Benton v. Benton

528 P.2d 1244, 215 Kan. 875, 1974 Kan. LEXIS 584
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 7, 1974
Docket47,502
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 528 P.2d 1244 (Benton v. Benton) 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
Benton v. Benton, 528 P.2d 1244, 215 Kan. 875, 1974 Kan. LEXIS 584 (kan 1974).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Foth, C.:

This action was commenced as one to quiet title to a quarter section of land in Gray county. The trial court found that plaintiff was not the absolute owner of the land, but instead was the mortgagee under an equitable mortgage. It gave her judgment for the underlying debt and strictly foreclosed the mortgage, but also gave the defendant mortgagor a forty-five day redemption period. In so doing the court refused to give any effect to a quitclaim deed from defendent to plaintiff, holding it to be a sham. Plaintiff appeals, contending the court erred in granting the period *876 of redemption, and in refusing to quiet her title under the quitclaim deed.

The plaintiff, Mrs. Mary M. Benton, is grandmother of the defendant A. Eugene (Gene) Benton. In 1968 Mrs. Benton and her now deceased husband were the owners of the quarter in question. They agreed to sell it to their grandson for a sum, found by the court to be $10,000, payable at $600 per year, with interest at 6%. Gene was just turning eighteen and facing the draft, so a warranty deed was executed on April 1, 1968. It was recorded August 21, 1968, about the time Gene judicially acquired the rights of majority. The balance of the parties’ agreement was never reduced to writing, but both parties, while differing over some of its terms, recognize its existence.

The defendant promptly entered into possession of the land and commenced to farm it. The first thing he did was sink an irrigation well, financed by the proceeds of a $25,000 mortgage to Travelers Insurance Company dated October 10, 1968. He then planted the land to alfalfa.

The first and only $600 payment on the place was made the following summer, on August 22, 1969. By October, 1969, Gene was back to his grandmother borrowing $1800 “until I sell my alfalfa.” (This sum, together with various other advances from plaintiff to defendant over the next four years, was added to the balance of the original debt in arriving at the court’s judgment for plaintiff. At oral argument we were advised by both counsel that the parties have agreed upon an accounting between them and have stipulated as to the amount required for redemption should we determine that redemption is proper.)

It appears that the defendant commenced his farming operation in some sort of association with one Doc Addison. By the spring of 1970 the two had had a falling out, and Doc was threatening to sue. He was claiming a partnership with Gene, and a one-half ownership of the quarter section; it was he who had made the $600 payment of the preceding summer. At this point Gene executed the quitclaim deed upon which plaintiff rests her present claim to title. Gene testified that he consulted a lawyer about his difficulties with Doc, and as a result of that consultation conceived the idea of the deed as a device to place the quarter beyond Doc’s toils in the threatened litigation. Accordingly, he testified, he went to his grandmother on the evening of June 23, 1970, and gave her the deed. He explained at that time,-he said, that Doc was *877 threatening to sue him. He promised to take care of the payments on the Travelers mortgage, and would get a deed back from her when his trouble with Doc was settled.

Gene’s version of this meeting was corroborated by the testimony of Terry Nolan, a farmer who had done contract harvesting for Gene and had money coming. Nolan described not only the legal consultation but also ihe meeting between Gene and his grandmother. He was present, he said, heard Gene explain why he was giving Mrs. Benton the deed and that he would expect one back when the trouble with Doc blew over, and heard her respond, “Fine.”

The plaintiff’s version of the meeting was a little different. Only she and Gene were present, she said, and Gene never did explain to her why he was giving her the deed. She thought it was because she had been nagging him about needing some money from the place. She did testify, however, that when Gene brought her the deed he told her Doc was suing him but hadn’t filed yet, and that she should get the deed down to the courthouse and record it at 8:00 o’clock in the morning. This she did, on June 24, 1970.

Gene continued to farm the land, along with considerable other land owned by plaintiff, until January 29, 1973. At that time she orally dispossessed him and turned the farming of all her land over to his brother-in-law. Plaintiff admitted that at Easter time of 1972 Gene had asked her to reconvey, saying that ‘he was going to have to have the deed back.” Her version of her response does not appear in the record, but according to Gene, “She said that if the lawsuit was still pending that she didn’t feel that she could go through with the deeding it back.”

Doc’s lawsuit, which had been filed in November, 1970, um still pending at Easter of 1972. It was dismissed a year later (on April 2, 1973) because, according to Doc, “you can’t get blood out of a turnip.” A month later, May 11, 1973, Mrs. Benton filed this suit claiming absolute ownership.

On appeal plaintiff contends: first, that the dealings between the parties afforded ample consideration for an absolute deed from Gene to plaintiff; second, that there was no consideration for any promise on her part to reconvey; third, that such an agreement can’t be enforced in equity because it was in fraud of creditors; and fourth, that Gene in particular can’t enforce any such agreement because he comes into equity without the requisite clean hands. *878 (Her fifth contention, dealing with interest on various advances, we take to be settled by the stipulation of the parties as to the redemption amount, referred to above.)

We think plaintiff has misconceived the import of the trial court’s findings, and the contentions just enumerated thus miss the mark. As to the quitclaim deed the court’s only findings were:

“f. That when A. Eugene Benton deeded the property back to Mary M. Benton, his grandmother, it was intended as a sham transaction for the purpose of putting the property beyond the reach of his prospective creditors.
“g. That such deed and its delivery did not actually convey title to Mary M. Benton.”

These findings are clearly supported by the testimony described above. Having made them, the trial court was justified in its course of paying no further attention to the deed. It made no difference that there might have been consideration for a bona fide deed — this one was a sham, intended to convey nothing.

Further, the trial court did not enforce any agreement to reconvey. Therefore it mattered not whether there was consideration for such an agreement, whether it was tainted by the parties’ fraudulent intent, or whether Gene was barred from enforcing it because of his unclean hands. That the court’s judgment was wholly independent of the existence or validity of the deed-and-agreementTore convey is clear from its findings:

“c. I find that the original sale of the land to him [Gene] was for $10,-000.00 at 6% interest.
“d.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
528 P.2d 1244, 215 Kan. 875, 1974 Kan. LEXIS 584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benton-v-benton-kan-1974.