Lennie W. Dingler v. Martha Patricia Ferguson , 2015 Miss. App. LEXIS 582 ( 2015 )


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  •         IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 2014-CA-00476-COA
    LENNIE W. DINGLER AND LESIA C.L.                                          APPELLANTS
    DINGLER
    v.
    MARTHA PATRICIA FERGUSON                                                      APPELLEE
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                          12/10/2013
    TRIAL JUDGE:                               HON. TALMADGE D. LITTLEJOHN
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                 TISHOMINGO COUNTY CHANCERY
    COURT
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANTS:                   PHILLIP M. WHITEHEAD
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:                     JAK MCGEE SMITH
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                        CIVIL - CONTRACT
    TRIAL COURT DISPOSITION:                   DENIED THE APPELLANTS’ MOTION TO
    DISMISS; ORDERED THE APPELLANTS
    TO CONVEY CERTAIN REAL PROPERTY
    TO THE APPELLEE’S EX-HUSBAND, WHO
    IN TURN WAS ORDERED TO CONVEY
    THE REAL PROPERTY TO THE APPELLEE
    AS PART OF THE EQUITABLE
    DISTRIBUTION OF THEIR MARITAL
    ASSETS
    DISPOSITION:                               AFFIRMED - 11/10/2015
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:
    BEFORE GRIFFIS, P.J., MAXWELL AND JAMES, JJ.
    MAXWELL, J., FOR THE COURT:
    ¶1.    According to Lennie and Lesia Dingler, Kevin Ferguson voluntarily walked away
    from a contract to lease / purchase their convenience store, after paying more than one-third
    of the $150,000 purchase price. As a result, the Dinglers evicted Kevin’s estranged wife,
    Martha Patricia Ferguson (“Pattie”), who had been operating the store and living in the back
    of the property.
    ¶2.    Pattie sued the Dinglers as part of her divorce action against Kevin. In response, the
    Dinglers claimed Pattie lacked standing to sue them because her name was not on the lease.
    But Pattie did not sue them for breach of contract. She sued them for conspiring with Kevin
    to interfere with her rights to marital property. When the Dinglers forced Pattie out, they
    were not enforcing any contractual right to self-help. Rather, Kevin still had the right to
    possess the store under the lease / purchase agreement. And the chancellor found, contrary
    to the Dinglers’ assertions, Kevin never in fact voluntarily relinquished this right. Rather,
    both the Dinglers and Kevin acted like the lease was still in effect. The only difference was
    that Kevin’s dad, not Pattie, was running the store and living on the premises. On appeal,
    we will not disturb this finding, as it was supported by substantial evidence. Because the
    lease retained by Kevin was a marital asset, subject to equitable distribution, we find Pattie
    had a legally protected interest in it. So she had the necessary standing to sue the Dinglers
    for their interference.
    ¶3.    During the pendency of Pattie’s lawsuit, all Kevin’s obligations under the lease /
    purchase agreement were fulfilled—including paying the full purchase price, plus interest.
    Because the agreement required the Dinglers to convey the property to Kevin upon receipt
    of the purchase price, we affirm the final divorce judgment, which ordered the Dinglers to
    convey the property to Kevin, and for him to then convey the property to Pattie as part of the
    equitable distribution of their marital property.
    2
    Background Facts and Procedural History
    I.     Lease / Purchase Agreement
    ¶4.    Lennie and Lesia Dingler owned a convenience store on Highway 25 in Tishomingo,
    Mississippi, called “Lesia’s One Stop.” Ready to retire, they found a buyer, Kevin Ferguson,
    whom they agreed to finance.
    ¶5.    On July 23, 2009, the Dinglers and Kevin entered into a lease / purchase agreement.
    Under this agreement, Kevin would lease the store’s real property and other assets until he
    had paid the $150,000 purchase price in full. Kevin paid the Dinglers $5,000 upon signing.
    He then paid another $5,000 in September and $40,000 in October—for a total of $50,000
    in cash. The remaining $100,000 (plus 8% interest) was to be paid in monthly installments
    of $2,485.40. These monthly payments would start in November 2009 and continue for
    forty-seven months until October 2013.
    ¶6.    Per the agreement, any failure to pay the monthly rent within ten days of its due date
    would lead to default. Upon default, the Dinglers had the option to terminate the lease and
    retake the property. But upon payment in full, the Dinglers must convey the property by
    warranty deed to Kevin.
