Carls v. Carls

65 P.2d 257, 145 Kan. 262, 1937 Kan. LEXIS 305
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 6, 1937
DocketNo. 32,989
StatusPublished

This text of 65 P.2d 257 (Carls v. Carls) 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
Carls v. Carls, 65 P.2d 257, 145 Kan. 262, 1937 Kan. LEXIS 305 (kan 1937).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Harvey, J.:

This was an action in ejectment and for the partition of a tract of about 156 acres of farm land in Jefferson county. The jury answered special questions and returned a verdict for defendant. Plaintiff has appealed.

Briefly, the record discloses the following facts, concerning which there is no substantial controversy. Plaintiff and Henry G. Carls were married about 1882, and with no property to speak of, engaged in the business of farming for a few years in Clay county, and for some years afterward in Osage county. By about 1912 they were the parents of five children, of whom the defendant is the eldest son, and they had accumulated a substantial amount of property. They sold their Osage county farm for $30,000 and the personal property on the place for about $10,000. In selling the farm they took a [263]*263mortgage on it for $14,000. This was taken in the name of the plaintiff. It appears that with the proceeds of this mortgage an 80-acre tract of land was purchased in Jefferson county in the name of plaintiff, but this is not the land in controversy here. It appears also that from the proceeds of the sale of the Osage county property the farm here in question was purchased, the title being taken in the name of the husband, Henry G. Carls. The parties lived on this farm for a few years. About 1918, or a little later, a residence property was bought in Los Angeles, perhaps for the balance of the proceeds of the $14,000 mortgage. Since that was done plaintiff has lived in that home most of the time, with a married daughter and her husband and her youngest son, while her husband continued to live most of the time in Kansas. He made several trips to Los Angeles and lived with his family there for from a few weeks to several months at a time, and plaintiff was in Kansas living with her husband for comparatively short periods on several occasions. The husband sent his wife money for living expenses, or a portion of them, and also for the education of the boy with her, and later sent the boy money on perhaps three occasions, aggregating about $2,500. From about 1918 to 1925 Henry G. Carls lived on the farm in controversy with the defendant, who was farming the place, and his family. Defendant’s wife died in 1925 and thereafter the father made his home elsewhere. Henry G. Carls died in June, 1933. In February, 1933, he had executed and delivered to defendant a deed for this farm. Plaintiff did not join in the execution of that deed and knew nothing about it until after the death of her husband. About the time he executed this deed Henry G. Carls distributed among his other children government bonds which he owned of the value of perhaps $10,000 and some bank stock in the bank at Wakarusa. He sent $3,000 worth of these bonds to his youngest son, who was then living with his mother in Los Angeles. The estate of Henry G. Carls was not administered upon. After his death the plaintiff, as his surviving widow, claimed an undivided one-half interest in the farm in controversy. Defendant claimed to be the absolute owner of it. Hence this action.

Plaintiff’s petition recited the pertinent facts above stated and sought to recover a half interest in the tract of land and possession thereof. Her claim was predicated upon our statute, G. S. 1935, 22-108, which, so far as here pertinent, provides that the surviving wife have set off to her in fee simple one half in value of all real [264]*264estate in which the husband, at any time during the marriage, had a legal or equitable interest, and of which the wife has made no conveyance. In his answer defendant claimed title by virtue of fifteen years’ adverse possession, and further claimed that.about the time the farm in Osage county was sold his parents had made a separation agreement by which their property was divided under such terms that H. G. Carls could convey the property that stood in his name without his wife’s consent. These defenses were put in issue by a reply. At the beginning of the trial defendant admitted one half of the property would belong to plaintiff if it were not for the matters pleaded in defense. To establish these defenses defendant assumed the burden of proof and offered his evidence. Plaintiff’s demurrer thereto was overruled, and plaintiff introduced her evidence. Answering special questions, the jury found defendant had been in the adverse possession of the property for more than fifteen years when the action was brought, and also found that there had been a property settlement between the plaintiff and her husband, Henry G. Carls, by which their property had been divided between them. Plaintiff moved to set aside these answers to special questions, and to set aside the general verdict on the ground of the lack of substantial competent evidence to support them, and also moved for a new trial. These motions were overruled and judgment was rendered for defendant.

In this court plaintiff contends there is no substantial evidence to support either of the defenses pleaded by defendant and found by the jury. In support of the defense of adverse possession defendant testified that he sowed wheat on this farm in the fall of 1917 and moved there with his family in March, 1918, and that he had claimed it as his home since then; that his father lived with him until a short time before his wife died in 1925, and that since then he and his two daughters have lived there. When asked what improvements, if any, were put upon the place he answered, “We built a garage” in 1920. He further testified • that in February, 1933, his father gave him a deed for the farm, which he recorded. A witness, Joseph Uhlman, called by defendant, testified that he had lived near this farm for ten years, was well acquainted with defendant, and saw him frequently; that he had also known defendant's father for more than thirty years, having first become acquainted with him when they lived near each other in Osage county in 1902; that on one occasion, in 1920 or 1921, he met de[265]*265fendant’s father in Topeka and visited with him, and at that time defendant’s father said he had given this farm to Herman. On cross-examination, and again on redirect examination, when asked to state the language used on that occasion by defendant’s father, he said the language used was, “I am going to give the farm to Herman.” The witness further testified that Herman had paid his father rent up until a'few years before the father’s death; that on one occasion the father came there to get rent corn, and that defendant had told the witness he was paying his father rent. Lucile Carls, defendant’s daughter, called as a witness in his behalf, testified that in the early twenties she was living on the farm with her parents, her sister and her grandfather, and that she had heard her grandfather say “that that place was our place,” meaning by the word “our” her father and “we kids,” and that on several different occasions she had heard her grandfather make statements of that character. This, in substance, is all of the evidence offered by defendant in support of his claim for adverse possession. Clearly it is insufficient to establish adverse possession, even as against his father, and certainly not as against his mother. The evidence offered by plaintiff on this point did not strengthen defendant’s claim of adverse possession. It was to the effect that defendant went on the place as a tenant, and that he had paid rent, sometimes not as much as his father thought he should, up until perhaps two years before his father’s death.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 P.2d 257, 145 Kan. 262, 1937 Kan. LEXIS 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carls-v-carls-kan-1937.