Paton v. Paton

103 P.2d 826, 152 Kan. 351, 1940 Kan. LEXIS 190
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 6, 1940
DocketNo. 34,816
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 103 P.2d 826 (Paton v. Paton) 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
Paton v. Paton, 103 P.2d 826, 152 Kan. 351, 1940 Kan. LEXIS 190 (kan 1940).

Opinion

[352]*352The opinion of the court was delivered by

Thiele, J.:

This was an action wherein plaintiffs sought to have themselves decreed to be the owners of certain real and personal property by reason of an alleged contract made by their respective ancestors with the ancestor of the defendants. The trial court sustained demurrers to the petition for the sole reason the cause of action was unenforceable by reason of the statute of frauds.

The petition discloses that the plaintiffs comprise three groups, who are the children and heirs, respectively, of George Paton, Jr., John Paton and Ellen Paton Davidson, all deceased, and that the defendants are the children of David Paton, deceased, and legatees and devisees under his will of which the defendant, J. H. Jester, is the executor. The petition also discloses that the common grandfather, George Paton, and his wife, Ellen Morton Paton, settled on a farm in Sumner county about 1871. They had seven children. James died in 1883. George, Jr., died in 1902. John died in 1930 and Ellen Paton Davidson died in 1894, and the plaintiffs are the children of the last three named. David died in 1938, and his children are defendants. Maggie Paton Fernald died in 1936 and plaintiffs and defendants, except the executor, are her only heirs at law. Another daughter, Jean Paton Dryden, died leaving surviving Jean Dryden, who later died without issue. Dates of the deaths of the last two are not shown. George Paton, Sr., died September 28, 1896. His wife died about 1892. The petition alleges that at the time of his death George Paton, Sr., was past eighty years of age, and that for several years previous to the death of himself and his wife, their youngest son, David, and his wife, made their home with the parents; that for a number of years previous to their deaths the parents were in poor health, were of weak and feeble mind and were easily influenced, and while in such condition their son, David, on December 18, 1888, procured from them a deed to 320 acres of land in Sumner county; that after the death of the mother the father became more enfeebled, very hard of hearing, was unable to see and was in very poor health and easily influenced by those about him, and while in this condition L. S. Paton, wife of David Paton, on October 4, 1895, procured from the father a deed to 160 acres of land in the same county, which she conveyed to her husband on June 4, 1896; that on October 4, 1895, the father, while in very poor health, physically and mentally, and easily influenced, made a [353]*353deed to David Paton conveying 320 acres of land in Sumner county. Copies of the several deeds attached to the petition show that each one was recorded immediately after its date. It was further alleged that at the time of his death George Paton, Sr., owned ten thousand bushels of wheat which David Paton sold for $10,000; that he owned about 125 head of cattle which David Paton sold for $6,000; that he owned twenty-five horses worth $3,750, and about one thousand bushels each of oats and corn on which no value is placed, and that he had $5,000 in cash, and that all of that personal property and cash was taken by David Paton; that at the time of the death of George Paton, Sr., he left as his only heirs, his sons, George, Jr., John, David, his daughter, Maggie, and his minor grandchildren, John Davidson, Jr., and Agnes, the children of his deceased daughter Ellen, and that none of them, had actual knowledge at the time of the father’s death that the son David had procured the deeds above mentioned. Shortly after the father’s death, David asserted claim to all of the personal property and it' was discovered that the deeds had been made. During January of 1897, George, Jr., John and Maggie and the husband of the deceased Ellen, the mother of the two minors, had a meeting and discussed the matter of the father’s estate, the method by which David had procured the deeds and the way he was taking charge of the personal property, as a result of which George, Jr., acting for all, demanded of David that he distribute their share of the estate to them; that David told George, Jr., he knew his father’s condition when the deeds were made and he would let them know later what he would do. That shortly thereafter George Paton, Jr., John Paton and John Davidson, father of the minors, employed a firm of attorneys at Wellington, Kan., to institute a suit to set aside the deeds, to get possession of the personal property and to distribute the estate. There is no allegation as to what advice the attorneys gave the clients. That shortly after the consultation with the lawyers, David Paton stated to George Paton, Jr., that he could make a settlement with Maggie Fernald if he could make a compromise and settlement with George and John and the children of his deceased sister Ellen, and—

“That at said time David Paton further stated to George Paton, Jr., that if George Paton, Jr., John Paton, and John Davidson, acting for his two minor children, would not bring any action or litigation to contest or set aside the deeds or to distribute the estate of George Paton, Sr., deceased, and would allow him, David Paton, to stay on the land and to have possession of all the personal property and continue the management thereof, that he, David Paton, [354]*354would manage and look after the estate to the best of his ability. That he would make a settlement with their sister, Maggie Fernald. That at his, David Paton’s death, he would leave a will devising and bequeathing all of the property of every kind, nature and description that he had, including all of the George Paton, Sr., estate and all the accumulations therefrom, in equal shares to the children of his brother, George Paton, Jr.; to the children of his brother, John Paton; to the children of his deceased sister, Ellen Paton Davidson; and to the children of David Paton, so that each family would receive one-fourth of all the property of every kind, nature and description that he, David Paton, might have at the time of his death.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 P.2d 826, 152 Kan. 351, 1940 Kan. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paton-v-paton-kan-1940.