
(Miss. 2018). Because we find that the chancellor was not in error in finding Shirley was the
rightful owner of the properties in question, Cristina’s argument as to a constructive trust is
moot. For these reasons, we affirm the decision of the chancellor.
13
¶23. AFFIRMED.
BARNES, C.J., CARLTON, P.J., GREENLEE, WESTBROOKS, McDONALD,
McCARTY AND C. WILSON, JJ., CONCUR. J. WILSON, P.J., DISSENTS WITH
SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION, JOINED BY TINDELL, J.
J. WILSON, P.J., DISSENTING:
¶24. This dissent primarily addresses six of the eight properties that are at issue in this
appeal.10 There is no dispute that Shirley signed warranty deeds reconveying those six
properties to Harry. There is also no dispute that Shirley signed those deeds at Harry’s
lawyer’s office at Harry’s specific request. And there is no dispute that Harry took
possession of the deeds, continued to pay insurance and taxes on the properties for the rest
of his life, and continued to make improvements and repairs and collect rents on the
properties. The chancellor nonetheless found that Harry did not “accept” the deeds to these
properties. I respectfully disagree with the chancellor’s conclusion. I would reverse and
render judgment in favor of Cristina as to these six properties.
I. The January 15, 2004 Warranty Deeds
¶25. With respect to six of the properties at issue in this appeal, there is no dispute (a) that
Harry signed deeds conveying the properties to Shirley on December 31, 2003, and (b) that
Shirley then signed warranty deeds reconveying the properties to Harry on January 15, 2004.
10
The other two properties—(1) the “Two Houses and Green Valley Lab” in Shannon
and (2) a house and nine and a half acres in Plantersville—raise different issues because
there is no evidence that Shirley signed deeds reconveying them to Harry. I address those
two properties in Part II.
14
These include four properties in Lee County and two in Monroe County:
1. 1201 Nixon Drive in the Lee Acres subdivision in Tupelo (Lee County)
(Exhibits 1-A and 1-B);
2. the “Main Street Warehouse” in Shannon (Lee County) (Exhibits 2-A
and 2-B);
3. the “Shannon Lot” in Shannon (Lee County) (Exhibits 4-A and 4-B);
4. “Temple Circle” in Shannon (Lee County) (Exhibits 5-A and 5-B);
5. “Monroe County Land” in or around Nettleton (Monroe County)
(Exhibits 3-A and 3-B); and
6. a beauty shop, house, and acreage at 30023 White Lane in Nettleton
(Monroe County) (Exhibits 6-A and 6-B).
Shirley signed the six deeds reconveying the properties to Harry at Harry’s specific request
at the office of Harry’s lawyer, John Fox.
¶26. The December 31, 2003 deeds for the four Lee County properties were not recorded
until December 4, 2004. The December 31, 2003 deeds for the two Monroe County
properties were not recorded until after Harry’s death. On July 29, 2010, about three weeks
after Harry died, Shirley recorded those two deeds in Monroe County. The January 15, 2004
deeds reconveying the six properties from Shirley to Harry were never recorded.
¶27. Although the deeds reconveying the properties from Shirley to Harry were neither
acknowledged nor recorded, that does not affect their validity as between Shirley and Harry
or their heirs. Miss. Code Ann. § 89-5-3 (Supp. 2018) (providing that a deed “shall . . . be
valid and binding” “as between the parties and their heirs” even if it is not acknowledged or
15
recorded); Assocs. Fin. Servs. Co. of Miss. v. Bennett, 611 So. 2d 973, 976 (Miss. 1992);
Cotton v. McConnell, 435 So. 2d 683, 687 (Miss. 1983); Metro. Nat’l Bank v. United States,
901 F.2d 1297, 1302 n.2 (5th Cir. 1990). The chancellor recognized this point in his order
denying summary judgment, and Shirley does not dispute it on appeal. The chancellor
correctly stated that the “one central question remaining in this cause” is “whether Harry
accepted the six deeds on January 15, 2004.”
¶28. “[A]cceptance by the grantee [is] essential to the validity of a deed.” Odom v.
