Alexa v. Alexa

193 P. 1083, 108 Kan. 38, 1920 Kan. LEXIS 546
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 11, 1920
DocketNo. 22,592
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 193 P. 1083 (Alexa v. Alexa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexa v. Alexa, 193 P. 1083, 108 Kan. 38, 1920 Kan. LEXIS 546 (kan 1920).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

DAWSON, J.:

Plaintiff claimed that the will was made in fraud of h;s rights under an oral, agreement between him and his parents made in 1893 whereby he was to have all his father’s property at his father’s death, subject only to a life estate for his mother if she survived his father. Plaintiff’s petition recited at length that in 1893 his father was heavily in debt and that his creditors were pressing him for payment; that he, plaintiff, was then 29 years old and that he had determined to shift for himself ; and that his father and mother promised him that if he would remain on the farm and live thereon until his father’s death and use his best efforts to aid in the payment of the indebtedness that he should have all his father’s property, subject only to a life estate in his mother’s favor if she outlived her husband.

The family, at home in 1893, consisted of the father aged 67, the mother aged 61, a young sister Anna who taught school and boarded at home, and the plaintiff. The father was afflicted with rheumatism and overweight, and was incapacitated for further labor.

Plaintiff alleged that pursuant to this oral agreement he indorsed his father’s obligations and labored on the farm for many years and did help to pay off the indebtedness, and had fully performed his part of the contract, and had wholly shaped his life in conformity thereto, and when he married, in 1902, he established his own domicile in his father’s dooryard until his father’s death' in 1916, and still resides thereat.

The mother’s and daughter’s separate answers denied this alleged agreement, and also recited at length a good deal of the family’s business relations for this long period; and the daugh[40]*40ter prayed that her brother, the plaintiff, be dispossessed and her title quieted to that part of the farm conveyed to her by her mother.

The abstract and counter-abstract of the record are long, but they present no difficult legal problems. The trial court refused to make some 34 findings of fact requested by plaintiff, covering nine pages of the abstract, but made the following instead:

“findings of fact.
“1. That in 1893 John Alexa was not heavily involved financially in comparison with his resources.
“2. That he was not being pressed by his creditors for the payment of his obligations to a greater extent than was usual in ordinary business affairs at that time; that his creditors were making no extraordinary demands upon him for payment but were urging payment of his loans as they urged the payment of loans by other customers; and there was no threat by any of his creditors to close him out if he did not pay, and the extensions in time of payment were not granted by any of his creditors on account of the management of his financial affairs being in part turned over to the plaintiff.
“3. That because of the increasing age and growing physical disability he turned the active management.of his farm and business affairs over to his son, John M. Alexa, the plaintiff herein, retaining in himself the final control and decision in all things.
“4. That plaintiff managed said property, under the control of his father, from 1893 to 1904, took possession of the profits and proceeds thereof, kept the proceeds in banks in his own name and disbursed the same to suit himself.
“5. That in 1904 plaintiff discontinued the management of his father’s business, thereafter rented a part of the land himself and assisted his father in renting the remainder.
“6. That in 1904 John Alexa was still in debt to an amount exceeding $2,500.00.
“7. That plaintiff married in 1902, and thereafter and up to the present time has resided in a separate dwelling in the dooryard of John Alexa’s home.
“8. That plaintiff prior to 1893 received from his parents his living, spending money, and cash to pay for the 40 acres of land preempted by him; that between 1893 and 1904 he had full charge of his father’s property and used it pretty much as he pleased, and that from 1902 to the death of his father in 1916 he engaged extensively in farming and stock raising, and had free use of his house and improvements on his father’s farm, including feed yards, buildings, fences and pasture, for which he paid no rent or other consideration.
“9. That the improvements which plaintiff placed upon the farm of John Alexa were very largely drawn from said farm or its proceeds.
[41]*41“10. That in 1892 (1902) plaintiff acquired 232 acres of land in his own name (exclusive of the 40 acres of preempted land) and with the aid of John Alexa and from the use of John Alexa’s farm paid for said land, at least $2,000.00 of John Alexa’s money going into this land.
“11. That plaintiff was a faithful, hard-working son, kind to his father and doing what he reasonably could to minister unto his father’s needs and comfort.
“12. That defendant, Anna Alexa, lived at home from 1885 to the time of the commencement of this action; that she never married; that she taught school over 30 years, nearly all that time living at home and assisting in the housework and the care of her aged father and mother, contributing from her limited income to the common expenses of the home and at times helping her brother, the plaintiff.
• “13. That defendant, Anna Alexa, was a faithful, hard-working daughter, kind to her parents, and doing what she reasonably could to minister to their-needs and comfort.
“14. That since 1916 the defendant, Katherine Alexa, has been bedridden and has had the constant care, day and night, of the defendant, Anna Alexa.
“15. That during his life John Alexa made many statements as to what he was going to do with his property, to-wit, ‘that he was going to leave the farm to the plaintiff,’ ‘that he would leave the farm to the plaintiff and require him to pay certain sums to the other heirs’; ‘that he would leave his property all to his wife and if the children did not do right she could do what she pleased with it’; ‘that he would give Anna 80 acres and a house and lot in Hanover’; ‘and that he would give Anna the homestead.’
“16. That in 1901 John Alexa made a will, the contents of which are not disclosed by the evidence, and which was destroyed prior to 1904.
“17.

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Bluebook (online)
193 P. 1083, 108 Kan. 38, 1920 Kan. LEXIS 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexa-v-alexa-kan-1920.