Kenneth R. Minshall v. Robin Griffin and Joy Osbon, Individually and as the Personal Representative of the Estate of Gail Lee Quinn

2025 WY 90
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 7, 2025
DocketS-25-0019
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 WY 90 (Kenneth R. Minshall v. Robin Griffin and Joy Osbon, Individually and as the Personal Representative of the Estate of Gail Lee Quinn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Kenneth R. Minshall v. Robin Griffin and Joy Osbon, Individually and as the Personal Representative of the Estate of Gail Lee Quinn, 2025 WY 90 (Wyo. 2025).

Opinion

THE SUPREME COURT, STATE OF WYOMING

2025 WY 90

APRIL TERM, A.D. 2025

August 7, 2025 KENNETH R. MINSHALL,

Appellant (Plaintiff),

v. S-25-0019 ROBIN GRIFFIN and JOY OSBON, individually and as the Personal Representative of the Estate of Gail Lee Quinn,

Appellees (Defendants).

Appeal from the District Court of Washakie County The Honorable Bobbi Dean Overfield, Judge

Representing Appellant: David Ziemer of Legal Aid of Wyoming.

Representing Appellees: Christopher M. Wages of The Wages Group, LLC, Buffalo, Wyoming.

Before BOOMGAARDEN, C.J., and Fox*, GRAY, FENN, and JAROSH, JJ.

* Justice Fox retired from judicial office effective May 27, 2025, and, pursuant to Article 5, § 5 of the Wyoming Constitution and Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 5-1-106(f) (2023), she was reassigned to act on this matter on May 28, 2025.

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in Pacific Reporter Third. Readers are requested to notify the Clerk of the Supreme Court, Supreme Court Building, Cheyenne, Wyoming 82002, of any typographical or other formal errors so that correction may be made before final publication in the permanent volume. FENN, Justice.

[¶1] Kenneth Minshall filed a complaint seeking to quiet title to approximately two acres of real property in Washakie County (Subject Property). On appeal, he claims the district court erred when it found the doctrine of estoppel by deed did not preclude the heirs and personal representatives of the Estate of Gail Lee Quinn from challenging the legality of a deed transferring the Subject Property to his corporation, which had not been duly incorporated. We affirm.

ISSUE

[¶2] Mr. Minshall presents one issue on appeal, which we rephrase as follows: Does the doctrine of estoppel by deed preclude the heirs and personal representatives of the Estate of Gail Lee Quinn from claiming title to the Subject Property?

FACTS

[¶3] This matter involves a dispute over the title of the Subject Property, which consists of approximately two acres of real property with two mobile homes and a steel building located at 982 Lane 4, in Worland, Washakie County, Wyoming. At the center of the dispute is whether the Subject Property was transferred to a non-existent corporation identified by employer identification number (EIN) XX-XXXXXXX and three different names, M/G Enterprises, M/Q Enterprises, and M-Q Enterprises.

[¶4] Gail Lee Quinn owned the Subject Property beginning in the 1970s. Kenneth Minshall lived with Ms. Quinn from 1980 until her death, except for certain periods when his work required him to live elsewhere.

[¶5] On or around August 1, 2006,1 Ms. Quinn executed a document labeled “contract,” which provided:

I Gail l. (sic) Quinn on 1 August 2006 upon the completion of the 30’ x 50’ steel building on my property do here by Relinquish all rights to said property to M/Q ENTERPRISES, EIN XX-XXXXXXX, Granting, all such right, title, interest, property, possession, claim and demand, as they may have or ought to have, in or to all the following described premises situated in Washakie County, Wyoming to wit.

1 Mr. Minshall claims in his brief “[t]he contract says it was signed in 2006, but undisputed testimony is that it actually was signed in 2008, and ‘2006 was a typographical error.” We do not have the testimony in the record and the district court found it was unable to ascertain whether it was 2006 or 2008.