Forbes, 500 So. 2d 997, 1001 (Miss. 1987). The grantee’s intent to accept the deed is
“manifested by his words, acts and the circumstances surrounding the transaction.” Id. The
chancellor in this case noted that Mississippi case law addressing the grantee’s intent to
accept a deed is “sparse.”
¶29. In Martin v. Adams, 216 Miss. 270, 62 So. 2d 328 (1953), the Court held that the
grantee, Mrs. Adams, did not accept a deed from the grantor, her husband. When Mr. Adams
told his wife that he had executed a deed conveying certain land to her, she “immediately
declined to accept the deed, and remonstrated with him for what he had done.” Id. at 277,
62 So. 2d at 329. She “took the deed to an attorney for his interpretation of it,” but the deed
was then “returned to [Mr. Adams] and remained in his control.” Id. at 277-78, 62 So. 2d
at 329. The Court held that the deed was void due to Mrs. Adams’s express refusal to accept
it. Id.
¶30. The Court also held that deeds were not accepted in In re Estate of Hardy, 910 So. 2d
16
1052, 1054-55 (¶¶7-10) (Miss. 2005). In that case, Hardy executed deeds conveying property
to her three daughters, but she died before she delivered the deeds. Id. at 1055 (¶9). The
deeds were found in her purse after her death, and “each of [her daughters] testified
unequivocally that she never accepted the deed.” Id. Thus, the problem in Hardy was not
just that the deeds were not “accepted” but that they were not even delivered. Id. at (¶10).
¶31. In Salmon v. Thompson, 391 So. 2d 984 (Miss. 1980), the Court held that a deed was
not accepted because the offeree failed to pay the purchase price for the property. Salmon
orally agreed to buy 55 acres from Thompson for a specified price. Id. at 985. Six months
later, Thompson wrote to Salmon. Id. He enclosed an executed deed and instructed Salmon
to return a copy of the deed with a check for the purchase price if he still wanted to buy the
property. Id. For more than two years thereafter, Salmon did not pay for the property or
record the deed, and Thompson finally informed Salmon that he was selling the land to
another party. Id. at 985-86. Salmon then attempted to record the deed and pay for the
property. Id. However, the Court held that Thompson had withdrawn the offer to sell before
Salmon accepted the deed. Id. at 987. The Court held that Thompson’s initial “letter with
instructions . . . constituted a qualified delivery of the deed,” but Salmon failed to accept the
deed when he failed to comply with those instructions for more than two years. Id.
¶32. In each of the foregoing cases, the evidence that the grantee did not accept the deed
was clear. There is no similarly clear evidence of non-acceptance in this case. In fact, there
is ample evidence that Harry did accept the deeds. There is no dispute that Harry asked
17
Shirley to go to the Fox law office and sign the deeds reconveying the properties to him.
There is also no dispute that Harry took possession of the deeds and left the Fox law office
with them. Harry then continued to pay the taxes and insurance on the properties, continued
to make repairs and improvements on the properties, and continued to collect rent on the
properties. In addition, more than three years later, Harry had a new will prepared in which
he specifically devised at least some of the properties at issue. He specifically devised the
“White Lane” property in Nettleton to his grandchildren, and he devised “[t]he Green real
estate apartments and houses” to Cristina.11 In a residual clause, Harry devised all of his
remaining real property to Cristina. Harry also borrowed money against the Nixon Drive
property and used the funds to build a new marital home on another of his properties. In
short, with respect to these six properties, Harry exercised the ordinary rights and fulfilled
the ordinary obligations of property ownership. As the chancellor put it, “Harry’s day-to-day
behavior with regard to the property was consistent with ownership.”
¶33. The evidence that Shirley cites does not demonstrate a lack of acceptance. Shirley
emphasizes that Harry never had the deeds notarized and filed. However, as discussed
above, that does not render the deeds invalid as between the parties or their heirs.12 Shirley
11
The precise nature of all six of the properties is not clear from the record; however,
at least some of them are rental properties that appear to fall within this devise. Shirley
acknowledged at trial that she changed the locks on the properties and began collecting rent
on the properties after Harry’s death.
