Langston v. Butler

199 P.2d 190, 165 Kan. 703, 1948 Kan. LEXIS 335
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 13, 1948
DocketNo. 37,016
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 199 P.2d 190 (Langston v. Butler) 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
Langston v. Butler, 199 P.2d 190, 165 Kan. 703, 1948 Kan. LEXIS 335 (kan 1948).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Hoch, J.:

In an equitable action to cancel a deed on the grounds of misrepresentation, fraud, and lack of consideration, the plaintiff prevailed and the defendant appeals. Appellant’s principal contentions are:

(1) In its findings of fact and conclusions of law, the trial court went outside of the issues joined by the pleadings and on its own motion introduced the issue of a confidential relationship between the grantor and the grantee, and the lack of independent advice to the grantor; and

(2) There was no evidence to support a cause of action upon the theory advanced in the petition.

Alice M. Ransom, a widow, owned certain described real estate in Fort Scott, Kan. On February 12, 1946, she executed a deed to this property to T. C. Butler, the appellant here. Recital in the instrument was that the deed was executed in consideration of “One Bollar and other Valuable considerations” and that “As a part of the consideration hereof the party of the second part agrees that the first party and Tom Bruce are to have a home in the house on said premises during their natural lives, and that the second party will pay the expenses of a decent funeral for the said first party upon her decease, said Tom Bruce is to have the priveledge of cul[704]*704tivating One Half of the ground on the said premises which is now in cultivation.”

On November 2, 1946, Mrs. Ransom brought action to cancel the deed alleging that Butler, the grantee, “knowingly, wilfully, and wrongfully, with the purpose and intent to defraud this plaintiff” prepared the deed and “through misrepresentation and fraud” induced this plaintiff to sign such deed in that he represented to this plaintiff that it was a paper or a document which she would have to sign in order to continue to receive assistance payments from the welfare office in Bourbon county and that this plaintiff, relying upon said statements and acting under such inducement, did sign her name to some paper or document, believing that it was a paper relating to her right to receive assistance from the welfare board and without any knowledge that it was a warranty deed conveying said above described real estate to the defendant; that there was no consideration for said conveyance, nor did she at any time agree or intend to convey her property to the said T. C. Butler; that said property was of a reasonable value of $2,000 on February 12, 1946, and she was receiving assistance from the welfare department which enabled her to live in her home on the real estate as described above; that she was under no obligation to make a conveyance to the said T. C. Butler but had intended that said property should be used to pay her medical expenses and funeral expenses and that the balance of the property, if any, should go to LaLane Ellen Langston.

Mrs. Ransom died on January 13, 1947, and the action was revived in the name of the appellee, LaLane Ellen Langston, executrix of her estate, and her sole beneficiary.

In his answer the defendant admitted the execution, delivery, and recording of the deed, and denied the other allegations of the petition. The case was tried before the court, and on May 2, 1947, judgment was entered cancelling the deed and granting the defendant Butler a lien against the estate in the sum of $401.30 for money paid by him for taxes, and ordering each party to pay the fees of his own witnesses and dividing the remainder of the costs equally between the parties.

It may be noted at the outset that opposing counsel do not agree upon the construction to be given the record before us. This is readily understandable in view of its confusing nature. After entering judgment and while a motion for rehearing was pending, the trial court made findings of fact and conclusions of law which were [705]*705served upon the parties on May 19, 1947. No journal entry was filed at that time. In these original findings, the court specifically found that the execution of the deed was secured by fraud and misrepresentation ; that the property had a reasonable value of $2,000 ; and that the consideration was so wholly inadequate as to constitute proof of fraud and undue influence. In its findings of fact number two the court held:

“At the time the above deed was executed the grantor, Alice M. Ransom, was a woman of about seventy years of age suffering from cancer and according to the evidence was a very sick woman on the day the deed was executed. The grantor was in bed and apparently in no condition to weigh the matter of signing the deed. Even if she had understood the nature of the paper which she was signing, yet the evidence shows that she was under the domination and influence of the defendant who had been her pastor for several years. Further, the evidence shows that defendant misrepresented the nature of the instrument to Mrs. Ransom by telling her that it was a paper relating to payments and increased allowance from the Welfare Board from whom she was then receiving a small allowance.”

The defendant filed motion for judgment on the findings, asking that findings of fact and conclusions of law be specifically stated and numbered; to strike certain findings, and to make additional findings of fact and to adopt suggested conclusions of law. These motions need not be noted in detail. Thereafter the trial court made “amended findings of fact” and conclusions of law which bear date of May 21, 1947, but which were not filed of record or served upon counsel until May 28, 1947. Again no journal entry was filed at that time. No additional evidence was taken following the filing of the original findings of fact and conclusions of law. In the “amended findings of fact” the trial court found, inter alia, that Mrs. Ransom became quite ill in the latter part of 1945; that by February, 1946, “her life was despaired of,” and that she executed the deed on February 12, 1946; that she was very ill on that day having had .medical attention in the forenoon and that “a deed was prepared and given to her for signature, which for some reason she declined to sign. A short time later the deed in question was prepared and brought to her by Butler and Herman F. Wogan, white, a notary public. She signed this deed in the presence of the notary. He acknowledged the same and Butler placed it in his pocket. Such controversy exists in the evidence that the court is unable to determine just who was present and just what the transaction was on the signing of the deed, but the defendant, Butler, was present, the deed [706]*706was prepared at his instigation and signed in his presence.” That Mrs. Ransom died on January 13, 1947, and that at the time of the trial in May, 1947, the expenses of her last sickness and funeral remained unpaid, and that the defendant Butler had not paid or offered to pay them. As “conclusions of law” the trial court found that a confidential relationship existed between Mrs. Ransom and the defendant Butler; that she had no independent advice in the transaction; and that she did not comprehend the nature of the transaction at the time the deed was executed.

It will be noted that in the second and amended findings of fact the trial court did not specifically find that there was fraud and misrepresentation. A second journal entry was prepared which embodied the second group of findings and on the same day, June 24, 1947, the two journal entries were filed — one embodying the original findings and the other embodying the amended findings.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
199 P.2d 190, 165 Kan. 703, 1948 Kan. LEXIS 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langston-v-butler-kan-1948.