Ford v. Willits

688 P.2d 1230, 9 Kan. App. 2d 735
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedApril 5, 1985
Docket55,585
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 688 P.2d 1230 (Ford v. Willits) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ford v. Willits, 688 P.2d 1230, 9 Kan. App. 2d 735 (kanctapp 1985).

Opinion

Briscoe, J.:

This is a quiet title action in which the plaintiffs, co-trustees, seek to quiet their title to an undivided one-fourth mineral interest which had been sold to defendant Willits at a tax foreclosure sale seven years earlier. The trial court entered summary judgment for defendant Willits, after concluding plaintiffs’ action was barred under K.S.A. 79-2804b and by laches.

Our recitation of the undisputed facts in this case begins with the creation of the Albert L. Bartlett Trust (hereinafter referred to as the Bartlett Trust) on July 19, 1940. The trust instrument named Walter C. Bartlett, Albert L. Bartlett, Jr., and Mae Y. Bartlett as trustees and contained the following provisions for appointment of successor trustees:

“If any Trustee hereunder shall die, go to reside abroad, resign or become incapable or unfit to act, then, and in every or any such case and so often as the same shall happen, it shall be lawful for the Trustees continuing to act hereunder, by a writing, executed as a deed, to be recorded, to declare a vacancy to exist in the place of such Trustee, and, in their discretion, to appoint any person or corporation to fill such vacancy, . . . shall be vested with all and the same powers, rights, duties, privileges, immunities, election and discretions as if originally named herein, such declaration that a vacancy exists shall be conclusive evidence thereof as to any purchaser or other person dealing with the Trustees.”

In September, 1946, the Bartlett Trust conveyed the following described real estate to Russell W. Willits:

The Southwest Quarter, and the West Half of the Southeast *738 Quarter, of Section 33, Township 9, Range 20, in Jefferson County, Kansas.

On September 24, 1946, Willits conveyed back to the Bartlett Trust an undivided one-fourth interest in the mineral rights in the above-described property. Willits signed the mineral deed on September 30, 1946, but the deed was not recorded with the Jefferson County Register of Deeds until January 18, 1947. The deed indicated that the conveyance was from Russell W. Willits to “Walter C. Bartlett, Albert L. Bartlett, Jr., and Mae Y. Bartlett, Trustees, their heirs, successors and assigns.”

On September 16, 1950, the trustees of the Bartlett Trust leased their property to Cities Service Gas Company for gas storage. The First National Bank of St. Joseph, as depository for the Bartlett Trust, received the lease payment of $60 per year from September 16, 1966, through September 16, 1973.

In 1962, we see the beginning of a shift in trustees of the Bartlett Trust. As a result of the death of Walter C. Bartlett, J.M. Ford, II, was appointed as a substitute trustee for the Bartlett Trust on September 20, 1962. On November 23, 1965, Albert C. Bartlett, Jr., resigned, leaving Mae Y. Bartlett and J.M. Ford, II, as co-trustees. They appointed the First National Bank of St. Joseph as a substitute trustee on December 1, 1965. The appointments of J.M. Ford, II, and the First National Bank of St. Joseph were never recorded in Jefferson County, Kansas.

The undivided one-fourth interest does not appear on the tax rolls of the County Treasurer of Jefferson County until 1964. The Bartlett Trust failed to pay property taxes on its mineral interest for the years 1947 through 1973. As a result, a tax foreclosure action was filed by the county attorney of Jefferson County on July 19,1973, describing the mineral interest and naming Walter C. Bartlett as a defendant and as owner of the interest. Peyton W. Bartlett, a nephew of Walter C. Bartlett, was personally served. Peyton had no interest in the Bartlett Trust. The Bartlett Trust was neither named as a party defendant in the foreclosure action, nor served by publication or otherwise.

Russell W. Willits purchased the undivided one-fourth mineral interest at the tax foreclosure sale on July 1, 1974. The sale was confirmed and on August 21,1974, a sheriff s deed to Willits was issued and recorded. Willits promptly informed Cities Service Gas Company by letter of his ownership of the mineral interest and forwarded a copy of his sheriff s deed to it.

*739 On August 19,1974, an employee of Cities Service telephoned the cashier of the First National Bank of St. Joseph and requested return of the $60 lease payment paid to the Bartlett Trust for the year commencing September 16, 1974. A trust officer of the bank wrote a letter to Cities Service on August 23, 1974, to inquire why the return of the payment was requested. By its letter of August 26,1974, Cities Service informed the trust officer that the mineral interest had been sold on July 1, 1974, at a tax foreclosure sale and again requested return of the lease payment. On October 3, 1974, a $60 check was written on the Bartlett Trust account, signed by the trust officer, and made payable to Cities Service. On that same date, a corresponding entry was made on the records of the Bartlett Trust maintained by the trust department, indicating return of the money, followed by a legal description of the mineral interest and this statement: “Mineral interest sold at tax foreclosure sale.”

On October 29, 1980, Willits entered into a three-year oil and gas lease with Petro-Technology, Inc., Topeka, Kansas, on property which included the mineral interest he purchased at the foreclosure sale. Petro is a corporation engaged in oil and gas exploration.

Plaintiffs J.M. Ford, II, and the First National Bank of St. Joseph, as co-trustees for the Bartlett Trust, filed the quiet title action which gave rise to this appeal on November 3, 1981. Plaintiffs also sought recovery of the value of any oil, gas or other minerals severed from the property. Willits, in turn, filed a third-party complaint against the Board of County Commissioners, Jefferson County, Kansas, and the Jefferson County Abstract Company, alleging a failure to exercise due diligence in their handling of the tax foreclosure.

All parties moved for summary judgment. The trial court held plaintiffs’ action was barred by the limitations of time in K.S.A. 79-2804b, and by laches. Summary judgment was granted to the defendants and third-party defendants on the claims asserted in plaintiffs’ petition. Having determined the third-party petition was in essence a claim for indemnification.against the third-party defendants should the plaintiffs prevail, the trial court dismissed the third-party petition. The plaintiffs appeal, and defendant Willits and third-party defendants Board of County Commissioners and Jefferson County Abstract Company cross-appeal.

*740 The following issues have been raised: (1) Whether the plaintiffs have standing to challenge the tax foreclosure sale; (2) whether this action is precluded under the provisions of K.S.A. 79-2804b; (3) whether the action is barred by laches; and (4) whether the original mineral deed was invalid under the provisions of K.S.A. 1983

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
688 P.2d 1230, 9 Kan. App. 2d 735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ford-v-willits-kanctapp-1985.