Burns v. Spiker

202 P. 370, 109 Kan. 22, 1921 Kan. LEXIS 69
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 7, 1921
DocketNo. 22,899
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 202 P. 370 (Burns v. Spiker) 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
Burns v. Spiker, 202 P. 370, 109 Kan. 22, 1921 Kan. LEXIS 69 (kan 1921).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by ■

MASON, J.:

Sarah E. Burns, the widow of John T. Burns, brought this action against his four children by a former wife, and other defendants, the principal purpose being to procure a division of his estate under the law of descents and distributions instead of according to the terms of a written ante-nuptial agreement and a will to which she had given her consent in writing, both of which instruments she claims to be invalid. Judgment was rendered against her and she appeals.

1. The plaintiff contends that the provisions of the ante-nuptial contract are so unconscionable as to render it unenforceable, or, at all events, to cast upon the defendants the burden — which was not met — of proving it to have been en[24]*24tered into with full understanding on her part; that the evidence required a finding that there was either actual fraud in procuring her signature to the contract, or the existence of such conditions as in equity to require it to be set aside.

At the time the contract was entered into, November 23, 1897, the plaintiff was about thirty-nine years old. Her first husband, a brother of John T. Burns, had died about a year before. Seven children of that marriage survived, two of them being married, the other five living with her, the youngest being three years of age. She had no considerable property. John T. Burns was fifty-five years of age; a widower with four children, all of whom survived him. His property consisted of an eighty-acre farm in Jackson county on which he lived, worth $2,000, subject to a mortgage of $600, and personalty worth $500. He was unable to work. His eyesight was very bad; he was practically blind, subject to rheumatism, and later a cancer developed. He received a pension of $75 a month. He died June 7, 1917, his estate then amounting to nearly $20,000, the Jackson county farm — the homestead— figuring in this estimate at $8,000, a Meade county farm at a like amount, an accumulation of pension money at $800, and growing crops at $1,000;.the remainder being made up of stock, implements, household goods' and other personal property. One child, who still lives, was born to the plaintiff and her second husband, in 1901.

The antenuptial contract provided that if the wife survived the husband she should receive only one-fifth of his estate — that is, an equal share with each of his four children, the portion of any child that might die before the father to go to the surviving children. Other provisions were that the wife should care for the husband’s children as if she were their mother; but that as soon as any of her children became able to earn its own living she should find some place for it to work and the husband should not be held liable for -its support; and that he might refuse to keep any of them around the farm who refused to obey him. The husband released all claims to his-wife’s estate, but this was so small as to be unimportant.

We do not regard the contract as so unfair as to be unenforceable or to cast upon those relying upon it the burden of producing affirmative evidence of its having been fully under[25]*25stood, its voluntary execution being admitted. There is no room for a suggestion that the wife was misled as to the extent of the husband’s estate — that he had property the existence of which he concealed from her. His possessions consisted mainly of the home farm, which was mentioned in the contract. The difference in his financial worth at the time of his marriage and at the time of his death was real and not merely apparent: The increase was due to new accumulations and rise in values, not to the bringing to light of concealed assets. Moreover, the wife, being allotted a fractional part of the estate, shared in the benefit of the increase in the same proportion. The one-fifth interest in her husband’s property assigned to the plaintiff by the contract is not so much less than the half interest to which she would have been entitled under the law as to condemn the settlement as inequitable. An antenuptial contract which was evidently used to a considerable extent as a model in the preparation of that now under consideration, and in which the “child’s share” which was allotted to the wife amounted to but one-eighth, the husband having seven children, was upheld by this court. (Hafer v. Hafer, 33 Kan. 449, 6 Pac. 537.)

The provision of the contract with respect to the wife’s children was certainly ungracious, but we do not regard it as sufficient to vitiate the contract. The fact that the accumulation of the property in question is largely due to the efforts of the plaintiff is urged in support of her claim. Her husband’s almost helpless physical condition of course prevented him from sharing in the manual toil, but it is not clear that his advice and direction may not have been an important factor in the matter. He was obviously a close bargainer, while the plaintiff is represented as not being much of a business woman. It is not disputed that the property in controversy belonged to the husband, and the basis of its division at his death having been fixed by a valid contract, the court has no power to vary the apportionment because of the meritorious conduct of the plaintiff. Of a somewhat similar situation it was1 said in a former case:

“Some 'make-weight allegations are inserted in the petition, to' the effect that through the joint .efforts of husband and wife, incumbrances on the land in controversy were paid off, and valuable, permanent im[26]*26provements were placed on it. The plaintiff does not ask for compensation, or for a lien. What she wants is one-half the land, something she is not entitled to receive.” (Osborn v. Osborn, 102 Kan. 890, 895, 172 Pac. 23.)

The validity of an antenuptial agreement is not determined by precisely the same considerations in all jurisdictions. These rules have been declared in this state:

“It would seem from the authorities, that agreements of this kind are generally looked upon by the courts with favor, and are to be liberally interpreted with a view of carrying out the intentions of the persons engaging in them. We entertain no doubt, in the present state of our statutes, of the validity of an ante-nuptial contract, entered into in good fáith by parties competent to contract, and which, considering the circumstances of the parties at the time-eof making the same, is reasonable and just in its provisions, and that the rule thus agreed upon will take the place of that prescribed by the statute, in the distribution of their property upon the death of either.” (Hafer v. Hafer, 33 Kan. 449, 459, 6 Pac. 537.)
“If the intended wife is competent to make a contract and ha* a fair and adequate knowledge concerning the future husband’s property when she enters into an ante-nuptial agreement which is free from, deceit or fraud, it should not be set aside merely because the court or jury find that the provision made for her is in great disproportion to his property.” (Gordon v. Munn, 87 Kan. 624, 635, 125 Pac. 1.)

2. A daughter of the plaintiff testified that her mother was illiterate — not educated; that she could read large print and sign her name, but nothing further. This fact, unless somé fraud or imposition is shown, does not affect the validity of the contract or shift the burden of .proof as to its having been under standingly entered into.

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Bluebook (online)
202 P. 370, 109 Kan. 22, 1921 Kan. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burns-v-spiker-kan-1921.