L.H. Manning v. Robert Perry ( 2017 )


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  •         IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 2016-CA-00444-COA
    L.H. MANNING, VIRGINIA WARREN, JOHN                                     APPELLANTS
    HENRY MANNING, GEANNIE JONES,
    NIKIESHA FUNCHESS, AND EVA MANNING
    v.
    ROBERT PERRY AND PAIGE PERRY                                              APPELLEES
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                        09/10/2015
    TRIAL JUDGE:                             HON. J. LARRY BUFFINGTON
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:               PIKE COUNTY CHANCERY COURT
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS:                JOHNELL MOSBY MATTHEWS
    CHRYSTAL MICHELLE MATTHEWS
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEES:                  WAYNE DOWDY
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                      CIVIL - REAL PROPERTY
    DISPOSITION:                             AFFIRMED: 11/07/2017
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:
    EN BANC.
    FAIR, J., FOR THE COURT:
    ¶1.   This action involves a roughly seventy-eight acre parcel of land in Pike County, once
    owned by Henry and Addie Manning. Part of an eighty-six acre parcel that had been titled
    in their names, they deeded it to their son Ed in 1994. Following his death in 2011, his
    widow and sole devisee, Joan Manning, sold the seventy-eight acre parcel to Robert and
    Paige Perry in a transaction financed by the Pike National Bank (“the Bank”).
    ¶2.   Ed’s siblings, claiming Ed was only the trustee of their parents’ former land, sued
    Joan, the Perrys, and the Bank for an adjudication of their ownership of the property as
    beneficiaries of a constructive trust of which Ed had been trustee. The chancellor granted
    motions for partial summary judgment filed by the Perrys and the Bank, dismissing the Perrys
    and the Bank as defendants.
    ¶3.    The chancellor certified that his partial summary judgment was final, and the
    Mannings have appealed as to the Perrys. Joan remains the sole defendant, litigating title to
    the remaining 9.05 acres of the original eighty-six on which the Manning family home is
    located. Joan had deeded the home to the Mannings upon the dismissal of their first suit
    against her.
    Record Title
    ¶4.    An examination of the Pike County land deed records reflects that in 1994 Henry and
    Addie executed a quitclaim deed conveying their eighty-six acres of real property to their son
    Ed, one of their seven children. Very shortly thereafter, Henry died; Addie followed him in
    death in 1998. They were survived by Ed and his six siblings. Ed’s siblings are the plaintiffs
    and appellants in this cause.
    ¶5.    In 2011, Ed died at home in Texas. Probated in his home state, his will was also
    probated in an ancillary proceeding in Mississippi. Pursuant to his will, the eighty-six acre
    parcel deeded to him by his parents passed to his wife Joan along with all of his other assets.
    Passage of title was reflected in a final judgment in the Mississippi probate action, which was
    filed of record in the Pike County land deed records. Thereafter Joan, relying on that
    judgment, sold seventy-eight of the eighty-six acres to the Perrys for almost $244,000 by
    warranty deed dated October 18, 2013.
    2
    ¶6.    On the date of the deed from Joan to the Perrys, Joan held clear record title to all
    eighty-six acres described in Ed’s deed from his parents. Shortly before the sale, however,
    the Mannings had filed against Joan for the first time. They sought adjudication of the deed
    as part of an established family trust by their parents and conversion of the quitclaim to Ed
    to a trust instrument. The Mannings did not file a lis pendens notice until after Joan’s deed
    to the Perrys had been executed and recorded, as had the deed of trust in favor of the Bank.
    ¶7.    The Perrys obtained a title opinion prior to closing and a loan from the Bank, and
    purchased both lender’s and owner’s title insurance. Around $94,000 in a down payment
    came from their funds, and the Bank loaned them the remainder. They testified that they
    relied on the advice of their realtor and their lawyer and the land deed records of Pike County
    in closing on their purchase of the seventy-eight acres.
    Claim of the Mannings
    ¶8.    At the time record title passed to the Perrys, there was no active claim to the realty in
    question reflected in the land deed records by Ed’s six siblings. There was, however, a
    pending lawsuit against Ed’s widow, Joan, by the Mannings. It was dismissed from the Pike
    County Chancery Court, refiled in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of
    Mississippi, dismissed again, and refiled for the third time in this action. In each of their
    filings, the Mannings asserted that Ed was not really a fee simple owner of the real estate at
    issue, but was rather a trustee of the land for himself and his siblings. On their return to the
    chancery court, they again filed for reformation of the 1994 deed and imposition of a
    3
    constructive trust on the 9.05 acres now titled of record in Joan’s name and, as well, the
    seventy-eight acres held by the Perrys.
