Ondrasek v. Ondrasek

238 P.2d 535, 172 Kan. 100, 1951 Kan. LEXIS 409
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 8, 1951
Docket38,460
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 238 P.2d 535 (Ondrasek v. Ondrasek) 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
Ondrasek v. Ondrasek, 238 P.2d 535, 172 Kan. 100, 1951 Kan. LEXIS 409 (kan 1951).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wedell, J.:

This is an appeal by plaintiffs from an order striking an amendment to a petition.

*101 The action was one by adult children of John Ondrasek and Anna Ondrasek, his wife, both parents being deceased, against one son, John Ondrasek and Anna, his wife, to have the rights of the parties in and to real and personal property established, to obtain an accounting and for a division of the property in accordance with their respective rights therein.

There was no challenge of the sufficiency of the original petition or of the amendment by demurrer or otherwise. For purposes of this appeal it is unnecessary to narrate at length the allegations of the original petition or the amendment thereto. It will be sufficient to state only the general character and nature of each pleading in order to determine whether the amendment was properly stricken.

The original petition insofar as here material, in substance, alleged:

The purchase of three quarter sections of land by the father prior to his death in 1924 and of the fourth and last quarter in 1936 before the mother’s death; the first three quarters were purchased with funds of the father, a deed to one of these quarter sections being taken in the name of the defendant, John Ondrasek, who aided his father in connection with tire purchase thereof; the fourth and last deed to another quarter section was acquired from proceeds of the farming operations which were conducted by the defendant, John Ondrasek; this deed was taken in the name of John Ondrasek; that the father’s name and the defendant son’s name were the same, to wit, John Ondrasek; that the son, John Ondrasek, held the land and the proceeds from the sale in 1930 of the farming machinery and livestock, except $1,000 thereof which was then given to the mother, in trust for all the children; he should be compensated for his services in the operation and management of the lands and if the property could not be divided in kind it should be sold and the proceeds thereof divided in accordance with their interests.

The amendment, in effect, alleged the title to the two quarter sections conveyed to the father as grantee during his lifetime remained in him until his death; that thereafter title to an equal undivided one-half interest passed to the mother and the other one-half interest to the six children, plaintiffs and the defendant son, share and share alike; after the mother’s death the entire interest in the lands passed to the six children share and share alike under the law of descents and distributions.

*102 The amendment further alleged if it be determined title did not so descend as to those two quarter sections it should be held in the alternative that the defendant, John Ondrasek, was holding the title thereto in trust as set forth in the original petition.

Defendants’ motion to strike the amendment was sustained. From that ruling plaintiffs appeal. We shall continue to refer to the parties as plaintiffs and defendants.

Defendants’ motion to strike the amendment referred in part to a previous action covering the two quarter sections involved in the amendment. That part of the motion to strike was on the ground the previous case constituted an adjudication of the issue presented by the amendment. The previous action was dismissed without prejudice and that part of the motion to strike is without merit.

The substance of the remainder of the motion to strike was the amendment constituted a departure from the cause of action set forth in the instant original petition and the proof of allegations contained in the amendment would disprove the allegations of the original petition.

Although the motion is quite clear the briefs of counsel indicate some confusion of thought with respect to the precise question presented by defendants’ motion. In order to eliminate such confusion and a discussion of contentions not properly within the purview of the motion it may be well to state at the outset that this particular motion is not one which is tantamount to a demurrer which challenges the sufficiency of either pleading to state grounds for the relief plaintiffs seek. Nor is this motion based upon the ground these pleadings, or either of them, are so indefinite, uncertain and confusing that defendants cannot ascertain upon what theory, or theories, plaintiffs seek relief. On the contrary this motion admits the two pleadings disclose on their face two grounds are alleged for relief and then asserts that the ground alleged in the amendment is inconsistent with that alleged in the original petition.

It will be observed the original petition and the amendment both alleged the ownership by plaintiffs and the defendant, John Ondrasek, of an equal undivided one-sixth interest in and to the property described in each of them. There was, therefore, no inconsistency in these two pleadings with respect to the interest alleged to be held in the lands by each of the parties. The only difference therein lies in the grounds alleged for the same identical relief. In the amendment plaintiffs, in substance, merely allege all the parties inherited an equal undivided ■ one sixth interest in *103 those two quarter sections of land, title to which was taken in the name of John Ondrasek, the father, but if it should be determined the defendant son, whose name was also John Ondrasek, took the title in his name that then it should be held, in the alternative, the defendant son held those two quarter sections in trust as requested in the original petition.

Proof of allegations contained in the amendment that all the children inherited the two quarter sections therein described would not necessarily disprove the defendant son now was holding the interest of the other children in those lands in trust for them. In order to make actions inconsistent one action must allege what the other denies, or the allegation in one must necessarily repudiate or be repugnant to the other. (Taylor v. Robertson Petroleum Co., 156 Kan. 822, 137 P. 2d 150.) In other words grounds for recovery are not inconsistent with each other when one does not defeat the other, and the truth of one does not disprove the truth of the other. (Anderson v. Surety Co., 107 Kan. 375, 191, Pac. 583; Springer v. O’Brien, 164 Kan. 461, 190 P. 2d 341.)

What we really have in the instant action is an effort, under both pleadings, to obtain the same relief but on two grounds, with a request in the alternative that if the ground alleged in the amendment should not be sustained that then the relief sought should be granted on the ground requested in the original petition. There was a sound basis for such an alternative pleading. By reason of the fact the father and the defendant son had the same name plaintiffs apparently were in doubt is to precisely what the evidence might disclose and in order to meet the exigencies of proof they alleged:

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Bluebook (online)
238 P.2d 535, 172 Kan. 100, 1951 Kan. LEXIS 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ondrasek-v-ondrasek-kan-1951.