12
Moreover, as noted above, with respect to the two Monroe County properties,
neither the December 31, 2003 deeds from Harry to Shirley nor the January 15, 2004 deeds
from Shirley to Harry were recorded prior to Harry’s death. It was only after Harry died that
18
also notes that Harry asked her to sign deeds of trust for the Nixon Drive property. However,
it is hardly surprising that the bank wanted Shirley—the record owner of the property—to
sign the deed of trust. Shirley next points out that Harry frequently reviewed the properties
under her name at the Lee County chancery clerk’s office. However, that simply shows that
Harry knew that the Lee County land records showed that Shirley was the owner of record,
which is not in dispute.
¶34. Shirley also relies on Cristina’s inability to produce the original signed deeds that
Harry took with him from the Fox law office. Shirley speculates that Harry may have lost
or destroyed the originals. However, even if that is what happened, the subsequent loss or
destruction of the originals would not render Harry’s acceptance of the deeds invalid. See
Wood v. Johnson, 234 Miss. 874, 880, 108 So. 2d 202, 204 (1959) (“The rule has generally
been adhered to in this jurisdiction that where a deed has once been signed and delivered, a
subsequent surrender and destruction of it does not divest the grantee of title to the land.”);
Lisloff v. Hart, 25 Miss. 245, 250 (1852) (“The deed made to the son by Hanah vested the
title to the land in him, and the subsequent destruction of it did not divest it. The second
deed, made by Hanah to Charles Lisloff, Sen., is inoperative, and cannot defeat the right of
the son to the premises.”). The relevant issue is whether Harry accepted the deeds when they
were executed and delivered to him in January 2004—not what he may have done with them
Shirley recorded her deeds. It is unclear why Shirley’s unilateral action after Harry’s death
should make those deeds more valid than the deeds that Shirley signed to reconvey the same
properties to Harry.
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sometime later.
¶35. Shirley also cites vague testimony of her brother, Wilford Green, that Harry and
Cristina wrote a number of “rent” checks to Larry Williams for “around $500” while the
couple resided on Nixon Drive. Wilford said that Williams was a “friend” of theirs. Shirley
suggests that Harry would not have paid “rent” to a “third party” if he really owned the Nixon
Drive property. The suggestion makes no sense. To begin with, Wilford had little
knowledge of the checks and did not clearly testify that they were rental payments for the
Nixon Drive home. Beyond that, there is no evidence that Larry Williams owned the
property or that he was collecting rent on behalf Shirley. It is Shirley’s position in this
litigation that she owned the Nixon Drive property at that time. Yet Shirley fails to explain
why Harry would have been paying rent to Larry Williams or how that would tend to prove
that she owned the property. Is Shirley suggesting that Harry mistakenly believed that his
friend Larry Williams owned the property? And, if so, what would that prove?13
¶36. Finally, the chancellor found it significant that Harry had Shirley execute two deeds
reconveying the marital home in “The Summit” subdivision in Tupelo. The Summit property
13
The majority opinion quotes a snippet of Cristina’s testimony to make it appear that
Cristina admitted that she and her husband were renting the Nixon Drive home. Ante at ¶13.
Cristina, who is from Venezuela, apologized during her testimony that her “English is so
bad.” She also testified that she and Harry did not pay rent for the property and that they did
not have a landlord. All that she clearly articulated was that she once overheard Harry make
some unspecified comment to his secretary about renting the property. Furthermore, the
majority also fails to explain why Harry or Cristina would have been paying rent to Larry
Williams if, as the majority contends, Shirley owned the property.
20
is not at issue in this appeal because Shirley does not dispute that Cristina is its rightful
owner. Like the six properties discussed above, Harry signed a deed conveying the Summit
property to Shirley on December 31, 2003, and Shirley then signed a deed conveying the
property back to Harry on January 15, 2004, although the latter deed was never recorded. In
2009, Harry asked Shirley to execute a second deed conveying the Summit property to him
so that he could file for a homestead exemption on the property. Shirley complied, and that
deed was both acknowledged and recorded. The chancellor suggested that the 2009 deed
“may have been unnecessary if Harry had truly accepted the 2004 conveyance.” However,
the much simpler explanation for Harry’s request for a second deed is just what he told
Shirley: he needed an acknowledged, recorded deed to file for his homestead exemption.14
Harry’s request regarding the Summit property should not be interpreted as evidence of what
he did or did not believe about the six other properties.