    II.    Pattie’s One Stop
    ¶7.    The day after entering the lease / purchase agreement, Kevin set up a limited-liability
    company with his wife, Pattie. The company’s name was Pattie’s One Stop, LLC. Its
    purpose was to operate the convenience store in Tishomingo, which they renamed “Pattie’s
    One Stop.” Pattie was to run the store while Kevin worked in Iraq as an independent
    3
    contractor.
    ¶8.    The Dinglers had agreed to train Pattie. From the time the lease began in July 2009
    through October 2009, the Dinglers continued to work at the store, showing Pattie how
    everything was done. During this training period, the Dinglers kept the store’s profits. But
    once Pattie took over in October 2009, she and Kevin got to keep any profit they generated.
    ¶9.    Pattie not only took over the store in October 2009, she also moved onto the property
    two months later. Pattie had been living in Alabama with Kevin’s father, James Ferguson.
    James moved his trailer behind the store. And Pattie began converting space in the back of
    the store into living quarters for her, Kevin, and Kevin’s teenaged son. When Kevin returned
    from Iraq in February 2010, he stayed with Pattie and his son in the back of the store and
    worked on the construction of the living space.
    III.   Marital Separation and Alleged Lease Termination
    ¶10.   In February 2010, Kevin and Pattie had been married for almost nine years. But their
    relationship was on the skids. Both had been involved in extramarital affairs. And Pattie
    testified Kevin had come home from Iraq “changed.” After a few weeks at home, Kevin
    returned overseas, not wanting to be married anymore.
    ¶11.   On May 14, 2010, the Dinglers appeared at the store with local law enforcement.
    They told Pattie that Kevin had terminated the lease / purchase agreement. So they were
    there to reclaim the store. Earlier that day, James went to the Dinglers and informed them
    Kevin wanted to surrender the store—and the more than $60,000 he had invested in it. James
    claimed to have a power of attorney for his son. So the Dinglers and James executed a hand-
    4
    written termination letter, which the Dinglers presented to Pattie that afternoon. The
    Dinglers eventually talked to Kevin on the phone. According to them, he confirmed he was
    tired of losing money through the store.
    ¶12.   While Pattie was forced out of the store and her home that day, her stepson was
    allowed to stay in the back apartment, and James kept living in his trailer. The Dinglers shut
    down the store for several days. When friends posted on social media, asking what was
    going on, Lesia responded that she and Lennie were not taking over the store. Rather, they
    were helping James run the store. Apparently, James had provided $35,000 of the $50,000
    down payment, which he would lose if the lease / purchase agreement was terminated early.
    James later testified he knew Kevin’s termination of the lease meant he (James) would lose
    his $35,000. That is why he hoped to rent the store from the Dinglers.
    IV.    Divorce Complaint and Emergency Hearing
    ¶13.   On May 19, 2010—five days after she was kicked out of her store and home—Pattie
    sued Kevin for a divorce. In addition to Kevin, she named her father-in-law, James, as a
    defendant. She claimed Kevin and James had conspired with the Dinglers to divest her of
    her interest in the store, which Pattie claimed was marital property. Pattie amended her
    complaint two weeks later to add the Dinglers as defendants. Both James and the Dinglers
    responded with motions to dismiss. They claimed Pattie had not been a signatory to the lease
    / purchase agreement and, thus, had no standing to enforce any rights under it.
    ¶14.   The chancery court held an emergency hearing a week later on June 8. While James
    and the Dinglers appeared at this hearing, Kevin did not. With Kevin still working in Iraq,
    5
    Pattie had not been able to serve him with process.
    ¶15.   At this hearing, Pattie admitted she had not signed the lease / purchase agreement.
    But she explained how Kevin had bought the store for her, to give her something to do while
    he was away, and how the two had created an LLC to operate the store. Pattie also described
    how the store was not only a marital business but also their marital home. On cross-
    examination, Pattie was asked if she knew modifying the store to build an apartment was a
    violation of the lease.1 Pattie responded that the Dinglers knew about the living space and
    did not mind. In fact, Lennie even helped them with one of the construction projects.
    ¶16.   Lennie confirmed that neither he nor his wife voiced any concern over the apartment
    or any other activity that might have been construed as a default.2 On May 14, 2010, Kevin
    was current on all his lease payments. And the Dinglers had no intention to declare a default.
