Gilgren v. Price

299 N.W. 325, 140 Neb. 124, 1941 Neb. LEXIS 163
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 18, 1941
DocketNos. 31146, 31147
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 299 N.W. 325 (Gilgren v. Price) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gilgren v. Price, 299 N.W. 325, 140 Neb. 124, 1941 Neb. LEXIS 163 (Neb. 1941).

Opinion

Yeager, J.

Presented here are two actions identical in all particulars except as to names of parties and description of real estate/ They were consolidated for trial in the district court and have been presented here on one bill of exceptions and one set of briefs. They will be disposed of in one opinion. The actions were originally instituted in the district court for Cheyenne county, Nebraska, by plaintiffs and appellees, against Blanche Price, defendant and appellant, and others not parties to this appeal, the objects and purposes of which were to obtain specific performance of an alleged oral contract between plaintiffs and one August Burk, and to quiet title in Gustave A. Gilgren to the northwest quarter (NW !4) of section twenty-eight (28), township seventeen (17) north, range forty-nine (49), west of the sixth P. M. in Cheyenne county, Nebraska; and to quiet title in David Christian Gilgren to the southwest quarter (SW]4) of this section of land.

The substance of the claims of plaintiffs, as set forth in their petitions, is that prior to her death on April 21, 1934, Anna Kristina Gilgren, mother of plaintiffs, was the owner of the northwest quarter (NW %) and the southwest quarter (SW ) of section twenty-eight (28), township seventeen (17) north, range forty-nine (49), Cheyenne county, Nebraska, and that at the time of her death Vera Josephine Andersen held a mortgage on the northwest quarter, and the Lincoln National Life Insurance Company held a mortgage on the southwest quarter. After the death of Anna Kristina Gilgren the mortgagees foreclosed the mortgages, and decrees of foreclosure were duly entered in March and September, 1935, respectively, and nine-month stays were taken in each case. Prior to the sales August Burk purchased and secured assignments of the judgments of the two mortgagees, whereupon the stays were withdrawn and sales made to August Burk, which sales were duly confirmed and deeds were issued.

August Burk was a brother of Anna Kristina Gilgren, an uncle of Gustave A. Gilgren and David Christian Gilgren, [126]*126and a brother of one Lottie Akeson. Lottie Akeson predeceased both Anna Kristina Gilgren and August Burk, and in her will bequeathed to each of them $1,000. After her death, and before receipt of the bequest, Anna Kristina Gilgren died, thus causing the bequest to become payable to the estate of Anna Kristina Gilgren. Gustave A. Gilgren and David Christian Gilgren, being the only heirs at law entitled to take, were entitled to share equally in the distribution of this bequest.

On October 27, 1939, August Burk died in Cass county, Nebraska, leaving a will in which he gave to Blanche Price, a niece, all of his estate after the payment of debts, funeral expenses and costs of administration. This will was duly probated in the county court of Cass county, Nebraska.

The plaintiffs contend that this will is in violation of an oral agreement which August Burk had with them, whereby Burk agreed to give Gustave A. Gilgren the northwest quarter, above described, and to give the southwest quarter to David Christian Gilgren.

They alleged that on May 16, 1936, and at many times prior thereto, August Burk orally promised that in consideration of the plaintiffs’ withdrawal of their nine-month stays, and the transfer of the use and benefit of the real estate involved to August Burk, such use and benefit being rents and income during the life of Burk, and a further cash consideration of $1,000 to be received by plaintiffs out of the estate of Lottie Akeson through the estate of Anna Kristina Gilgren and paid over to August Burk to apply on the existing indebtedness upon the land in question here, at his death Gustave A. Gilgren would become the sole and absolute owner of the northwest quarter, and David Christian Gilgren would become the absolute owner of the southwest quarter. They say that the stays were withdrawn and that Burk received the $1,000 from the estate of Anna Kristina Gilgren.

It is this agreement that plaintiffs seek to have enforced in these actions, and they further seek to have titles quieted in them to the lands described as against the devise to Blanche Price.

[127]*127On the question of the existence of the agreement, Gustave A. Gilgren, having been limited by the court to conversations relating to the David Christian Gilgren case, testified as follows: “Q. Did you ever have any conversation with him (August Burk) regarding what was to be done, or might be done, with the land that was given to your brother David by your mother? * * * A. Yes; we had conversations. Q. Will you just tell the court about when those conversations began, if you can recall? A. Yes, sir; those conversations began shortly after the will was probated, her will. Q. Do you know whether or not your uncle August Burk knew of the mortgage against that land ? A. I do. Q. Now, just tell the court what he said to you about this quarter of land that was willed by your mother to your brother David ? * * * Q. Subsequent to the death of your mother, as you have testified? A. Well, there were several conversations. I couldn’t just exactly remember the whole thing. He said he would like to see the mortgage cleared up so we could get the benefit from the land, was mostly his idea. Q. Did you hear him make any proposition to your brother David regarding that matter of clearing up the mortgages on the land? * * * A. Yes. Q. What did he say? A. He said that if we can get the money and get together and try and clear it up. * * * Q. Did he make any suggestions to you- as to how that could be done, or what he would do about it ? Answer ‘Yes,’ or ‘No.’ A. Yes. Q. What did he say? A. He said he would try to get the money, and if he could clear it up and buy it out some way that he would see that we got some benefit out of it. * * * Q. Was there anything that your brother David was to do in connection with that? A. Yes, sir. Q. What was it? A. Well, he was supposed to take his share of the estate that was willed to my mother, and it was afterwards willed to him and I, and apply on the land. Q. What money or estate was that? A. That was the estate of my aunt Lottie Akeson. Q. Do you know where the money from that estate — where did the money from that Akeson estate go to, if you know, who was it paid to? A. According to my knowledge it was paid to my mother’s [128]*128estate, and then it was paid to apply on those mortgages. * * * Q. Now, in return for what you have just testified to, to be done by your brother David in connection with this land and the proceeds of that estate, what, if anything, did Mr. Burk say he would do ? * * * A. He said if they could get it cleared up and he could have the income from the land that he would will or deed us the land at his death. Q. Did you have any further conversation with him about the deeds, and if so what was it ? A. Yes, sir; he said one time he would fix up two deeds and then at his death they were to be turned over to us. Q. Who do you mean by ‘us’? A. My brother David and I.”

Ellen Gilgren, wife of Gustave A. Gilgren, in relation to a conversation with August Burk testified to the following: “Q. What was your conversation with him? A. I told him I didn’t want to sign that paper to give him control of the estate. Q. What did he say ? A. He said if I would, he said at his death we wpuld get it, he would either give us a quitclaim deed or turn it over to us in a will at his death. Q. Who did he say he meant, if he did at all, by ‘we’ ? A. He meant my husband and I. Q. Did he tell you anything, or did you talk about the other piece of land that was willed to Dave? A.

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Bluebook (online)
299 N.W. 325, 140 Neb. 124, 1941 Neb. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilgren-v-price-neb-1941.