In Re Estate of Stannard

295 P.2d 610, 179 Kan. 394, 1956 Kan. LEXIS 390
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 7, 1956
Docket40,018
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 295 P.2d 610 (In Re Estate of Stannard) 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 Stannard, 295 P.2d 610, 179 Kan. 394, 1956 Kan. LEXIS 390 (kan 1956).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Thiele, J.:

The present appeal is from an order of the district court striking a part of defendant’s answer and arises under the circumstances later set forth.

Grant A. Stannard died testate on November 12, 1951, and on December 7, 1951, his widow, Faye C. Stannard, was appointed as the executrix of his will and estate. On June 23, 1952, Flossie May Reynolds filed her petition in the probate court for allowance of her demand against the estate of Stannard in which she alleged that on January 12, 1951, Stannard in his lifetime entered into an oil and gas lease with her, a copy of which was attached and made a part of the petition, which provided:

“ ‘It is a part of the consideration and covenants of this lease that the lessee will commence and drill a well with due diligence to the Wilcox Sand, unless oil or gas is found in paying quantities at a lesser depth’;”

that the decedent in his lifetime breached the agreement and his estate had wholly failed to comply with its provisions, and that no well was commenced or drilled to the Wilcox sand and no oil or gas was found in paying quantities at a lesser depth, and that petitioner had suffered damage in the amount of $20,000, the reasonable cost of drilling such a well, and petitioner asked that her demand be allowed for that sum.

We need note the oil and gas lease only to state that it is dated January 12, 1951, and that under it Flossie May Reynolds for a stated consideration of $1.00 and other good and valuable consideration leased a forty acre tract in Creek County, Oklahoma, to Grant A. Stannard for a term of one year for oil and gas purposes *396 and that the last paragraph preceding the witnessing clause is the provision above quoted.

Faye C. Stannard, executrix, filed an answer in the probate court in which she admitted her residence, and for present purposes, denied generally. It may be noted her answer in the probate court contained no allegations similar to those stricken from her amended answer later mentioned.

As the result of a hearing in the probate court, the demand was allowed in the sum of $12,750 on May 6, 1953, and in due time and on May 28, 1953, the executrix appealed to the district court.

In the district court, with leave of the court, the executrix filed an amended answer containing a demurrer on the ground a cause of action was not stated, and admissions and denials not of present importance. The sixth and seventh paragraphs alleged:

“Sixth.
“Further answering in the alternative and without waiving any defenses hereinbefore pleaded, respondent alleges and states: That it was the duty of the petitioner to minimize and avert any claimed damages to herself or to her property after the alleged breach of the terms of said lease by the said Grant A. Stannard, Deceased, and this respondent. Notwithstanding the foregoing, said petitioner took no appropriate measures readily available to her to mitigate and avert any alleged damages claimed in her petition for allowance of demand, in that said petitioner did, and before any well had been commenced upon the property of said petitioner and on or about the 12th day of May, 1952, refuse a proposal of this respondent as executrix, for herself individually and other heirs of said decedent, to drill a well under a lease containing terms identical with the terms of the alleged lease attached to said petition and marked Exhibit ‘A’, except said proposal provided that a well would be commenced within sixty to ninety days in lieu of one year, and this respondent was at that time and at all times material thereafter, ready, willing and able to drill said well as aforesaid.
“Seventh.
“After said refusal of the proposal aforesaid, and on or about the 15th day of September, 1953, the petitioner granted an oil and gas lease to one R. C. Halliburton, the express consideration being $1.00, a copy whereof is hereto attached, marked Exhibit ‘A’, and made a part of this answer. By such act, petitioner further disabled herself from mitigating or averting her alleged damages. Respondent is informed and believes, and therefore alleges as a fact, said lease expired by reason of the fact no well was commenced upon the demised premises on or before September 15, 1954.
“Defendant is informed and believes, and therefore alleges as a fact, that subsequent to September 15, 1954, a well was drilled to completion on the property of petitioner, which well was and is a producing well.”

The claimant filed her motion to strike the amended answer for *397 three reasons. The first is presently immaterial. The second was that the answer contained allegations in paragraphs six and seven that were inadmissible on the trial and prejudicial to claimant and the third was in the alternative that if the court should fail to strike the whole answer, all but the first sentence of paragraph six and all of paragraph seven should be stricken. The trial court sustained the motion as to the second and third reasons. Thereafter the executrix perfected her appeal to this court.

Before discussing the contentions of the parties we note the following. Appellant presents her contentions as though all of the sixth and seventh paragraphs of the answer had been stricken in their entirety, and indeed the ruling of the trial court was to that effect. The appellee presents her contentions as though all that was stricken of the sixth paragraph of the answer was that part after the first sentence, and that was what the third ground of its motion asked, and which the trial court sustained. In our opinion literally read the ruling of the trial court as reflected in the journal entry, is contradictory and conflicting. We resolve that conflict by holding that paragraph six of the answer was stricken only insofar as it contained allegations inadmissible on trial, and that the only part stricken is that following the first sentence, and that the allegation it was the duty of the petitioner to minimize and avert any claimed damages to herself after the alleged breach by Stannard, remains in the answer. The question then remains whether the portion stricken constitutes a defense or defenses which were improperly stricken.

Appellant directs attention to the general rule that one injured by reason of a breach of contract by another is bound to exercise reasonable care to avoid loss or minimize the resulting damage, and that to the extent the damage is the result of his active and unreasonable enhancement thereof or due to his failure to exercise such care and diligence he cannot recover, or, as sometimes stated, he is bound to protect himself if he can do so with reasonable exertion or at trifling expense and can recover from the delinquent party only such damages as he could not, with reasonable effort, have avoided, as more fully stated in 15 Am. Jur. 420. She also directs our attention to Kansas decisions where that general rule has been recognized such as Swisher v. Beckett, 172 Kan. 711, 242 P. 2d 831, and authorities cited, and to Oklahoma decisions such as Smith-Horton Drilling Co. v. Brooks, 199 Okla. 63, 182 P.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
295 P.2d 610, 179 Kan. 394, 1956 Kan. LEXIS 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-stannard-kan-1956.