    Rather, it was James who initiated the termination by telling the Dinglers Kevin wanted to
    surrender possession of the store.
    ¶17.   At the end of this hearing, the chancellor granted Pattie’s emergency request to be
    restored to the marital home. The chancellor found no proof that James had a power of
    attorney to terminate the lease / purchase agreement. So he ordered the Dinglers to return
    the store to Pattie, who would be permitted to continue to operate it if she complied with the
    1
    The lease / purchase agreement forbid any physical modifications to the building
    without the Dinglers’ written preapproval.
    2
    The lease / purchase agreement listed “allow[ing] any illegal activity” as a default.
    And much of the testimony at the emergency hearing centered on whether Pattie allowed
    gambling and after-hours drinking at the store. (Tishomingo is a “dry” county.) But Lennie
    testified none of these alleged activities had factored into the decision to terminate the lease.
    6
    lease / purchase agreement’s terms.
    V.     Final Hearing on the Merits
    ¶18.   Over the next three years, Pattie continued to operate the store and stayed current on
    monthly payments. Eventually, she served Kevin with a divorce complaint, when he was
    back home on vacation. Because much more than 120 days had passed since filing her
    original divorce complaint against Kevin,3 Pattie served him with a new action—an action
    consolidated with her ongoing case against the Dinglers.4
    ¶19.   In January 2013, Pattie presented her case for divorce based on Kevin’s uncondoned
    adultery. Kevin did not appear to defend himself. Because Pattie proved her claim, the
    chancellor granted her a fault-based divorce. At the end of the divorce hearing, the Dinglers
    once again moved to dismiss Pattie’s claims against them. This motion was denied. And the
    hearing was continued to July 2013, when all property issues would be resolved.
    ¶20.   At this final hearing, Lennie testified Pattie was current on all monthly payments
    through May 2013. At this point, Pattie tendered a check for the final six payments. But
    Lennie refused to cash it. Despite collecting monthly payments for three years, Lennie
    insisted the lease had been terminated by Kevin back in May 2010.5 Lennie tried to introduce
    3
    Under Rule 4(h), if the service of the summons and complaint cannot be served on
    a defendant within 120 days (and no extension or good-cause showing is made), the action
    will be dismissed against that defendant without prejudice. M.R.C.P. 4(h).
    4
    After consolidation, Pattie filed a third amended complaint. For reasons unclear
    from the record, this complaint dropped James as a defendant.
    5
    Lennie also testified, without much specificity, that Pattie had violated the lease in
    other ways since the court ordered she be allowed to return. But Lennie said he did not
    exercise his right to terminate the lease because he believed the emergency order prevented
    7
    a document purporting to be the power of attorney Kevin had signed over to James back in
    April 2010. But the chancellor refused to admit the document, finding it had not been
    properly executed or recorded.
    ¶21.   Lesia testified next. She admitted she had posted on Facebook back in May 2010 that
    she and Lennie were not taking back the store. Rather, they were helping James run the
    store. She also admitted that by the time of the final hearing, August 2013, she and Lennie
    had been paid the entire $150,000 purchase price (plus interest).
    ¶22.   When it was Pattie’s turn to testify, she presented a series of emails from Kevin. In
    them, Kevin kept trying to use the store as leverage, saying she could have it if she would
    grant him a no-fault divorce.
    ¶23.   From this evidence, the chancellor concluded Kevin had never terminated the lease.
    Instead, his actions after May 2010 showed he still believed the lease was in effect. The
    Dinglers too, despite their assertions, never acted like the lease had been terminated. Though
    they made Pattie leave, they allowed James and his grandson to live on the property. And
    as they told others, the plan was for James to run the store on Kevin’s behalf.
    ¶24.   Because Pattie had finished making all required payments, the chancellor ordered the
    Dinglers to convey the property to Kevin by warranty deed, in accordance with the lease /
    purchase agreement. The store was marital property. And after a detailed Ferguson
    analysis,6 the chancellor awarded the store to Pattie. Kevin was ordered to deed the store to
    him from doing so.
    6
    Ferguson v. Ferguson, 
    639 So. 2d 921
    , 928 (Miss. 1994) (providing guidelines for
    chancellors to consider when attempting an equitable distribution of the marital property).
    8
    Pattie as soon as he received the deed from the Dinglers.
    ¶25.   The chancellor entered a final judgment in March 2014. The Dinglers timely
    appealed.
