90 So. 2d 169 | Miss. | 1956
The parties hereto were married to each other in 1925 and as a result of said marriage they had two children, both of whom are now adults and are married. Their marital life was not pleasant and in May 1953 the appel-lee filed a suit for divorce and alimony and attorneys fees against the appellant in the Chancery Court of J act-son County, Mississippi. At that time they owned a house and lot in the City of Ocean Springs, Mississippi, which had been bought with their joint funds in 1945, the deed thereto being made to both parties in equal share, and a deed of trust was executed by them to secure a balance due on the purchase price. Upon learning of appellee’s intention to file the suit the appellant requested her to withhold prosecution of the suit and agreed with her that if she would drop the case he would convey to her his entire interest in the property. The bill for divorce had been signed and the affidavit thereto executed on May 12, 1953, and it had been filed on May 14, 1953, and
The parties resumed the marital relation and the ap-pellee went on a short visit to their son in Illinois. Thereafter she returned home and resumed residence with the appellant and later, about the end of July, she left and went back to Chicago where she spent two days with her son and then she went to Cleveland, Ohio, where she has continuously since resided. In the intervening time she made four visits back to Ocean Springs and stayed two or three days at a time, and on the last visit she told appellant that she was going to get a divorce from him. A final decree of divorce was granted in Cleveland, Ohio, on November 28, 1955, but after the filing of the Ohio suit and before the entry of the final decree the appellant brought suit in the Chancery Court of Jackson County, Mississippi, to establish his interest in the home and for a partition sale thereof. An answer and cross bill was filed by the appellee in which she set up the fact to be that a final divorce was granted to her in Ohio and a copy of the decree of November 28, 1955, was attached as an exhibit. She denied that the appellant has any interest in the property in question and averred the fact to be that he had continued in possession of the property since the separation. She admitted that he had a veto interest in the sale of the property until the divorce decree was entered, and she admitted that he had continued to make the monthly payments on the mortgage, which according to the proof amounted to a total of $1,181.28, which amount covers not only the principal but also the interest
In the case of Burnett v. Smith, 93 Miss. 566 (572), 47 So. 117, we held that “ a man of sound mind may execute a will or a deed from any sort of motive satisfactory to him, whether that motive be love, affection, gratitude, partiality, prejudice, or even a whim or caprice. ’ ’
In the case of Williams v. Green, 128 Miss. 446, 91 So. 39, we held that a husband may make a valid deed to his wife to the homestead, without her signature, and that such deed will convey the title, but will not defeat the husband’s right to occupy it as a home, and, as the law requires his consent to his wife’s alienation of the homestead, his right to the homestead can not be impaired so long as the place is used as a homestead. Of course, when the parties are divorced the husband no longer has the right to occupy the property as a homestead.
We think that these authorities as well as what was said in Hemphill v. Hemphill, 197 Miss. 783, 20 So. 2d 79, afford ample support for the chancellor’s decree, adjudging appellee to be sole owner of the property and awarding possession thereof to appellee, and the decree in that respect is affirmed.
This brings us to the question whether the appellant is entitled to recover from the appellee the payments which he made on the note and deed of trust in the sum
If the appellant is still in possession of the property, he is liable to the appellee for the reasonable rental value thereof from and after the date of the divorce decree, and the cause will be remanded to the lower court for a determination thereof, as well as for any other proceedings not in conflict with this opinion.