The Mississippi Court of Appeals handed down five opinions today in five different areas of law: custody, PCR, wills and estates, criminal, and personal injury.
Culver v. Culver, 2021-CA-01108-COA (Civil – Custody)
Affirming the chancellor’s ruling changing physical custody from the mother to the father, holding that the chancellor did not err in finding an impending move out-of-state would constitute a material change in circumstances that would adversely impact the children’s welfare and that the chancellor’s analysis of the Albright factors was not manifestly wrong.
(6-3-0: Wilson, Westbrooks, and McDonald concurred in result only without separate written opinion; Lawrence did not participate.)
Brown v. State, 2022-CP-00069-COA (Civil – PCR)
Affirming denial of PCR motion, holding that the ineffective assistance of counsel claims were untimely, barred as successive, and precluded by res judicata; the circuit court was not required to grant the plaintiff’s MSJ or find the State in contempt for not responding to it; and the circuit court was not obligated to conduct an evidentiary hearing.
(10-0)
Roosa v. Roosa, 2022-CA-00128-COA (Civil – Wills, Trusts & Estates)
Affirming the chancellor’s estate orders in a 15-year-long legal saga over the estate of an astronaut, holding that the challenging beneficiary (1) waived the argument that the executor did not have authority to donate property to a foundation and (2) did not secure a ruling from the chancellor on the issue of whether the donation met the requirements of a valid inter vivos gift.
(9-1-0: Wilson concurred in part and in the result without separate written opinion.)
Practice Point – This decisions is a good reminder that you have to get a ruling from the trial court on an issue before you can appeal the issue:
Trest v. State, 2021-KA-00968-COA (Criminal – Felony)
Affirming conviction of molestation, holding that the circuit court did not abuse its discretion by admitting evidence of prior bad acts (of molestation) or denying a mistrial when the witness to the prior molestation said that the defendant had molested “us” or by admitting evidence under the tender-years exception, and that the evidence was sufficient to support the conviction.
(8-1-0: Westbrooks concurred in part and in the result without separate written opinion.)
Rhodes v. RL Stratton Properties LLC, 2022-CA-00338-COA (Civil – Personal Injury)
Affirming summary judgment in favor of a building owner in a suit filed by a roofer who fell through a framed opening in the attic floor while looking for the source of water leaks, holding that the failure to warn an experienced roofer claim failed as a matter of law and that the fall through the opening was “intimately connected” to the work the plaintiff was hired to do.
(10-0)
Other Orders
Obert v. AABC Property Management, LLC, 2021-CA-00612-COA (denying rehearing)
Colenberg v. State, 2021-CA-00673-COA (denying rehearing)
Smith v. Minier, 2021-CA_01284-COA (denying rehearing)
Mallard v. State, 2022-CA-00152-COA (denying rehearing)