    Discussion
    I.     Pattie’s Standing
    ¶26.   At every stage, the Dinglers have insisted Pattie lacked standing to sue them, as she
    neither signed nor was a named third-party beneficiary of the agreement. Standing is a
    question of law, which we review de novo. Clark Sand Co. v. Kelly, 
    60 So. 3d 149
    , 154
    (¶12) (Miss. 2011).
    ¶27.   At first blush, it does seem unusual that Pattie could seemingly drag the Dinglers into
    her divorce with Kevin, even though she was not a part of the lease / purchase agreement.
    Among other things, standing required Pattie suffer an “injury in fact”—that is, “an invasion
    of a legally protected interest which is (a) concrete and particularized and (b) actual or
    imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical.” 
    Id. at 154-55
    (¶14) (quoting Lujan v. Defenders
    of Wildlife, 
    504 U.S. 555
    , 560-61 (1991)). According to the Dinglers, Pattie suffered no
    injury in fact because she had no legally protected interest springing from the lease. But
    Pattie did not file suit for breach of contract or specific performance. She filed for divorce.
    And as part of her divorce action, she sued the Dinglers for conspiring with her husband to
    interfere with her right to possess the marital home and run the marital business.
    ¶28.   While perhaps uncommon, suing third parties as part of a divorce is not
    unprecedented—especially when the third party claims an interest to a marital asset. E.g.,
    9
    A & L, Inc. v. Grantham, 
    747 So. 2d 832
    , 837 (¶10) (Miss. 1999) (consolidated case that
    included, as part of the divorce, the wife’s action against her husband’s family, to whom the
    husband had fraudulently transferred corporate assets after he separated from his wife);
    Blount v. Blount, 
    231 Miss. 398
    , 405-06, 
    95 So. 2d 545
    , 548 (1957) (pre-equitable
    distribution case where the husband’s father had to return property to his son, which had been
    conveyed in an effort to drain off assets that would otherwise be considered for alimony and
    child-support purposes). See also Deborah H. Bell, Bell of Mississippi Family Law §
    19.01[2], 463-64 (2005).
    ¶29.   On May 10, 2010—the day the Dinglers tried to remove Pattie from the store—the
    Dinglers had not declared the lease to be in default. In other words, they made no claim that
    full ownership and possession of the store reverted to them by operation of the lease /
    purchase agreement. Instead, on that day, Kevin still had the right to possess the store under
    the lease.
    ¶30.   This right was clearly a marital asset. See Hemsley v. Hemsley, 
    639 So. 2d 909
    , 915
    (Miss. 1994) (“defin[ing] marital property for the purpose of divorce as being any and all
    property acquired or accumulated during the marriage”). Kevin had entered the lease with
    the Dinglers during his marriage to Pattie, setting up an LLC with her to run the store.
    Moreover, Kevin used income accumulated during the marriage to pay the $50,000 down
    payment and subsequent rent payments. And in December 2010, the store became the
    couple’s marital residence. And as a marital asset, the lease / purchase agreement was
    subject to equitable distribution. See 
    id. (“Assets so
    acquired or accumulated during the
    10
    course of the marriage are marital assets and are subject to an equitable distribution by the
    chancellor.”).
    ¶31.      For this reason, we find Pattie, like the wives in A & L and Blount, had standing to
    legally challenge the Dinglers’ claim that Kevin, after he left his wife, voluntarily transferred
    back to them his interest in this marital asset. Further, this claim was properly consolidated
    with Pattie’s action. See A & 
    L, 747 So. 2d at 837
    (¶10); 
    Blount, 231 Miss. at 408
    , 95 So. 2d
    at 549.
    II.    The Dinglers’ Contractual Rights
    ¶32.      The Dinglers also argue the chancellor erred by not allowing the Dinglers to reenter
    and retake possession of the store in May 2010. They claim the chancellor—by ordering
    them to allow Pattie back in and continue to operate the store under the terms of the lease /
    purchase agreement—improperly interfered with the contract between them and Kevin,
    essentially invalidating the contract’s terms. Yet the Dinglers fail to point to which
    contractual terms were ignored.
    ¶33.      As we emphasized in the previous section, Lennie admitted at the emergency hearing
    he and Lesia had not exercised their contractual right to self-help. They had not deemed
    Kevin to be in default. And until James approached them the morning of May 10, 2010, they
    had no plans to terminate the lease / purchase agreement. So their decision to retake the
    property that day was not based on the contract’s terms. Instead, it was based on James’s
    representation that Kevin wanted to walk away from the contract—and the more than
    $60,000 he had paid toward the purchase price. For this reason, we fail to see how the
    11
    chancellor improperly interfered with the Dinglers’ contractual rights.
