In Re Estate of Johnson

279 P.2d 271, 177 Kan. 368, 1955 Kan. LEXIS 223
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 22, 1955
Docket39,587
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 279 P.2d 271 (In Re Estate of Johnson) 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 Johnson, 279 P.2d 271, 177 Kan. 368, 1955 Kan. LEXIS 223 (kan 1955).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Price, J.:

This action, filed originally in the probate court, was, in its inception, a proceeding to probate a will. Through pleadings and contentions by protestants, it was expanded into a counteraction to probate a contractual lost or destroyed will, to set aside a deed, and for specific performance of an alleged oral contract to devise.

Proponents have appealed from an adverse judgment.

Protestants have filed a motion to dismiss the appeal.

Upon consideration of the record we have concluded that the appeal must be dismissed. For that reason only so much of the record as will show the basis of our decision will be summarized.

The following is not disputed:

On August 3,1929, Fred Johnson, Sr., a resident of Rooks County, died intestate, leaving as his heirs-at-law his widow, Mary Jane, the decedent herein, and six adult children — George, Fred, Jr., Ethel, Dorathe, Robert and Anna. Among other property, he owned three quarter sections of real estate in Rooks County. On August 17, 1929, the six children, joined by their spouses, executed a quitclaim deed to their undivided interests in this real estate to their mother, Mary Jane. George was appointed administrator of his father's estate and the administration thereof was fully settled and closed a year later. The order of final settlement recited that the balance of money on hand for distribution be “paid to the widow by request of the children.”

On May 25, 1949, the widow, Mary Jane, executed a will by the provisions of which three of her children, Fred, Jr., Anna and Ethel, were bequeathed the sum of five dollars each, and all of the residue of her estate was bequeathed and devised to the other three children, George, Robert and Dorathe, and a granddaughter, Barbara Ann, share and share alike. George was designated as executor of this will.

On April 24, 1953, Mary Jane, being still possessed of the three quarter sections of land owned by her husband, Fred, Sr., at the time of his death, executed a general warranty deed to one of the quarter sections to George and his wife, Ruth, in joint tenancy, the consideration thereof being the sum of one dollar and love and *370 affection. It also recited that it was a gift deed, that no revenue stamps were necessary, and reserved to Mary Jane certain rentals and royalties from oil and gas leases.

On June 18, 1953, Mary Jane died, and shortly thereafter George filed in the probate court a petition for the probate of the 1949 will.

In opposition to this petition, protestants, being the other five children of Mary Jane, filed a petition alleging that the deed of August 17, 1929, in which they and George quitclaimed their undivided interests in the three quarter sections of real estate to their mother, Mary Jane, was executed pursuant to an oral agreement with their mother, whereby, in consideration of such conveyance, she agreed to execute a will devising all of the property remaining in the estate of her late husband to her six children, share and share alike; that pursuant to such agreement their mother executed such a will on August 17, 1929, in which Fred, Jr., was designated as executor thereof; that said will was contractual in nature, but had been lost or destroyed; that the purported will executed by their mother in 1949 was in violation of and contrary to the terms of such oral contract and the contractual will executed in 1929; and that the 1953 deed from their mother to George and his wife, Ruth, to one of the three tracts of real estate, was given without consideration, was in violation of and contrary to the oral agreement entered into by all six children and their mother, and should be cancelled and set aside.

The prayer of this petition was for an order denying probate of the purported 1949 will; for an order admitting to probate the lost or destroyed will of 1929, and appointing Fred, Jr., as executor thereof; for a further order cancelling and setting aside the 1953 deed to George and his wife, Ruth, and, in the alternative, if the lost or destroyed. 1929 will not be admitted to probate then that protestants have specific performance of the alleged oral contract, and that they and their brother George be decreed to be the owners as tenants in common of the three quarter sections of real estate.

By an appropriate motion George’s wife, Ruth, was made a party to the proceeding, and George, Ruth and Barbara Ann, the granddaughter, filed a reply and answer to the petition of protestants.

This pleading admitted the death of Fred, Sr., in 1929; that Mary Jane and the six children were his only heirs-at-law; that he owned the three quarter sections of real estate in question; that *371 on August 17, 1929, the six children, together with their spouses, quitclaimed their undivided interests in the real estate to their mother, Mary Jane; that in 1953 the latter deeded one of the three tracts to George and his wife, Ruth, but denied all other material allegations of the petition filed by protestants.

Upon the issues thus joined, a hearing, at which considerable evidence was introduced, was had in the probate court.

At the conclusion thereof that court rendered judgment in favor of protestants to the effect that on August 17, 1929, Mary Jane entered into the claimed contract with her six children; that on such date she executed her will in conformity thereto; that such will was contractual and binding upon her; that it had been lost or destroyed; that Fred, Jr., was designated therein as executor; and that the 1953 deed from Mary Jane to George and his wife, Ruth, was void as being in contravention of the oral agreement and contractual will, and that the property attempted to be conveyed thereby should be inventoried as a part of Mary Jane’s estate.

The judgment further ordered that probate of the 1949 will be denied, that the lost or destroyed will of 1929 be admitted to probate, and Fred, Jr., was appointed executor thereof.

Fred, Jr., qualified as executor and proceeded to administer the estate. The inventory and appraisement filed by him included the quarter section of land which had previously been conveyed by Mary Jane to George and his wife, Ruth.

George, Ruth and the granddaughter, Barbara Ann, appealed to the district court. The notice of appeal named and was served on Fred, Jr., in his personal capacity, and on Fred, Jr., executor of the purported will of Mary Jane.

In the district court no additional pleadings, other than a motion pertaining to jurisdiction, and which, for our purposes, need not be noted, were filed, and the case was tried upon the transcript of proceedings in the probate court.

In rendering its decision the district court made conclusions of fact and of law, which, in substance, affirmed the findings and judgment of the probate court, with the exception that Mary Jane’s 1949 will was ordered admitted to probate. The journal entry of judgment provided that notwithstanding the admission of such will to probate, her estate was to be administered in accordance with the oral agreement entered into by her and the six children on August 17, 1929. In other words, the effect of the court’s holding *372

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Bluebook (online)
279 P.2d 271, 177 Kan. 368, 1955 Kan. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-johnson-kan-1955.