1 A parcel of land in NW 1/4 NW 1/4 of Section 21, T 48 N., R. 92 W., Resurveyed Of 6th P.M,. Washakie County. Wyoming being more particularly described as follows:

Beginning at a point which is located N. 89° 46’. East, 810 feet from the Northwest corner of said Section 21, said point being on the North line of said Section 21; thence N. 89° 46’ East 245.41 feet along the North line of said Section 21; thence S. 0°01’12” West, 355.00 feet; thence S. 89° 46 West, 245.41 feet; thence N 0°01’12” East to the point of beginning, together with all appurtenances thereto attached.

Said parcel of land contains 2.00 acres of land, more or less.

TO HAVE AND TO HOLD the said above described premises, all and singular, unto said Grantor and unto his, her or their heirs, successors or assigns forever.

Dated this 1 Day of August 2006.

Ms. Quinn and an unknown individual identified as “witness” are the only parties to execute the document entitled “contract.” The steel building was completed on an unknown date. The record does not indicate whether this document was ever recorded in Washakie County’s real property records.

[¶6] On February 28, 2018, Ms. Quinn deeded the Subject Property to her two daughters, Robin Griffin and Joy Osbon, by quitclaim deed. Four months later, on June 8, 2018, Ms. Griffin and Ms. Osbon deeded the Subject Property back to Ms. Quinn. That same month, Ms. Quinn executed a quitclaim deed and deeded the Subject Property to M/G Enterprises, EIN XX-XXXXXXX. The M/G Enterprises identified as the grantee in the deed does not match the name of the company identified in the document entitled “contract,” M/Q Enterprises. However, the referenced EIN in the deed matches the EIN referenced in the document entitled “contract,” EIN XX-XXXXXXX.

[¶7] Mr. Minshall alleged the intended grantee under the 2018 deed was his business M/Q Enterprises, not M/G Enterprises, and the discrepancy was the result of a typographical error. Information about a third business, M-Q Enterprises, whose EIN also matched the EIN referenced in the 2018 deed and in the document entitled “contract,” was also introduced during the proceedings. In 2008, Mr. Minshall received a letter from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) stating it had corrected the business name on his account.

2 The letter was addressed to Mr. Minshall and M-Q Enterprises and explained a dash must be substituted for the backslash in M/Q Enterprises. The IRS identified M-Q Enterprises with the same EIN as used in the document labeled “contract” and in the 2018 deed to M/G Enterprises. None of the three businesses identified—M/G Enterprises, M/Q Enterprises, and M-Q Enterprises—have ever been registered as a business with the Wyoming Secretary of State or with any other state. Although M-Q Enterprises has an EIN with the IRS, M-Q Enterprises has never received any documented income or paid any taxes.

[¶8] Ms. Quinn died intestate on July 7, 2019. Mr. Minshall executed a quitclaim deed on behalf of M/G Enterprises, EIN XX-XXXXXXX, on November 2, 2021, which provided “M/G Enterprises, EIN XX-XXXXXXX, Grantor, . . . convey[s] and quitclaim[s] to Kenneth R. Minshall, Grantee, all such right, title, interest, property, possession, claim and demand” in the Subject Property. Despite Mr. Minshall transferring the Subject Property to himself on behalf of M/G Enterprises, Ms. Griffin and Ms. Osbon claimed an ownership interest in the Subject Property as the heirs of Ms. Quinn.

[¶9] Mr. Minshall filed a complaint to quiet title against Ms. Griffin and Ms. Osbon requesting a declaration he is the owner of the Subject Property. He further requested Ms. Griffin and Ms. Osbon be permanently enjoined and restrained from asserting any right, title, or interest in the Subject Property. Ms. Griffin and Ms. Osbon answered the complaint and filed a counterclaim for quiet title and ejectment. They served Mr. Minshall with a Notice to Quit, Vacate, and Leave Premises. Ms. Griffin and Ms. Osbon also requested Ms. Quinn’s estate be added as a party. The district court ordered the Estate of Gail Lee Quinn be joined as a party and amended the caption. Ms. Griffin and Ms. Osbon amended their answer and counterclaim to assert the following amended counterclaims: (1) ejectment; (2) quiet title; (3) trespass; and (4) declaratory judgment.

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2025 WY 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenneth-r-minshall-v-robin-griffin-and-joy-osbon-individually-and-as-the-wyo-2025.