    ¶34.   In his emergency order, the chancellor actually affirmed the Dinglers’ rights under the
    lease / purchase agreement. While ordering Pattie be restored to the property, the chancellor
    was clear she had to comply with the terms of the lease / purchase agreement—including
    timely monthly payments and no illegal activity—lest the Dinglers exercise their right to
    terminate the contract.
    ¶35.   By the time of the August 2013 final hearing, Lesia admitted she and her husband
    received the benefit of their bargain. Pattie had timely paid each $2,485.40 monthly payment
    in the three years since the emergency hearing. And she had months earlier tendered a check
    for the remainder of the purchase price. Under the terms of the lease / purchase agreement,
    “[u]pon payment in full of the $150,000 plus accrued interest,” the Dinglers were required
    to convey the store’s real property to Kevin by warranty deed and its personal property and
    fixtures by a bill of sale. The Dinglers do not argue they were not paid in full. So we find
    the chancellor’s order that they convey the store to Kevin by warranty deed did no more than
    hold them to the terms they agreed to.
    ¶36.   If the chancellor interfered with anything, it was the seeming windfall the Dinglers
    would have received had the chancellor agreed Kevin terminated the lease / purchase
    agreement in May 2010. We recognize the nature of self-financing carries a certain amount
    of risk and reward. Had Kevin not been able to keep up with the monthly payments or
    otherwise been declared in default, the Dinglers would have been entitled under the
    agreement to keep all payments plus repossess the store. But, again, Kevin did not default.
    12
    Instead, according to the Dinglers, Kevin merely said the Dinglers could keep the $50,000
    and the store. And even though the lease would be terminated, the Fergusons (minus Pattie)
    could continue to pay rent and live and work at the store.
    ¶37.   We find the chancellor’s interference was warranted because of the severe negative
    consequences such a windfall would have had on Pattie. It has been a longstanding principle
    in Mississippi—even before the adoption of equitable distribution—that one spouse, in
    anticipation of divorce, cannot convey assets to a third-party to keep them shielded from the
    other spouse. See 
    Blount, 231 Miss. at 411-19
    , 95 So. 2d at 551-54 (affirming a chancellor’s
    decision to set aside a husband’s conveyance of property to his father because the husband’s
    purpose was to divest himself of any assets that would have been subjected to alimony); see
    also A & 
    L, 747 So. 2d at 843
    (¶48) (“In a divorce action a chancellor is justified in setting
    aside, as fraudulent, a conveyance made by one of the spouses, where the conveyance was
    made with the exclusive intent of cheating the other spouse out of their share of marital
    assets.”).
    ¶38.   In both Blount and A & L, the husband had conveyed property titled in his name to
    family members. And in both cases, the chancellor voided the conveyance as a fraudulent
    attempt to keep assets out of the wife’s reach. Here, based on the evidence, the chancellor
    found no proof Kevin had in fact terminated the lease, so there was no actual conveyance to
    avoid. But we find the equitable principle from Blount and A & L still applies. Kevin could
    not have voluntarily terminated the lease for the purpose of depriving Pattie use of the marital
    home and cheating her out of her share of the marital business. See A & 
    L, 747 So. 2d at 843
    13
    (¶48).
    ¶39.     We recognize, in contrast to the relatives in Blount and A & L, the Dinglers may not
    have been privy to Kevin’s matrimonial motive for relinquishing the store. But still, their
    advantageous “repossession” of the store would have greatly disadvantaged Pattie. Thus, we
    find no error in the chancellor’s refusal to recognize their alleged gratuitous right to repossess
    the store.
    III.   James’s Power of Attorney to Terminate Lease
    ¶40.     The Dinglers also challenge the chancellor’s ruling to exclude the document
    establishing James’s power of attorney for Kevin. While conceding this document was not
    executed and recorded according to Mississippi law, the Dinglers assert it did not have to be.
