Meek v. Ames

280 P.2d 957, 177 Kan. 565, 1955 Kan. LEXIS 256
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 5, 1955
Docket39,634
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 280 P.2d 957 (Meek v. Ames) 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
Meek v. Ames, 280 P.2d 957, 177 Kan. 565, 1955 Kan. LEXIS 256 (kan 1955).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Thiele, J.:

This was an action in which plaintiffs sought to recover damages for the alleged wrongful detention of real estate and to have themselves declared the owners of the real estate under the will of Benjamin Reeder and entitled to possession thereof. In a former appeal the ruling of the trial court striking certain allegations of their petition was sustained and reference is made to *567 the opinion in Meek v. Ames, 175 Kan. 564, 266 P. 2d 270, for the statement of facts therein. After the above opinion was filed the plaintiffs filed a second amended petition, hereafter referred to as the petition.

For present purposes it may be said that the petition alleged the status of the plaintiffs and their relationship to Benjamin Reeder and Maude Reeder Ames; that Benjamin Reeder died June 12, 1914, leaving a last will which was duly admitted to probate; that under the terms of his will he devised to his daughter, Maude Reeder, a half section of land for her natural life only, subject to the life use of his wife Diana S. Reeder, and at the death of his daughter Maude Reeder, all the land devised should go to and be the absolute property of her children. Similar devises were made to other daughters. The testator further provided that if at the death of any of his daughters she should have no children living then the real estate devised to her should be divided equally between his other daughters; that Diana S. Reeder died October 10, 1928; that Maude Reeder Ames died May 10, 1951, leaving no children living entitled to inherit under the will of Benjamin F. Reeder, and as of the last date all of the title to the above half section of land vested in and became the property of the plaintiffs who had made demand upon the defendant for possession, which had been refused to plaintiffs’ damage. They prayed for possession of the real estate and damages for its detention.

The record as abstracted does not disclose that any defendant other than Earl Ames filed any pleadings or participated in the trial.

The defendant Earl Ames filed an answer admitting that Benjamin Reeder died leaving a will, the relationship of the plaintiffs to him and that Maude Reeder Ames died May 10, 1951. He denied that Maude Reeder Ames left no children entitled to take under the will of Benjamin Reeder and alleged that she was survived by one child, Mary Jane Jeffress Ames, who was entitled to take under the will; that on or about September 7, 1937, defendant Ames and his wife Maude Reeder Ames adopted Mary Jane Jeffress as their own child and heir under proceedings had in the probate court of Johnson county, Kansas, a copy of the order and decree of adoption being attached to the petition, and that at the time of the death of Maude Reeder Ames the said Mary Jane Jeffress Ames was the child and heir of Maude Reeder Ames and the answering *568 defendant and was entitled to and did inherit the described real estate; that on May 18, 1951, Mary Jane Jeffress Ames, then an adult, conveyed all her interest in the real estate to Earl Ames, the warranty deed of conveyance being duly recorded and a copy being attached to the petition; that by virtue of all of the aforesaid Earl Ames was now the owner and in possession of the real estate and was entitled to an order and judgment of the court to that effect and he so prayed and asked that his title be quieted as against the plaintiffs. We here note that the adoption proceedings show that Mary Jane Jeffress was 19 years of age at the time of her adoption, and that the deed above mentioned expressed a consideration of $1.00, settlement of property rights “and other valuable considerations.”

The plaintiffs’ demurrer to the above answer was overruled and they filed a reply that an adoption proceeding was had in which Earl Ames and Maude Reeder Ames purported to adopt Mary Jane Jeffress, but they alleged that such proceeding was instituted and prosecuted in bad faith and pursuant to a conspiracy between Earl Ames, Mary Jane Jeffress and her natural mother Claribel Jeffress for the sole purpose of obtaining the above real property described in the will of Benjamin Reeder and for the purpose of defrauding plaintiffs of their rights of inheritance and ownership in said real estate and in disregard of the purposes and intents of Benjamin Reeder as expressed in his will in view of the circumstances and law in effect when the will was made; that the adoption proceedings were had with an oral understanding Ames and his wife would adopt Mary Jane Jeffress for the purpose of permitting her to inherit the property involved and that she was to receive it only for the purpose of conveying the fee to Earl Ames; that she was to continue to be known as Jeffress, to reside with her mother, to use the name Ames only on legal documents, and to continue as the child of her natural mother and the Ames were to assume no obligation, financial or otherwise, have no parental control as to Mary Jane and that she would not live at their home, which agreement was carried out. Plaintiffs set forth the language in the statute providing for adoption proceedings in the probate court appearing as G. S. 1935, 38-105; that the adoption was had in 1937 and that at the date of Benjamin Reeder’s death certain statutes were in effect, which provided that the period of minority of females extended only to 18 years and that adoption *569 proceedings affected only minors. Other allegations enlarged upon those reviewed, contained an admission Mary Jane Jeffress Ames executed a warranty deed to Earl Ames on May 18, 1951, and a denial that, on account of the alleged fraud, it conveyed any title to Earl Ames. They alleged they were entitled to a judgment that Maude Reeder Ames died leaving no child or children entitled to take under the will of Benjamin Reeder.

We here note that plaintiffs filed a motion demanding a trial by jury and a motion for a change of venue on account of disqualification of the trial judge. These motions were denied and a trial was had, following which the trial court made findings of fact, and conclusions of law, which include the status of the parties; that Benjamin Reeder died June 12, 1914; that Maude Reeder married Earl Ames in 1913 and died May 10, 1951; that Maude Reeder Ames and her husband legally adopted Mary Jane Jeffress, a minor female child, as their own child and heir on September 7, 1937, in the probate court of Johnson county; that the decree of adoption had never been set aside, modified or appealed from; that the adoption proceedings were regular and valid on their face; that the probate court had jurisdiction to enter the decree of adoption; that the time for appeal had expired and the decree had become final and was not subject to collateral attack; that upon the death of Maude Reeder Ames she was survived by her husband and by Mary Jane Jeffress Ames, her adopted daughter, and that she left no other child or children, natural or adopted, and no descendants of any deceased child or deceased adopted child.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
280 P.2d 957, 177 Kan. 565, 1955 Kan. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meek-v-ames-kan-1955.