¶37. In summary, the chancellor was entirely correct in finding that “Harry’s day-to-day
behavior with regard to the property was consistent with ownership.” Harry asked Shirley
to sign deeds reconveying the properties to him, and he took possession of those deeds. He
also paid the taxes and insurance on the properties, he made improvements and repairs, he
14
See Miss. Code Ann. § 27-33-17(f) (Rev. 2017) (“If title is held by deed . . . , such
instrument shall be dated and acknowledged on or before January 1 of the year for which
homestead exemption is applied and shall be filed for record with the chancery clerk on or
before January 7 of the year for which homestead exemption is applied . . . .”); Miss. Code
Ann. § 89-3-1 (Supp. 2018) (“Unless [a deed] is [properly] acknowledged . . . , the
[chancery clerk] may refuse to [record the deed].”).
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collected rent, and he even devised the properties in his will. The various other pieces of
evidence cited by Shirley do not prove a lack of acceptance. Because Harry accepted the
deeds, I would reverse and render judgment in favor of Cristina.
II. Constructive Trust
¶38. Cristina’s complaint sought a constructive trust as to all eight properties that are in
dispute in this appeal. As to the six properties discussed above in Part I, Cristina makes an
in-the-alternative argument that, “[t]o the extent there is any question concerning [Harry’s]
acceptance of the six signed deeds, [the] evidence is sufficient to establish a constructive
trust as to the properties.” Cristina also argues that a constructive trust should be imposed
on two additional properties: (1) the “Two Houses and Green Valley Lab” in Shannon and
(2) a house and nine and a half acres in Plantersville. There are no deeds to show that Shirley
ever conveyed these properties back to Harry; however, Cristina argues that Shirley held the
properties “solely for the benefit of Harry.”
¶39. A constructive trust is an equitable claim against a party who holds legal title to a
property. Joel v. Joel, 43 So. 3d 424, 431 (¶23) (Miss. 2010); McNeil v. Hester, 753 So. 2d
1057, 1064 (¶24) (Miss. 2000). Therefore, the majority’s determination that Shirley has title
to the six properties discussed above in Part I does not defeat Cristina’s claim for a
constructive trust. Nor is Cristina’s lack of deeds for the other two properties dispositive
with respect to those two properties.
¶40. I would not address Cristina’s claim for a constructive trust as to the six properties
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discussed above in Part I only because I would hold that the January 15, 2004 warranty deeds
from Shirley to Harry were valid and effectively conveyed title to the properties. Therefore,
a constructive trust should be unnecessary as to those properties.
¶41. As to the remaining two properties—the Two Houses and Green Valley Lab and the
Plantersville property—I would affirm the chancellor’s denial of a constructive trust.15
Unlike the six properties discussed above, there is no evidence that Shirley signed a warranty
deed conveying either of those properties back to Harry. Although there is some evidence
to support Cristina’s claim that Shirley held the properties solely for Harry’s benefit, the
evidence is also open to other interpretations. I cannot say that the chancellor clearly erred
by finding that Cristina failed to meet her burden of proving this claim by clear and
convincing evidence.
CONCLUSION
¶42. I would affirm the denial of Cristina’s claim for a constructive trust with respect to
the Two Houses and Green Valley Lab and the Plantersville property. However, with respect
to the six properties discussed in Part I, I would hold that the evidence is open to only one
interpretation: Harry accepted the signed warranty deeds reconveying the properties to him.
Therefore, those deeds were valid and effective, and I would reverse and render as to those
six properties. I respectfully dissent.
15
The Supreme Court’s decision in Joel, 43 So. 3d at 430-31 (¶¶22-24), summarizes
the basics of the law on constructive trusts.
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TINDELL, J., JOINS THIS OPINION.
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