Kirkpatrick v. Ault

280 P.2d 637, 177 Kan. 552, 1955 Kan. LEXIS 249
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 5, 1955
Docket39,632
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 280 P.2d 637 (Kirkpatrick v. Ault) 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
Kirkpatrick v. Ault, 280 P.2d 637, 177 Kan. 552, 1955 Kan. LEXIS 249 (kan 1955).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Harvey, C. J.:

This was an action in the nature of a declaratory judgment to have determined whether a personal judgment previously obtained by plaintiff against defendant, A. W. Ault, is a lien upon his alleged interest in certain real property now claimed to be owned entirely by his wife, Margaret Ann Ault. The trial court sustained a demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence and he has appealed.

*553 The facts are not in dispute and may be stated as follows: On April 17, 1943, a general warranty deed dated February 8, 1943, was filed in the office of the register of deeds in McPherson County, in which the grantors were Galen B. Barrett and his wife, Lawrence Louis Barrett a single man, Stanley Walden Barrett and his wife, March Henderson Barrett a single man, Willis Shaw Barrett and his wife, and Dorothy Barrett Rundell and her husband, and Margaret Ann Ault and A. W. Ault were grantees. It recited a consideration of $4,500, the payment of which was acknowledged, and described by metes and bounds a tract of land of about seven acres, all lying within the corporate limits of the city of McPherson.

On July 6, 1943, in an action pending in the district court of McPherson County in which the present plaintiff was plaintiff, and the present defendant, A. W. Ault, was the sole defendant (case No. 10,329), plaintiff recovered a personal judgment against defendant for the sum of $3,723.04, with interest and costs, upon which judgment $313.03 had been collected and credited, leaving a balance due at the time of this action of $3,410.01, plus accrued interest. Plaintiff has kept this judgment alive by successive executions.

On December 27, 1943, a general warranty deed was filed in the office of the register of deeds of McPherson County. This was entitled “Correction Deed.” It bore the same date, February 8, 1943, as the former deed; was executed by the same grantors on various dates in August, 1943, and the sole grantee named therein Margaret Ann Ault. It named a consideration of $1, and described the same land described in the earlier deed. This deed contained tire following recital:

“Whereas, tire said parties of the first part did, on or about the 8th day of February, 1943, execute to the party of the second part, under whom the party of the second part claims for the consideration therein mentioned, a conveyance of certain lands, situated in McPherson County, Kansas, and hereinafter more particularly described, which said conveyance is recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds of the County of McPherson, in Book 113, of Deeds, page 246 of the records of said office, and
“Whereas, in said conveyance by mistake the words, Margaret Ann Ault and Alfred W. Ault were written instead of the words Margaret Ann Ault, and
“Whereas, to prevent difficulties hereafter, it is expedient to correct said errors.”

One of the executions in case No. 10,329 issued June 27, 1952, *554 was accompanied by a note to the sheriff asking him in the event he found no personal property subject to execution to levy upon the one-half interest of A. W. Ault in the seven-acre tract of land described in the deed recorded April 17, 1943, above mentioned, except one acre thereof to be selected by the judgment debtor as his homestead. When the sheriff went to levy on the real property the debtor denied any ownership in the property. The sheriff made some other investigations, concluded the title was questionable, and refused to make the levy without bond, which the plaintiff refused to furnish. Then plaintiff filed a motion in case No. 10,329 to amerce the sheriff, and for the full amount due on the judgment. At the hearing of this motion the two deeds above mentioned were offered in evidence and it was stipulated that there were no other instruments of record affecting the title of the property described in the praecipe for execution in this cause “dated June 27, 1952” except a mortgage in the original amount of $2,700 from the Aults to the Railroad Building & Loan Association and the extension agreement relative thereto, that the said real property lies within the boundaries of the City of McPherson and has not been excluded therefrom; and that the defendant and his spouse were entitled to select a one-acre homestead therein. The trial court overruled the motion and plaintiff appealed. This court affirmed by an opinion found in 174 Kan. 701.

The petition in the case before us was filed December 4, 1953, No. 12,112. The plaintiff and the defendant, A. W. Ault, were the same persons who were plaintiff and defendant in case No. 10,329, but in addition thereto Margaret Ann Ault was named as a defendant. The petition pleaded the judgment in favor of Kirkpatrick in case No. 10,329, and that there was a balance due upon it of $3,410.01, plus interest. It pleaded the deed from the Barretts to Margaret Ann Ault and Alfred W. Ault, above mentioned, was executed and delivered; pleaded the defendants occupied a residence located upon the tract of land conveyed by the deed; pleaded that by reason of the deed the grantees named therein became seized and possessed of fee title to the property described therein as tenants in common, and that A. W. Ault became thereby the owner of an undivided one-half interest therein. It also pleaded the issuance of executions for the judgment; that when the sheriff attempted to levy upon the real property Margaret Ann Ault claimed the full title to the property and A. W. Ault denied *555 that he had any interest therein, and because thereof the sheriff declined to make the levy. It is further pleaded that by reason of the premises an actual controversy existed between the plaintiff and defendants, and each of them, as to the title of A. W. Ault in the property, and the lien of plaintiff’s judgment thereon. It was pleaded that defendant A. W. Ault should be determined to have an undivided one-half fee title interest in the property, that said interest was subject to the lien of judgment, and that the court should order the undivided one-half interest of A. W. Ault sold, subject to his selection of homestead, and equitably subject to the mortgage held thereon by the Railroad Building & Loan Association of Newton. The prayer was for such judgment.

The defendants joined in an answer which contained a general denial except as to matters admitted; they admitted plaintiff had obtained judgment against A. W. Ault in case No. 10,329; that the Barretts had executed and delivered to them a general warranty deed to the real property in question which deed was recorded April 17, 1943; alleged the “Correction Deed” was filed December 27, 1943; alleged that by reason of the said correction deed the title to the above described property was vested solely in Margaret Ann Ault and that A. W. Ault had no interest whatsoever in said real estate. The answer further alleged that in the proceedings to amerce the sheriff, above referred to, plaintiff’s motion to amerce the sheriff was denied by the district court; that plaintiff appealed therefrom, and that this court affirmed in its opinion reported in 174 Kan. 701, and alleged the decision of the supreme court to be a final adjudication, and was res judicata regarding all questions pleaded and set forth in plaintiff’s petition.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Vicki Lyn Buttel
D. Kansas, 2023
Hougland v. Franco
D. New Mexico, 2020
Franco v. Franco (In re Franco)
574 B.R. 730 (D. New Mexico, 2017)
In Re Vollen
426 B.R. 359 (D. Kansas, 2010)
Gallups v. Kent
953 So. 2d 393 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 2006)
Sartain v. Fidelity Financial Services, Inc.
775 P.2d 161 (Idaho Court of Appeals, 1989)
Knowles v. Freeman
649 P.2d 532 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1982)
Mater v. Boese
518 P.2d 482 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1974)
Attebery v. Griffin Construction Co.
312 P.2d 598 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
280 P.2d 637, 177 Kan. 552, 1955 Kan. LEXIS 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirkpatrick-v-ault-kan-1955.