    Course of Litigation
    ¶9.    The Mannings filed their first suit seeking reformation of the deed and imposition of
    a constructive trust against Joan on August 13, 2013. That first filing was pending on
    October 18, 2013, when she sold the seventy-eight acres at issue to the Perrys. A lis pendens
    notice reflecting the litigation was filed of record on November 8, 2013, after the deed to the
    Perrys had been filed. A little less than a month after the lis pendens was filed, the Mannings
    dismissed their first case against Joan.
    ¶10.   Over the ensuing two years, the Mannings filed two more actions, the first in federal
    district court based on diversity of the parties. When it was asserted and acknowledged by
    the district court that the Bank was a necessary party by virtue of its note for $142,006.02
    from the Perrys and the deed of trust securing it, the case was dismissed without prejudice.
    The Mannings then filed their third case against Joan, the Perrys, and the Bank in the
    Chancery Court of Pike County.1 A second lis pendens notice was filed by the Mannings,
    and Joan and the Perrys answered. Their answer included several affirmative defenses,
    among them the statute of frauds and two statutes of limitations. Joan and the Perrys failed,
    however, to formally assert their defense of “bona fide purchaser of value without notice,”
    1
    The Mannings initially brought several claims regarding the deed, including its
    authenticity and validity. Their challenge was abandoned in the lower court.
    4
    which was nevertheless tried and relied on by the chancellor in considering the motion for
    partial summary judgment now before this Court.
    ¶11.   After several months of discovery, the Perrys and the Bank moved for summary
    judgment, as did Joan and the Ed Manning estate. The chancellor granted partial summary
    judgment in favor of the Perrys and the Bank, but denied the motions of Joan and her
    husband’s estate. The chancellor found the Perrys were bona fide purchasers for value
    without notice2 and granted summary judgment. The chancellor subsequently denied the
    Manning siblings’ motion to reconsider, so they appealed to this Court.
    The Summary Judgments on Appeal and
    Purchase Money Lien of the Bank
    ¶12.   The chancellor specifically held that his ruling was exclusively based on his
    determination that the Perrys were bona fide purchasers without notice. He held that his
    decision was not based on any consideration of the statutes of limitations relied on by the
    Perrys and Pike National Bank, which had claimed to be bona fide lienors without notice.
    ¶13.   Though they relied on the concept of a bona fide purchaser without notice, they
    argued at length in their brief that the statutes of limitation and the statute of frauds were
    controlling. They urged that the Mannings filed too late. Mississippi Code Annotated section
    15-1-39 (Rev. 2012) provides:
    2
    At the time of the hearing, the only lis pendens in effect was filed by the Mannings
    some two years after the Perrys had purchased the property. The previous lawsuit from 2013
    had been dismissed in December 2013. The federal litigation had likewise been dismissed.
    5
    Bills for relief, in case of the existence of a trust not cognizable by the courts
    of common law and in all other cases not herein provided for, shall be filed
    within ten years after the cause thereof shall accrue and not after, saving,
    however, to all persons under disability of infancy or unsoundness of mind, the
    like period of time after such disability shall be removed. However, the saving
    in favor of persons under disability of unsoundness of mind shall never extend
    longer than thirty-one years.
    ¶14.   A similar statute was also argued. Mississippi Code Annotated section 15-1-7 (Rev.
    2012) provides:
    A person may not make an entry or commence an action to recover land except
    within ten years next after the time at which the right to make the entry or to
    bring the action shall have first accrued to some person through whom he
    claims, or, if the right shall not have accrued to any person through whom he
    claims, then except within ten years next after the time at which the right to
    make the entry or bring the action shall have first accrued to the person making
    or bringing the same.
    ¶15.   The chancellor did not discuss Mississippi Code Annotated section 15-3-1 (Rev.
    2012), the statute of frauds, also argued by the Perrys and the Bank, which provides that “an
    action shall not be brought whereby to charge a Defendant or other party . . . upon any
    contract for the sale of land . . . unless the promise or agreement upon which such action may
    be brought . . . shall be in writing and signed by the party to be charged therewith.”
    ¶16.   In his ruling in favor of the Perrys and the Bank, the chancellor stated:
    Okay. The Court has heard the arguments, has reviewed the Briefs, and the
    [m]otions that are filed herein, and I am going to address the parties from the
    easiest to the hardest.
    As to Pike National Bank there is no question. I have looked at all the
    [a]ffidavits. They are entitled to summary judgment. As a matter of fact, based
    on them extending money and nothing being of record that would have
    notified them that there was any question as to the ownership of this property;
    6
    therefore, they are entitled to a dismissal with prejudice and to retain their lien
    on the subject property.
