In Re Estate of Mueseler

362 P.2d 653, 188 Kan. 407, 1961 Kan. LEXIS 311
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 10, 1961
Docket42,291
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 362 P.2d 653 (In Re Estate of Mueseler) 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 Mueseler, 362 P.2d 653, 188 Kan. 407, 1961 Kan. LEXIS 311 (kan 1961).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Jackson, J.:

Frank Mueseler, now deceased, was in his life time a farmer in Rrown county. Upon his death in December, 1957, his will was probated in the probate court of Brown county having been admitted to probate on January 24,1958, and on the same date the executor named in the will was appointed. The three Lutheran church societies were the only named beneficiaries under the will.

Karl H. Mueseler is the only child and sole heir of the above named testator. Kárl made no objection to the will until the executor had sold the real estate then owned by the testator, paid the debts and otherwise administered the estate. The executor then filed his petition for final settlement in which he named the above church societies as legatees and devisees. At this time Karl filed his “objections, exceptions and defenses” to the executor’s petition.

The chief “objection” contained in the above pleading and the *408 only one concerned in the present appeal was stated in part as follows:

“4. That on or about the 2nd day of February, 1955, and for some time prior and subsequent thereto, very friendly and confidential, social and business relations existed between Karl H. Mueseler and his father, Frank Mueseler, induced and sustained by mutual business dealings and transactions particularly as to farming in which they were at times mutually and jointly interested. That at about the time aforementioned, the said Frank Mueseler expressed and stated to Karl H. Mueseler that he wished to retire from active farming, and yet have ready cash to care for himself without disposing of all his holdings, which then consisted of 200 acres of land in Brown County, Kansas, and some personal property.
“That to effect this desire of Frank Mueseler, Karl H. Mueseler met with Frank Mueseler and his attorney Roy V. Nelson, at said attorney’s office in Hiawatha, Kansas, on or about the date first above mentioned. There the matter was discussed and an agreement was reached between Karl H. Mueseler and his father, Frank Mueseler, whereby Frank Mueseler would convey to Karl H. Mueseler, an 80 acres of land, described as: (Land described) assessed at the value of $5425.00, for which Karl H. Mueseler would pay to Frank Mueseler such money as Frank Mueseler would require and need. That at this time Frank Mueseler suggested a maximum payment from his son Karl H. Mueseler, of $18,000.00, and Karl H. Mueseler suggested a maximum payment for said land of $15,000.00, but no agreement was had on the maximum to be paid Frank Mueseler by Karl H. Mueseler for said land. That at this time Karl H. Mueseler stated to his father, Frank Mueseler and his attorney, Roy V. Nelson, that he was unable to finance such a purchase and undertaking without mortgaging his own property, and thereupon Frank Mueseler stated that whatever Karl H. Mueseler paid, even up to the maximum of $18,000.00, as suggested by the father, would not matter because Karl H. Mueseler would receive all of his father’s property upon the death of his parents as their only child. Roy V. Nelson, attorney for the father, made similar statements in behalf of Frank Mueseler to Karl H. Mueseler at or about said time, telling Karl H. Mueseler of a last will and testament of Frank Mueseler devising and bequeathing all property to Karl H. Mueseler after the fife estate of testator’s wife, Anna Mueseler. That the spouse of Frank Mueseler was at this time incompetent, and did not enter into any part of the transaction. At this time it was knowledgeable to all parties present that Frank Mueseler had executed a last will and testament, accomplishing by its terms, bequests and devises to his only child, Karl H. Mueseler, subject to the aforementioned life estate of testator’s spouse, mother of Karl H. Mueseler. On such inducement, Karl H. Mueseler agreed to the acceptance of said deed, and the payments to be made by him to Frank Mueseler, but with no agreement or understanding as to the maximum to be paid, and pursuant thereto, Karl H. Mueseler mortgaged other property of his own and began payment to Frank Mueseler for the deed which Frank Mueseler executed to said property and delivered to Karl H. Mueseler, . .

*409 The pleading continued by alleging the recording of the deed to the eighty acres, just referred to, and further alleging that Karl made payments to his father from time to time beginning in April, 1955 and ending in March, 1957. The payments totaled $11,-703.94. It was also alleged that the wife and mother died on February 2, 1957, and that the land conveyed to Karl by his father was then free of any inchoate claim of the mother based upon the fact that she had not signed the deed to Karl. It was further alleged that because of the confidential relations existing between Karl and his father, he relied upon his father to keep his promises and leave the father’s estate to him; that without the knowledge of Karl, the father made the present probated will 'leaving his estate to others; that Karl not knowing of the new will of his father continued to make payments to him under the above alleged agreement. Karl then alleged in effect that the beneficiaries under the probated will should take nothing and that he should, as beneficiary under the alleged contract and as sole heir of his father, be declared to be the sole owner of the estate.

Karl later filed his petition to transfer the hearing of the above matters to the district court. The district court took jurisdiction of the hearing and after a full hearing denied the claims of Karl and ordered that the estate should be distributed as provided in the will and the report of the executor. Karl has appealed to this court from the decree of the district court.

In discussing the questions presented to this court, we shall for the sake of brevity continue to refer to the appellant by this first name. We shall also observe in the beginning that, as we read the record, the learned trial judge decided the question of Karl’s rights to the estate principally upon one question. The district court decided that Karl had not proved that there was in fact any oral contract to leave the father’s estate to Karl.

We would first point out that under the decisions of this court the trial court was under a duty to find that the contract had been pleaded and proved by clear and satisfactory proof and also that the party asserting the contract had complied with the contract and should in equity and good conscience be entitled to possess the fruits of such contract.

In the case of Jones v. Davis, 165 Kan. 626, 631, 197 P. 2d 932, plaintiff attempted to set up an oral contract under which plaintiff claimed an interest in real estate of a decedent. At page 631 of the *410 opinion, the court set out the rule applicable to the trial court in passing upon such contracts as follows:

“On many occasions this court has had before it contracts of the general nature of the one now under consideration, and in connection therewith has discussed the nature and validity of such contracts, the sufficiency of pleading and proof of the asserted contract, and whether in equity it should be enforced.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
362 P.2d 653, 188 Kan. 407, 1961 Kan. LEXIS 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-mueseler-kan-1961.