    They insist Kevin had executed a military power of attorney, exempt from state requirements
    and having equal effect as a power of attorney executed according to state law.7 See 10
    U.S.C. § 1044b (2012).8
    ¶41.     The standard of review for admissibility of evidence is abuse of discretion. Whitten
    v. Cox, 
    799 So. 2d 1
    , 13 (¶27) (Miss. 2000). As part of his discretion, the chancellor could
    7
    Alternatively, the Dinglers argue the power of attorney had to be accepted under
    Mississippi law—namely, Mississippi Code Annotated section 89-3-5 (Rev. 2011), which
    validates conveyances, contracts, and instruments that have been acknowledged by
    commissioned officers in the service of the United States armed forces. But the power of
    attorney here was signed by a non-commissioned officer, so any reliance on section 89-3-5
    is misplaced.
    8
    Under section 10 U.S.C. § 1044b, “[a] military power of attorney . . . is exempt from
    any requirement of form, substance, formality, or recording that is provided for powers of
    attorney under the laws of a State” and “shall be given the same legal effect as a power of
    attorney prepared and executed in accordance with the laws of the State concerned.”
    14
    not ignore applicable federal law. But here, we note there is some question whether section
    1044b actually applied to the document the Dinglers tried to introduce.9 We need not resolve
    that question on appeal, however. Even assuming the Dinglers presented a valid military
    power of attorney, we still find the chancellor’s refusal to admit this document was not
    reversible error, based on his finding the lease / purchase agreement had never, in fact, been
    terminated.
    ¶42.   “Where error involves the admission or exclusion of evidence, this Court will not
    reverse unless the error adversely affects a substantial right of a party.” 
    Whitten, 799 So. 2d at 13
    (¶27). The Dinglers claim they detrimentally relied on James’s assertion that he, as
    Kevin’s power of attorney, was terminating the agreement. But the chancellor found the
    evidence proved otherwise. Based on the evidence presented at the final hearing, the
    chancellor concluded—regardless of whether James had a power of attorney—Kevin and
    the Dinglers never in fact terminated the lease.
    ¶43.   The chancellor based this notion on both Kevin’s and the Dinglers’ actions after May
    10, 2010. Kevin’s father and son continued to live on the property. And Kevin’s
    9
    Neither Kevin nor James appeared at the final hearing to verify this was a document
    executed by Kevin to give James a general power of attorney. The document itself states,
    “This is a military power of attorney prepared and executed pursuant to Title 10, United
    States Code, Section 1044b, by a person authorized to receive legal assistance from the
    military services.” But beyond this statement, the Dinglers offered no proof to corroborate
    that Kevin was in fact “a person authorized to receive legal assistance from the military
    services.” Section 1044 does permit the military to provide legal assistance for civilian
    affairs to “[c]ivilian employees of the Federal Government serving in locations where legal
    assistance from non-military legal assistance providers is not reasonably available.” 10
    U.S.C. § 1044(7) (2012). But according to Pattie, Kevin was not an employee of the federal
    government. Rather, he was an independent contractor for a private company that had a
    contract with the Department of Defense.
    15
    father—who claimed to have Kevin’s power of attorney—intended to run the store instead
    of Pattie. The Dinglers admitted they had no intention to repossess the property or start
    running the store again. Instead, they were going to let other members of Kevin’s family
    continue to operate Pattie’s One Stop.
    ¶44.   We will not disturb a chancellor’s finding of fact “unless manifestly wrong or clearly
    erroneous.” Consol. Pipe & Supply Co. v. Colter, 
    735 So. 2d 958
    , 961 (¶13) (Miss. 1999).
    And after reviewing the record, we find no clear error.
    ¶45.   Because the lease was never terminated but paid off in the ensuing three years, we
    affirm the judgment ordering the Dinglers to convey the store to Kevin, who in turn was
    ordered to convey the store to Pattie as part of the equitable distribution of the marital
    property.
    ¶46. THE JUDGMENT OF THE TISHOMINGO COUNTY CHANCERY COURT
    IS AFFIRMED. ALL COSTS OF THIS APPEAL ARE ASSESSED TO THE
    APPELLANTS.
    LEE, C.J., IRVING AND GRIFFIS, P.JJ., BARNES, ISHEE, CARLTON, FAIR,
    JAMES AND WILSON, JJ., CONCUR.
    16
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2014-CA-00476-COA

Citation Numbers: 193 So. 3d 644, 2015 Miss. App. LEXIS 582

Judges: Griffis, Maxwell, James, Lee, Irving, Barnes, Ishee, Carlton, Fair, Wilson

Filed Date: 11/10/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024