In Re Estate of Gustason

250 P.2d 837, 173 Kan. 619, 34 A.L.R. 2d 1014, 1952 Kan. LEXIS 248
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 6, 1952
Docket38,721
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 250 P.2d 837 (In Re Estate of Gustason) 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 Gustason, 250 P.2d 837, 173 Kan. 619, 34 A.L.R. 2d 1014, 1952 Kan. LEXIS 248 (kan 1952).

Opinion

*620 The opinion of the court was delivered by

Thiele, J.:

The question in this appeal is whether Gladys A. Gustason, widow of Raymond D. Gustason, who died intestate, waived her right to inherit any part of his estate by reason of the property settlement agreement between them to which reference is later made.

Although the record as abstracted shows the question was first raised in the probate court as a defense to the application of Gladys A. Gustason for letters of administration on her deceased husband’s estate, and at subsequent times, we do not find it necessary to detail all of those proceedings for it appears without dispute that Susie Dean, Charles Gustason, Ida O. Coffey, Elsie Hall Moyer, Rose Orton, Edward Gustason and Bessie Zeiler, who were brothers and sisters of Raymond D. Gustason, although having previously raised the question, filed a demand in the probate court asserting their right to be declared his heirs and entitled to his estate; that the administrator of the estate filed his petition for final settlement, and that the demand and the petition for final settlement were transferred to the district court for a determination of the issues and for all orders necessary or incident to a final settlement of the estate. Thereafter Gladys A. Gustason filed an answer in the district court, “for the purpose of clarifying” her position, in which she alleged her marriage to Raymond D. Gustason, his death, that she survived as widow and was entitled to inherit his estate. She admitted execution of the property settlement agreement but alleged it was made for the purpose of making a division of the property owned by the parties in order that each could irianage, control, dispose of, alienate and devise his property independent of the other but that the parties did not intend to waive their rights of inheritance and that the contract did not by its terms effect a waiver of any such right.

When the above demand and petition came on for hearing in the district court certain facts were stipulated and no evidence was introduced other than the probate court files and the stipulation. For present purposes those facts were as follows:

Raymond D. Gustason, who married Gladys A. Gustason on September II, 1922, died intestate on July 11, 1950, leaving her, but no children or adopted children or their issue surviving him. He was also survived by the brothers and sisters above named. On October 27, 1949, Gladys A. Gustason and Raymond D. Gustason entered into a property settlement agreement which recited they were wife *621 and husband but that domestic difficulties had arisen which made it impossible for them to live together longer and they deemed it to their best interest to make a full and complete settlement of property rights, and they therefore contracted and agreed that a division be made, details of which are not set forth in the abstract, and that in consideration thereof Gladys A. Gustason did forever release Raymond D. Gustason from any and all obligations to support her or for alimony and she acknowledged full satisfaction of any and all claims which she might have in any of his property and she released, relinquished, transferred, conveyed and quitclaimed to him described real estate (of which he died the owner), and certain personal property. The third paragraph of the contract recited:

“The parties hereto hereby agree that a full disclosure has been made between them as to all property and property rights owned by them or either of them, jointly or severally, and that the foregoing contract and settlement is a full, fair, equitable and complete settlement of all rights in property owned or possessed by them or either of them, jointly or severally, and each of the parties hereto hereby agrees never to make any claim to any of the property herein allotted to the other, or to any property hereafter acquired by either of the parties hereto either in life or by inheritance and each agrees that the other may own, hold, use, encumber, alienate, lease or convey any of said property herein allotted to him or to her or any property hereafter acquired as his or her own separate property to the same extent and with like effect as though the parties to this agreement had never been married to each other, but if such requirement should be made then the other party will join in any requested conveyance or transfer of any property.” (Emphasis supplied.)

The remainder of the agreement is not of present importance. It was expressly stipulated that the agreement was prepared at the request of Gladys A. Gustason, that each party to the above agreement had executed and exchanged deeds to the real estate going to each, had fully performed all of the terms of the contract, and that Gladys A. Gustason, at the time of the death of Raymond D. Gustason, was residing on lands which she received under the settlement.

For present purposes it may be said the district court found that the property settlement agreement, supplemented by quitclaim deeds, gas transfer orders and a division of personal property, was a full, complete and final settlement of all property rights between Gladys A. Gustason and Raymond D. Gustason, including the right of inheritance by Gladys A. Gustason from Raymond D. Gustason, and that his brothers and sisters, naming them, were entitled to the net estate of Raymond D. Gustason and the title to all property owned by him at the time of his death and remaining a part of his *622 estate should be assigned to and vested in them, and it rendered judgment accordingly. .

Gladys A. Gustason filed a motion for a new trial which was denied and in due time she perfected her appeal to this court, specifying as error that the trial court erred in holding she had waived her right of inheritance and in denying her motion for a new trial.

Appellees have filed a cross-appeal from a ruling of the district court that an order of the probate court determining the property settlement agreement to be valid was not res judicata. Unless the appellant’s appeal is sustained there is no necessity to discuss the cross-appeal.

Appellant’s argument that the property settlement agreement did not bar her right to inherit her husband’s estate is twofold. Ignoring the language of the agreement under consideration, she first contends that before such a postnuptial agreement may be construed to disinherit the widow it must appear clearly and unmistakably from an examination of the entire instrument that it was the intention of the parties to do so, and that no strained interpretation of the language of the agreement will be permitted to strip her of her inheritable interest in the property of her husband, citing In re Estate of Johnson, 170 Kan. 308, 224 P. 2d 1032, and some of the cases cited therein. We are in accord with what was said in that case, but a mere reading of the contract there under consideration discloses that there was ample ground for this court to hold that nowhere in the contract was there any language clearly and unmistakably leading to a conclusion that either party intended to waive his right of inheritance upon the death of the other intestate.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
250 P.2d 837, 173 Kan. 619, 34 A.L.R. 2d 1014, 1952 Kan. LEXIS 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-gustason-kan-1952.