    As to Robert Perry and wife, Paige Perry, a little bit closer call, but the Court
    is satisfied that they are, likewise, entitled to a judgment under the summary
    judgment. And I am basing this on bona fide purchase of the value without
    notice. Even from the argument of Ms. [Joan] Manning, they raised this
    question with their attorney. The Court notes that the only filing that is before
    the Court at this time is a 2015 filing. Therefore, this was filed after they had
    purchased the property. The lis pendens that is on file may have been delayed
    to a previous lawsuit, however, that lawsuit evidently was dismissed and a new
    one was filed. So, therefore, they are entitled to the property.
    ....
    In making those rulings and basically ignoring any statute of limitations or
    statute of frauds as to the Mannings, I mean, to the Perrys, and Pike National
    Bank because I don’t think there is any.
    As to the estate of Edward Richard Manning and Ms. [Joan] Manning, herself,
    which she deeded part of the property to her, the lawsuit will remain and go
    forward.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶17.   “In reviewing a trial court’s grant or denial of summary judgment, the well-established
    standard of review is de novo.” Crist v. Loyacono, 
    65 So. 3d 837
    , 842 (¶12) (Miss. 2011).
    Summary judgment is appropriate where “the pleadings, depositions, answers to
    interrogatories and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is
    no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment
    as a matter of law.” M.R.C.P. 56(c). “The evidence must be viewed in the light most
    favorable to the party against whom the motion has been made.” 
    Crist, 65 So. 3d at 842
    (¶12) (citation omitted).
    7
    ¶18.   We also review the existence of a constructive trust de novo. Barriffe v. Estate of
    Nelson, 
    153 So. 3d 613
    , 618 (¶26) (Miss. 2014) (citation omitted). “The party advocating
    a constructive trust must show by clear and convincing proof that a constructive trust is
    necessary as a matter of law.” 
    Id. DISCUSSION ¶19.
      Since their first filing in 2013, the Manning siblings have maintained the position that
    they all now possess the property and that Ed never intended to claim sole ownership of the
    property.   Further, the siblings claim they shared all expenses for maintenance and
    preservation of the property. One of the siblings, L.H. Manning, was reportedly living in the
    Mannings’ home when Ed’s will was probated in 2013. In their opposition to summary
    judgment, the Manning siblings submitted affidavits from four siblings and an affidavit of
    a neighbor who witnessed a conversation between L.H. and Robert Perry. They also
    submitted a letter from Ed to L.H. regarding the sale of the disputed property; Ed’s letter
    used the words “we” and “us,” including the siblings as interested persons. Based on the
    evidence in the record, the siblings make a legitimate issue of whether or not the parents, Ed,
    and his siblings contemplated that when Ed died, the property would be transferred to them.
    The siblings also claim that the Perrys were aware of a pending lawsuit between themselves
    and Joan when they purchased the subject property.
    1.     Implied or Constructive Trust
    ¶20.   The Manning siblings assert that the 1994 deed is an implied or constructive trust and
    8
    not a simple quitclaim deed, which it appears to be on its face. L.H. claimed in his affidavit
    that Stewart Robison, the preparer of the deed, did not talk to Henry or Addie concerning
    their intentions for the deed. Rather, L.H. asserted, Robison only spoke to L.H. and two
    other siblings, all of whom stated that their parents wished to make Ed a trustee, who would
    later divide the property with all of them. Robison, the lawyer who drafted the deed,
    provided an affidavit to the contrary:
    At no time did anyone, including L.H. Manning nor the Grantors, Henry
    Manning and Addie Manning, make any statement regarding the creation of
    a constructive trust in the deed or any other type of trust or that the property
    was to be held in trust by Edward Richard Manning, other than an outright
    grant of the title to the Grantee, Edward Richard Manning . . . . At the hospital,
    I introduced myself to Mr. Henry Manning and his wife, Mrs. Addie Manning.
    Mr. Manning was unable to speak because of his medical treatment devices.
    I am convinced that Mr. Henry Manning understood the Quitclaim Deed,
    freely and voluntarily signing it, and that the Quitclaim Deed was intended to
    vest in fee simple title in Edward Richard Manning.
    Statute of Limitations on Constructive Trusts
    ¶21.   “While an express trust must be written, implied [or constructive] trusts differ in that
    they arise by implication of the law or are presumed from the circumstances.” Smiley v.
    Yllander, 
    105 So. 3d 1171
    , 1175 (¶12) (Miss. Ct. App. 2012). The statute of limitations
    applicable to actions involving constructive trusts provides that “[b]ills for relief, in case of
    the existence of a trust not cognizable by the courts of common law and in all other cases not
    herein provided for, shall be filed within ten years after the cause thereof shall accrue and not
    after . . . .” Miss. Code Ann. § 15-1-39 (emphasis added). The statute begins to run “from
    the time the act or acts were committed by which the actor becomes chargeable.” Alvarez
    9
    v. Coleman, 
    642 So. 2d 361
    , 374 (Miss. 1994) (quoting Thames v. Holcomb, 
    230 Miss. 387
    ,
    395, 
    92 So. 2d 548
    , 552 (1957)). In other words, “[t]he right to enforce an implied or
    constructive trust accrues at the time of performance of the act from which the trust results.”
