McCoy v. Cover

158 P.2d 380, 159 Kan. 711, 1945 Kan. LEXIS 189
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 5, 1945
DocketNo. 36,313
StatusPublished

This text of 158 P.2d 380 (McCoy v. Cover) 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
McCoy v. Cover, 158 P.2d 380, 159 Kan. 711, 1945 Kan. LEXIS 189 (kan 1945).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Smith, J.:

This was an action wherein the plaintiff asked judgment that the parties hold certain real estate in trust for each other and that certain deeds be set aside. Judgment was for the plaintiff. Defendants appeal.

The plaintiff is the son of Charles McCoy. The defendants are the daughter and son-in-law of Charles. The land in question is 286.54 acres in Jefferson county. It comprises one full quarter section and a fractional quarter section lying immediately south of it. For the purpose of this opinion the full quarter section will be divided into the west eighty and the east eighty while the fractional quarter will be divided into the north 63.27 acres and the south 63.27 acres.

The plaintiff alleged that on January 19, 1920, Charles McCoy conveyed to plaintiff and to Nellie R. Cover, as tenants in common, the entire tract of 286.54 acres; that at the same time the grantees in this deed, that is, plaintiff and his sister, agreed to pay Charles a thousand dollars a year as long as he should live. This agreement was fully complied with and is of no 'importance in this case. The petition further alleged that on January 10, 1926, Charles McCoy died and plaintiff and defendant Nellie R. Cover became absolute owners of the property as tenants in common. The petition [712]*712then alleged that on February 26, 1926, plaintiff and the defendants agreed that the property should be divided by the plaintiff taking the north half of the fractional quarter and the west half of the full quarter as his share, clear of any claim of defendants; and that defendant Nellie R. Cover should have as her share, and clear of any interest 'of the plaintiff, the south half of the fractional quarter and the east half of the full quarter. At that time the parties each took physical possession of the land as above described and agreed upon as their equitable portion, and ever since that date up to the time of the filing of the action have had sole possession thereof; that about the time of this oral agreement plaintiff was faced with litigation and feared the loss of his portion of this real estate and that having full knowledge of this litigation plaintiff placed the legal title of a part of his share of the real estate in the name of his sister to be held by her in trust for him until his fears of the litigation should be removed and at the same time defendant Nellie R. Cover placed the legal title to a part of her portion of this real estate in the name of plaintiff to be held in trust for her until termination of the trust; that no consideration was paid by either of the parties to the other for either of these conveyances; that during all the years that had elapsed since that time plaintiff and defendants had paid the taxes on all this real estate in equal shares; that the litigation which plaintiff feared had been disposed of; that on September 29, 1942, the plaintiff notified defendant Nellie R. Cover that he desired to terminate the trust and requested a reconveyance of the legal title of this real estate to him; that she and her husband refused to so convey it. Plaintiff in his petition also offered to terminate the trust reposed in him by defendants and to reconvey the legal title to the real estate described to them.

The prayer was that the trusts be terminated and the oral agreement for the division of the real estate be approved; that the deeds exchanged between the parties be canceled and that the title of plaintiff to the north half of the fractional quarter and the west half of the full quarter be quieted and that the defendants’ title to the south half of the fractional quarter and east half of the full quarter be quieted.

The.answer of the defendants was a general denial and also a specific denial that any trust agreement was entered into and an allegation that on the 26th day of February, 1926, warranty deeds were exchanged between the parties whereby plaintiff became the [713]*713owner of the fractional quarter; that plaintiff held the legal title of the fractional quarter from the 26th of February, 1926, until the year 1939, at which time he conveyed it to his son and three of his daughters as tenants in common; and that if there had been any trust agreement plaintiff’s conveyance of the legal title to his children constituted a repudiation of the trust; and that he secured a reconveyance for the purpose of maintaining this action. The answer further stated that plaintiff on February 26, 1926, decided he would own and occupy the fractional quarter as his homestead and defendants at that time conveyed their interest therein to him that he might hold it for his homestead in accordance with the laws of the state, and that plaintiff deeded to defendants the full quarter and they have ever since been occupying it as their homestead.

Later defendants filed an amendment to their answer in which they pleaded that any trust agreement, if there was one, was in violation of the statute of frauds. The reply of the plaintiff was a general denial.

The court made findings of fact and conclusions of law. These findings of fact were to the effect that the whole tract was conveyed to plaintiff and defendant Nellie R. Cover as tenants in common by their father on January 19,1920; that the contract between the parties and their father was fully, carried out.

The court found that at the time .of the death of his father plaintiff was involved financially to the extent of about $8,400; that his attorney had advised him in order to claim a homestead in any real estate it must be in one tract and on one side of the road and that defendants knew of this advice and of the financial trouble in which plaintiff was involved and that thereafter defendants deeded to plaintiff the fractional quarter and plaintiff deeded to defendants the full quarter; that plaintiff moved immediately to his fractional quarter and resided on the north half of it and began immediately to farm the north half of this quarter and the west half of the full quarter and continued to do so until the time of the action; that the defendants were residing on the east half of the full quarter and farmed that and also the south half of the fractional quarter. The findings then set out by years the taxes that had been paid from that time until the time of the action, and found that the plaintiff had paid half of these taxes. The court then found that on July 28, 1939, the plaintiff conveyed the fractional quarter to his children and that on July 22,1943, the defendants notified plaintiff to vacate [714]*714the west half of the full quarter because they owned it by virtue of the deed in 1926; that after the death of Charles McCoy and the execution of the deed between the parties the exact time not being known the defendants offered plaintiff $5,000 if he would let the deeds stand and divide the properties as deeded; that this offer was refused by plaintiff and that the reasonable and equitable division of the real estate would be as it had been possessed and farmed; that following the advice of his lawyer the plaintiff took the deed to the fractional quarter claiming it as a homestead and deeded the other quarter to his sister for the purpose of defeating the claims of his creditors; and that defendants should not now be permitted to profit after so aiding the plaintiff.

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Related

Clester v. Clester
135 P. 996 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1913)
Sexton v. Holt
136 P. 934 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1913)
Finn v. Alexander
171 P. 602 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1918)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 P.2d 380, 159 Kan. 711, 1945 Kan. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccoy-v-cover-kan-1945.