Kuehn v. Wishard

452 S.W.2d 5, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 2637
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 4, 1970
Docket324
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 452 S.W.2d 5 (Kuehn v. Wishard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kuehn v. Wishard, 452 S.W.2d 5, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 2637 (Tex. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinions

SAM D. JOHNSON, Justice.

This suit involves the construction of a deed from two parents to their children.

Gustave G. Kuehn and his wife, Mary Jane Kuehn, had ten children. On August 20, 1936, they executed a deed, which will sometimes hereafter be referred to as the “source deed.” Such deed reserved a life estate in themselves and conveyed property to their children. The property consisted of approximately 250 acres, the surface of which was divided by metes and bounds into nine parts or parcels, each of which was given a number, one through nine. The deed conveyed one parcel of the surface to each of the children, except a daughter, Mary Emily Hanson. The deed recited that the “Grantors, have bargained, sold, assigned and conveyed, and do by these presents bargain, sell, assign and convey, in the proportions hereinafter stated * * * ” to each of the nine children except Mary Emily Hanson “each a life estate” into the particular numbered parcel or share that such child was to receive.

The same deed, again subject to the life estate reserved in the grantors, also conveyed the mineral estate. Each of the grantors’ ten children was conveyed “a life estate in and to all of the oil, gas and other minerals * * * in equal and undivided portions.”

The source deed, at least up to this point, appears to be a conveyance of a life estate to each of the nine grantees of the surface tracts, and a conveyance of a life estate to each of the ten grantees of the undivided mineral estate.

The deed then continued:

“Should any or either of grantees die before the expiration of twenty five (25) years from the date hereof, then the estate and property to him herein conveyed shall immediately terminate, and forthwith vest in his (or her) natural children, if any he (or she) leave surviving; but if he (or she) should leave no surviving natural children, then such estate, on such contingency shall immediately vest in equal portions in such deceased grantee’s surviving brothers and sisters, or their children, if any be deceased. Upon the expiration of twenty five years from the date hereof a full fee simple title in and to the property herein conveyed shall vest in grantees, or their successors in title as above indicated, if any or either be deceased * * * During such term of 25 years neither of grantees shall have any power to assign, alien, convey mortgage or encumber the estate to him (or her) herein conveyed, or the income therefrom, or any of such [7]*7property acquired by him (or her) from another of grantees, and any such attempted assignment, conveyance, pledge or mortgage shall be wholly void, with the following exceptions, however; (a) Either of grantees may sell, convey, mortgage or encumber the estate to him herein conveyed, or the income therefrom, or any part thereof, or any of such property acquired from one of his brothers or sisters, to any or either of his surviving brothers or sisters, or their children if either be deceased.”

Thereafter, the grantors in the source deed, Gustave G. Kuehn and his wife, Mary Jane Kuehn, died. Gustave died testate on October. 4, 1938 and Mary Jane died testate on December 27, 1945. Their joint and mutual will left their residual estate in equal shares to their ten children.

Subsequently, one of the children, Anna Zeolide Kuehn Camp died intestate and without issue on April 8, 1953. By the terms of the source deed this child was the grantee of an undivided one-tenth of the mineral estate and of tract number 4 of the surface.

Later, on February 11, 1954, a second child, Frances Kallina Kuehn, executed a deed by the terms of which she purported to convey all her right, title and interest in and to tracts number 4 and 9 and whatever mineral interest she might own in the entire 250 acres to her sister, Viola Augusta Kuehn Wishard. No contention is here made relative to the interest in tract No. 4 or the mineral interest received by Frances Kallina Kuehn from her sister, Anna Zeo-lide Kuehn, it being conceded that such interest was conveyed to Viola Augusta Kuehn Wishard by her sister’s deed dated February 11, 1954.

The question in the instant case arises by virtue of the conveyance by Frances Kallina Kuehn to Viola Augusta Kuehn Wishard of her right, title and interest in and to tract No. 9 and whatever mineral estate she might own in the entire 250 acres. It was this tract No. 9, and the undivided one-tenth of the mineral interest, which Frances Kallina Kuehn had previously received by the terms of her parents’ source deed. The problem arose because, subsequent to her conveyance, Frances Kallina Kuehn died without issue. The date of Frances Kallina Kuehn’s death, July 27, 1958, was prior to the expiration of the 25-year period specified in her parents’ source deed.

Four of the children, Gustave Frederick Kuehn, Erna Edna Kuehn Tanner, Lilly Mabel Kuehn Pipkin and Peter Julius Kuehn filed the instant suit to enforce the deed of their parents and for a partition of the property. These parties, who are the appellants, will sometimes hereafter be referred to as plaintiffs. It is the plaintiffs’ position that the source deed conveyed to each of the children a life estate in their particular share and tract which was subject to being enlarged into a fee simple estate “upon the expiration of 25 years.” Plaintiffs concede that the deed from Frances Kallina Kuehn to Viola Augusta Kuehn Wishard conveyed whatever interest she had. Plaintiffs assert that what she had, however, was a life estate which was subject to being enlarged into a fee simple estate upon the expiration of 25 years. As Frances Kallina Kuehn died without issue prior to the expiration of 25 years, however, by. the terms of the source deed her interest passed in equal shares to her surviving eight brothers and sisters.

Defendants in the instant action were a sister, Viola Augusta Kuehn Wishard and husband, C. E. Wishard, and a brother, Frank Louis Kuehn and his son, Cyril Maurice Kuehn. The last sister, Mary Emily Kuehn Hanson, intervened. The defendants and intervenor, who are the ap-pellees, will be hereafter referred to as defendants.

It has been plaintiffs’ consistent position that the source deed of the parents, dated August 20, 1936, was not ambiguous and that the instrument clearly speaks for it[8]*8self. The trial court, in a trial to a jury, nevertheless permitted the introduction of evidence relative to the intent of the parents, Gustave G. and Mary Jane Kuehn, at the time their source deed was executed in 1936. At the conclusion of the introduction of evidence, plaintiffs filed a motion for an instructed verdict asserting that the only questions before the court were questions of law, and that there were no questions of fact for submission to the jury. This motion was overruled.

The trial court thereafter submitted the three following special issues to the jury:

Special Issue No. 1: “Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that it was the intentions of the Grantors in the Partition Deed, in conveying the surface, that upon the death of either of the nine Grantees as to the surface his or her interest should vest in his or her surviving brothers or sisters which were named as Grantees to the surface in said deed?”

To which the jury answered: “We do not.”

Special Issue No.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
452 S.W.2d 5, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 2637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kuehn-v-wishard-texapp-1970.