Collins v. Richardson

212 P.2d 302, 168 Kan. 203, 1949 Kan. LEXIS 473
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 10, 1949
DocketNo. 37,592
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 212 P.2d 302 (Collins v. Richardson) 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
Collins v. Richardson, 212 P.2d 302, 168 Kan. 203, 1949 Kan. LEXIS 473 (kan 1949).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Thiele, J.:

This was an action to determine the extent of interest of the parties in certain real estate and to quiet the title of plaintiffs [204]*204to their interests therein. Certain allegations of the answer of the defendant were stricken by order of the court and she has appealed.

.The allegations of the petition may be summarized as follows: M. C. Merritt, then the owner of a quantity of real estate, including the- land in Ellis county presently involved, died intestate in 1930, leaving as his heirs his widow Mahala E., his daughters Nellie Henderson and Mollie L. Richardson, his son William A., and three grandchildren, Doralynn Collins, Francis Leroy Collins and Donald Collins. An action to partition all of the real estate was commenced, but by agreement of the parties, Nellie Henderson elected to take the real estate presently involved and a sheriff’s deed therefor was executed and delivered to her. As part of the agreement, on October 5, 1931, Nellie Henderson entered into a trust agreement, the details of which will be more fully set forth later, stating she held the title in trust for the parties in the proportion of one-half for Mahala, one-eighth each for herself, Mollie and William, and one-twenty-fourth éaeh for Donald, Doralynn and Francis. A copy of this trust agreement was attached to the petition and made a part thereof. The sheriff’s deed and the trust agreement were recorded in the office of the register of deeds on December 8, 1931. (It is also noted that a copy of the trust agreement was made a part of the answer later mentioned, that copy showing it was recorded in the office of the register of deeds of Ellis county on December 8, 1931.) On December 1, 1931, William A. Merritt died intestate, leaving his mother, Mahala E. Merritt, as his sole heir. On June 9, 1937, Mahala E. .Merritt died testate, owning an undivided five-eighths of the involved real estate. Under her will she devised her undivided interest in the real estate to her daughter Nellie Henderson. Allegations concerning transfer of mineral rights need not be noticed. It'was alleged that the defendant Mollie L. Richardson claimed some right other than her undivided one-eighth interest, adverse to the interest of the other owners, all of whom joined as plaintiffs, and they prayed that she be required to answer and set up her claim, that it be adjudicated, and that plaintiffs have judgment that they owned the interests set forth in the petition and their title thereto be quieted.

‘ The trust agreement was between Nellie Henderson and her husband as first parties, and Mahala E. Merritt, Wm. A. Merritt, Mollie L. Richardson, Donald Collins, Doralynn Collins and Francis Collins as second parties, and recited that the parties were, as [205]*205heirs of M. C. Merritt, the owners of the involved real estate, and that in the partition suit a deed was made to Nellie Henderson, and it was agreed that she should hold title for the parties (in the same proportions as are alleged in the petition) and that her duties were to rent the lands, pay the taxes and distribute any surplus after providing for the payment of taxes. It was further provided the agreement should run for five years “and the said first party shall not sell said land without the unanimous consent of all of the parties.” Further provision was made that if at the end of five years the land had not been sold, the first party should continue to hold the property under the same terms “and shall not sell or dispose of said property, without the unanimous consent of all parties.” This trust agreement was signed by each of the parties.

In her answer Mollie L. Richardson alleged the death of M. C. Merritt, those who survived him as heirs and their proportionate shares of his estate; that a partition action was commenced and by agreement the title was taken in the name of Nellie Henderson, substantially as alleged in the plaintiffs’ petition. The gist of the remainder of her answer is as follows: In paragraph 10 it was alleged that all of the heirs, including Mahala E. Merritt, orally agreed that the real estate would be held intact as family property for a period of five years and during that period none of the land nor any of the interests of the parties therein could or would be sold or otherwise disposed of without the unanimous consent and approval of all, nor until the death of the mother Mahala E. Merritt who was then seventy-eight years of age, and if the land was not disposed of within the five-year period, then the written trust agreement should remain in full force until the death of Mahala E. Merritt, unless the land was sooner sold with the unanimous consent of all parties interested, and if not so sold, upon the death of Mahala E. Merritt, the real estate should and would go to and vest in the parties as her heirs, and as their interests might appear under the statutes of descents and distributions of Kansas, and that a written trust agreement would be prepared and signed by all of the parties, covering and incorporating all of the terms and provisions of the oral agreement. In paragraph 11 it was alleged that Mahala E. Merritt and particularly Nellie Henderson, procured the drafting of a written trust agreement, a copy being attached to the answer (and being the same agreement the terms of which are heretofore reviewed) and prior to the execution thereof represented to [206]*206Mollie L. Richardson that the written agreement so prepared contained and completely expressed all of the terms and provisions of the prior oral agreement, and Mollie L. Richardson, without carefully examining the same or observing omissions and mistakes therein, believed and relied upon the oral representations aforesaid and assumed that the written agreement expressed the actual agreement of the parties. In paragraph 12 it was alleged that through oversight, accident, mistake or common mistake, or the oversight and mistake on the part of Mollie L. Richardson, and the oral representations of the plaintiffs and particularly Nellie Henderson who sat idly by and remained silent knowing that the written agreement failed to set forth the terms and provisions of the prior oral agreement, permitted Mollie L. Richardson to sign the written agreement. Then follow extended allegations that certain oral agreements were not incorporated in the written agreement, as well as that certain language in the written agreement was erroneously included and should be stricken therefrom, and that the written trust agreement should be reformed to express the true intent of the parties, and as so reformed, should be specifically enforced. In a negative way, it may be said there was no allegation as to when Mollie L. Richardson discovered the written trust agreement did not include her version of the agreement. In paragraph 13 it was alleged that Mollie L. Richardson had at all times performed all conditions of the trust agreement, as reformed, to be performed by her, and that if any of the plaintiffs, including Mahala E. Merritt, disposed of their undivided interests by conveyance, will, deed or otherwise, such conveyance or disposition, if any, was contrary to and in violation of the terms and agreement of the parties, and any disposition of the interests of the parties was subject to the terms and provisions of the agreement (as sought to be reformed). In paragraph 14 it was alleged that William A. Merritt died and that Mahala E. Merritt inherited his one-eighth interest in the involved real estate. In paragraph 15 it was alleged that Mahala E.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
212 P.2d 302, 168 Kan. 203, 1949 Kan. LEXIS 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-richardson-kan-1949.