In re Estate of Einsel

374 P.3d 612, 304 Kan. 567, 2016 Kan. LEXIS 305
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 10, 2016
Docket109367
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 374 P.3d 612 (In re Estate of Einsel) 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
In re Estate of Einsel, 374 P.3d 612, 304 Kan. 567, 2016 Kan. LEXIS 305 (kan 2016).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Per Curiam:

The heart of the dispute in this appeal, which arises in the context of a partition action, raises a question of tire correct interpretation of a journal entry of judgment in a prior divorce proceeding. More specifically, the parties disagree about the effect of language in the journal entry granting the wife a percentage of the husbands remainder interest in an inheritance, which consisted mostly of land and mineral interests. The district court determined the decree granted the wife a money judgment. On appeal from that decision, the Court of Appeals reviewed the judgment de novo and held the divorce decree granted the wife an interest in property. Einsel v. Einsel, No. 109,367, 2014 WL 1795993, at *2 (Kan. App. 2014) (unpublished opinion).

On petition for review the husband argues tire Court of Appeals erred in applying a de novo standard of review and in interpreting the divorce decree as granting the wife an interest in real property. We disagree with his arguments, and, as we explain below, we affirm the Court of Appeals’ ruling, although we issue slightly different remand instructions.

Factual and Procedural History

A. Preliminary partition proceeding

In January 2010, Carol Einsel filed a petition for partition in Comanche County District Court against her ex-husband, Rodney Einsel. Although Carol initially named several other members of the Einsel family as defendants, these parties were peripheral (and some were dismissed). Due to the shared surnames, we will refer to the parties by their first names in order to avoid confusion. All parties agree the dispute is really only between Carol and Rodney, and we will limit our recitation of the facts accordingly.

The ownership interests at stake in this case involved the Einsel *569 family ranch — specifically, interests in 12 tracts of land in Comanche County (the surface rights), a total of 14 oil and gas wells in Comanche and Kiowa Counties (the mineral interests), and 3 tracts of land with mineral interests in Kiowa County. Carol alleged she had an ownership interest in certain surface and mineral interests that had previously been enjoyed only by Rodney and his family. Her petition did not differentiate between the surface rights and mineral interests and instead asserted these rights were all owned in the following percentages: each of Rodneys two sisters, an undivided one-third; Rodney, an undivided 60% of one-third; and Carol, an undivided 40% of one-third. She requested an order specifying the parties’ interests and directing partition pursuant to K.S.A. 60-1003; she later moved for payment of oil and gas proceeds from the 14 wells and the mineral interests in Kiowa County.

In his answer, Rodney explained that Carols claim derived from a 1994 journal entry of divorce (the “divorce decree”) in their earlier divorce proceedings, which had been filed and heard in Ellis County District Court. The judge presiding over the divorce had awarded Carol 40% of Rodney’s remainder interest in the inheritance he received during the marriage. Rodney disputed whether he actually received any interest in his inheritance during his marriage to Carol; regardless, he also argued that the divorce decree did not award Carol an interest in real property. According to Rodney, partition was inappropriate because Carol’s interest was limited to the value of Rodney’s remainder interest on the date of the divorce decree. In response to Carol’s motion for payment of oil and gas proceeds, Rodney explained he and his sisters actually owned a one-sixth interest in the Einsel real estate and mineral interests, not a one-third interest as Carol claimed.

The partition court denied as premature Carol’s motion for payment of oil and gas proceeds, and it then scheduled a hearing and ordered briefing between the parties regarding Carol’s ownership rights, if any, in the Einsel ranch and associated mineral interests. Essentially, the parties’ disagreement at this point hinged on the nature of Carol’s award in the divorce proceedings. Accordingly, we turn to the documents the parties submitted to the partition court regarding the divorce decree.

*570 B. Documents submitted to the partition court in advance of the hearing

According to exhibits submitted by the parties, Carol and Rodney were married in May 1966. Rodneys father, Victor Einsel, died testate in April 1992; his will was admitted to probate in June 1992.

Carol and Rodney experienced marital difficulties, and in December 1992 (approximately 8 months after Victors death), Carol petitioned for separate maintenance.

Victor Einsel’s estate

In January 1993, the probate court entered a journal entry of final settlement on Victors estate (the “probate order”). This probate order is relevant to the instant case because it defined what Victor owned at the time of his death and informed what Rodney could receive from Victor in inheritance. The probate order recounted that at the time of his death Victor owned an undivided one-half interest in the Einsel ranch in Comanche County (the surface rights) and also owned fractional interests in 14 oil and gas wells in Comanche and Kiowa Counties (the mineral interests). Victor also possessed a one-sixth or one-half interest in certain severed mineral interests in Comanche and Kiowa counties (the severed mineral interests). Victor held other property as a joint tenant in common with his wife, Anna Lou Einsel, and the probate court ruled that Victor s interest in this other property terminated upon his death, and full ownership devolved to Anna Lou as the surviving joint tenant.

The divorce proceedings

In June 1993, Rodney answered Carols petition for separate maintenance and counterclaimed for divorce in Ellis County District Court. In a hearing before the divorce court, Carol explained she was unemployed and had been unable to find work, was previously hospitalized due to emotional turmoil and had significant medical bills, had no means of support since Rodney stopped depositing money in their joint account, did not have reliable transportation, and was in need of funds.

In an October 1993 hearing, the divorce court asked the parties *571 if there would be substantial arguments about the value of any assets. Carol responded that there was only one such issue — “[t]he value of remainder interests in [Victor’s] estate, a sizable amount of land in die estate.” Rodney agreed there was an immediate issue as to ‘what the nature of his interest in that land is, if any.”

Prior to its final ruling, the divorce court received a valuation of Rodneys interest. According to the valuations, the Einsel ranch was valued at $892,680, and the royalty interests in Comanche and Kiowa Counties were worth $73,224, for a grand total of $965,904. Rodney owned a one-third remainder interest in one-half of this property (i.e., the half owned by Victor at the time of his death), valued at $160,984.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
374 P.3d 612, 304 Kan. 567, 2016 Kan. LEXIS 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-einsel-kan-2016.