    Stebbins v. Hayes, 
    379 So. 2d 898
    , 903 (Miss. 1980).
    ¶22.   Here, the key question is what chargeable act caused the statute to run – the filing of
    the 1994 deed, Henry’s death in 1994, Addie’s death in 1998, Ed’s death in 2011, or the
    ancilliary probate of Ed’s will in June 2013. The Manning siblings’ situation is similar to
    that of the siblings in Thames. In Thames, Clyde Holcomb asked his siblings to sign a deed
    putting an old family house in his name so he could refinance it and avoid foreclosure.
    
    Thames, 230 Miss. at 395
    , 92 So. 2d at 552. Holcomb promised he would make his nine
    siblings equal heirs to the property after he obtained the loan. 
    Id. The siblings
    agreed, and
    Holcomb got the loan, but he did not deliver new deeds to his siblings. 
    Id. at 396,
    92 So. 2d
    at 552. The Court held the siblings’ cause of action accrued on the day that the loan was
    made and the deed of trust was signed, because the siblings expected to get their deeds at that
    time. 
    Id. ¶23. Following
    the court’s reasoning in Thames, section 15-1-39 could have begun to run
    in 1994, when the deed was executed and recorded, giving notice to the world of an
    unrestricted transfer of all their property by Henry and Addie to their son Ed. More likely,
    however, the family logically intended for Ed to hold title and perform his duties as trustee
    by deeding over the property to himself and his siblings when Addie died. Had the property
    10
    remained in their hands until the last to die of Addie and Henry, then the statute would begin
    to run on Addie’s death in 1998. At that point any or all of the siblings had the right to
    clarify, by litigation if necessary, the title and insist Ed deed and vest each of his siblings
    with a full child’s part of the land to which they were entitled (and which they would have
    received on her death by intestate succession). Such a process would comport with intent of
    the members of the family if that intent was to avoid probate and, as well, provide a clear title
    to the children in accord with such an intent.
    ¶24.   So Ed’s siblings had until 2008 to make any conflicting claim, and specifically a claim
    for an implied or constructive trust. Instead, they waited until 2013, nearly twenty years later
    when all three of the parties to the deed in question were no longer able to express and/or
    take action to clarify the nature of the instrument at issue, which appears nowhere else in
    writing and of record in the land deeds of Pike County. Consequently, their claim is barred.
    To hold otherwise could significantly place the title search and title opinion process in
    jeopardy.
    2.     Bona Fide Purchasers and Lienors
    ¶25.   The Manning siblings hinge their claims on the assertion that the Perrys were not bona
    fide purchasers of the subject property. Mississippi Code Annotated section 89-5-3 (Rev.
    2011) provides for the effect of filing of the conveyances as notice and for the protection of
    bona fide purchasers for value:
    Failure to file such instrument with the clerk for record shall prevent any claim
    of priority by the holder of such instrument over any similar recorded
    11
    instrument affecting the same property, to the end that with reference to all
    instruments which may be filed for record under this section, the priority
    thereof shall be governed by the priority in time of the filing of the several
    instruments, in the absence of actual notice. But as between the parties and
    their heirs, and as to all subsequent purchasers with notice or without valuable
    consideration, said instruments shall nevertheless be valid and binding.
    “[A] real estate purchaser’s claim to be a bona fide purchaser for value without notice is ‘an
    affirmative defense and must be sustained by competent proof.’” Wheeler v. Burton, 
    958 So. 2d 1266
    , 1271 (¶18) (Miss. Ct. App. 2007) (quoting Memphis Hardwood v. Daniel, 
    771 So. 2d 924
    , 933 (¶32) (Miss. 2000)). The Perrys failed to raise an affirmative defense
    regarding their purchaser status, and they completely ignore the issue on appeal. Because we
    find the statutes of limitations to be dispositive, we find this issue is moot.
    ¶26.   We should note that the filing statute noted above states that “as between the parties
    and their heirs, and as to all purchasers with notice or without valuable consideration, said
    instruments shall nevertheless be valid and binding.”
    ¶27.   AFFIRMED.
    LEE, C.J., IRVING AND GRIFFIS, P.JJ., BARNES, CARLTON, GREENLEE
    AND WESTBROOKS, JJ., CONCUR. WILSON, J., CONCURS IN RESULT ONLY
    WITHOUT SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION. TINDELL, J., NOT
    PARTICIPATING.
    12
    

Document Info

Docket Number: NO. 2016–CA–00444–COA

Judges: Fair

Filed Date: 11/7/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024