Foulks v. McCray

207 P.2d 262, 167 Kan. 627, 1949 Kan. LEXIS 420
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 9, 1949
DocketNo. 37,465
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 207 P.2d 262 (Foulks v. McCray) 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
Foulks v. McCray, 207 P.2d 262, 167 Kan. 627, 1949 Kan. LEXIS 420 (kan 1949).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Smith, J.:

This is a proceeding commenced in the probate court for admission of a will to probate. Seven heirs at law of testatrix filed an objection on the ground that decedent at the time of the alleged execution of the will was not of sound mind and memory and on the further ground that the will had been obtained by undue influence practiced by the four devisees named in the will. Another heir filed a cross petition, in which she alleged that the deceased was in dire circumstances and that deceased told cross petitioner that if she would take her into her home and look after her she would give all her property to cross petitioner; that she agreed to the proposal and carried out her part of the contract to the letter and the deceased made a will giving her all her property and the will was given to a bank for safe keeping. The cross petition alleged that during the last days of 1943 deceased became deranged and mentally incompetent and left the home of cross petitioner, obtained the will from the bank, and cross petitioner was not able to tell what had been done with it. It was alleged that at the time the will was made deceased was capable of making a will and it was made of her own free will but that since she left cross petitioner’s home she had not been of sound mind and was in no respect capable of making a will. The cross petitioner prayed that the will executed in 1941, giving her the property, be established as the last will of deceased and that if that could not be done the contract be enforced.

The probate court heard all these matters and found that the allegations of the petition to probate the will had been proved; that the decedent died testate on September 21, 1946, a resident of Ness county, Kansas, leaving an estate therein; that the instrument bearing the date of January 10, 1944, was duly executed; that at the time of the execution decedent was of sound mind and under no restraint and that the will was valid and genuine; that the will described in the cross petition was revoked and that the alternative relief for enforcement of a contract should be denied. It was also ordered that A. S. Foulks be appointed executor of the will of testa[629]*629trix since he was named by the testatrix in the will. It was further ordered that deceased died intestate as to certain property, which property would be subject to administration; that it was for the best interest of the estate that Foulks be appointed administrator of the intestate property also.

From this order admitting the will to probate an heir other than any of the seven who had objected to its probation in the first pláce appealed to the district court.

For the purpose of clarity a statement of a general nature will be made.

At the time of the death of testatrix’s husband in 1940 she was seized of two adjacent quarter sections of land in Lane county. Her husband was seized of two quarter sections contiguous to these but in Ness county. The Lane county land was very rough. The Ness county land was smooth and good farming land; The couple lived on the Ness county land. Testatrix’s husband died testate and left all his property to his widow, testatrix here. By this she took the two Ness county quarters from her husband, and already owned the two Lane county quarters. By two different conveyances and under circumstances which will be noted later testatrix conveyed the two Lane county quarters to one Gregg.

The will offered for probate devised the two Ness county quarters to four nieces and nephews of deceased on her husband's side. Some months after the making of this will the testatrix was declared incompetent and a guardian appointed. This guardian sold one of the Ness county quarters and had the money received from the sale on deposit in the bank at the time these proceedings were begun.

At the same time her appeal was taken to the district court Blanche McCray filed a position in the district court entitled “Petition of Blanche McCray To Strike From Inventory.” She alleged she was the heir of the decedent and further that Foulks, as executor of the estate of decedent, had filed an inventory of the estate and that inventory had included as money in the bank $6,140.69 of personal property; that the only property described in the will was the half section of Ness county land; that the will contained no residuary clause and made no disposition of any other property other than the above described property; that decedent died intestate as to the personal property described and that it should be ordered stricken from the inventory filed by the executor. Plaintiff prayed that the court order the personal property be stricken from the inventory [630]*630filed by Foulks as executor. This motion was denied. Shortly thereafter the proponents of the will moved to dismiss the appeal from the probate court on the ground that when Blanche McCray filed the motion, to which reference has just been made, she recognized and acquiesced in the validity of the order of the probate court of Ness county, Kansas, and in the fact that Foulks had been named executor of that will. This motion was overruled. At the conclusion of the testimony the court made extensive findings of fact. Following these findings of fact the court made conclusions of law, as follows:

“Conclusions of Law
“On January 10, 1944, or on the date Elda A. Walter made the will in controversy :
“1. She did not have mental capacity: A. To know and understand the
nature, extent and value of her property; B. To comprehend the nature of'the obligations she owed to her relatives.
“2. She was unable to make a disposition of her property with understanding and reason because of an insane delusion that her relatives had not been good to her and that she had received title to the Ness county land from her second husband.”

A motion to set aside certain of these findings of fact and conclusions of law was filed by the proponents of the will. This also included a motion for a new trial on the ground that the decision was contrary to the evidence, judicial improprieties on the part of the court in discussing the case with witnesses outside of court and in receiving evidence from them not adduced from the witness stand and not included in the record; in discussing and arguing the case with witnesses, clerk, court reporter and counsel for objector with court not in session and in absence of counsel for proponents; that the evidence did not justify the conclusions of law.

In response to this motion the trial court filed amended findings of fact, which were about the same in substance as the original findings. Following this the court made a journal entry in which it referred to the amended findings of fact and conclusions of law, ordered that the will be refused probate; that deceased died intestate and that the property described in the instrument should pass under the laws of intestate succession.

The proponents have appealed and their assignments of error are that the court erred in overruling the motion of proponents to dismiss the appeal to Blanche McCray from the order of the probate court rendered on the 15th of February, 1947, admitting the will to [631]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
207 P.2d 262, 167 Kan. 627, 1949 Kan. LEXIS 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foulks-v-mccray-kan-1949.