Place v. Place

486 P.2d 1354, 207 Kan. 734, 1971 Kan. LEXIS 462
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 16, 1971
Docket46,041
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 486 P.2d 1354 (Place v. Place) 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
Place v. Place, 486 P.2d 1354, 207 Kan. 734, 1971 Kan. LEXIS 462 (kan 1971).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Harman, C.:

The action in district court was one to quiet title to real estate. The principals in the case are father and son. In trial to the court the plaintiff son and his wife prevailed and the defendant father has appealed.

At trial some salient facts were in dispute and others were not fully developed because of loss of recollection of the witnesses. We summarize those pertinent to determination of the controversy as revealed by the record.

The defendant A. J. Place was a successful dairy farmer in the Emporia area. In 1958 his wife of many years, Janis Place, passed away. Prior to this time A. J. had talked to his son Lloyd about conveying his property to him. Lloyd had quit school while in either the tenth or eleventh grade to work on the dairy farm. His father had said he would give him all he had if Lloyd would stay and work on the farm and do as he said. Mr. and Mrs. Place were the parents of four children: The plaintiff Lloyd and three daughters, Wanda, LaVon and Darlene. At the time of his wife’s death A. J. was the record owner of three tracts of land in Lyon county consisting of small rental properties in Emporia known as the “town property” and two tracts comprising the Place farm which were known as the “home place” and the “east place”. On February 24, 1958, four days after the death of Janis Place, A. J. took Lloyd and his wife Mary Ann to the office of an Emporia attorney where two deeds had been previously prepared at A. J.’s direction. A. J. said he was going to give Lloyd all the property. One deed, dated February 24, 1958, was a warranty deed conveying the three tracts of land from A. J. to Lloyd and Mary Ann. A. J. executed this deed and delivered it to Lloyd with instructions to have it recorded promptly, which instructions were complied with. At the same time Lloyd and his wife signed another deed, dated February 25, 1958, conveying the same property to A. J. The principal factual dispute concerns the events on this occasion. Lloyd testified this second deed with folded and he did not read or examine it but simply [736]*736signed where his father directed. In signing instruments he had always relied upon his father. He further testified A. J. said he wanted the paper signed so that he could live on the home place during his lifetime. Lloyd thought the paper was an agreement to this effect. Lloyd’s wife, Mary Ann, substantiated this testimony, testifying that after the deeds were signed A. J. stated the property now belonged to Lloyd and her. Lloyd and Mary Ann signed the second paper believing it would allow A. J. to live on the farm the rest of his life. A. J. disputed much of the plaintiff’s testimony but admitted execution of the two deeds. His version of the signing of these two instruments was simply “so that I would have protection, and I wanted him to deed the deeds straight back to me so I could put it in my name anytime I wanted to — back again”. His memory was faulty with respect to several aspects of the transaction. He testified he had no intention of conveying the property to Lloyd; right after his wife died he was thinking of remarriage.

Later A. J. also procured placement of title to another piece of realty in Lloyd’s name, which property is also the subject of this action, being a 120 acre tract known as the “Collins tract”. This tract had been previously farmed by the Places and was being purchased in the name of A. J.’s daughter Wanda under a contract of sale; however, all payments on the contract were made by A. J. Wanda had assigned her interest in the contract to Mrs. Janis Place. Upon Janis’ death A. J. was appointed administrator of her estate. He obtained disclaimers to the property from all the Place children, paid off the remainder of the contract price and had the seller execute a warranty deed to the property to Lloyd. This deed was executed September 24, 1959. As in the 1958 transaction A. J. at substantially the same time obtained a deed back to him for the Collins land from Lloyd and his wife. Lloyd’s deed was promptly recorded — A. J.’s was not. None of the parties had any recollection of events occurring in connection with the signing of these deeds and Lloyd’s first awareness he was the owner of this tract came when he noticed the Collins land was listed on his real estate tax notice. However, all parties concede the two deeds were in fact executed as indicated. Lloyd always thought the Collins tract was a part of the Place farm.

A. J. also had a disagreement with two of his daughters following Mrs. Janis Place’s death respecting the disposition of the proceeds of certain bonds which had been held in the names of Mrs. Place and the two daughters.

[737]*737Apparently affairs between A. J. and his son remained amicable for a period of time. Lloyd lived first in the big house on the home place and later in the smaller house with his wife and children. He operated the dairy route, to which he had previously received a bill of sale, and worked on the farm from 1958 to 1962 at which time the dairy route was sold. Thereafter Lloyd continued to work on the farm for short periods of time as well as maintain various jobs in the city of Emporia until he left the farm in 1968. Meanwhile A. J. had entered into a succession of three short-lived marriages, all terminating in divorce. He never told any of these wives he owned any real estate and in at least one of his divorce proceedings swore he owned none.

During the period of amity the farm insurance was changed to show Lloyd as the owner and proceeds arising from insured building losses were paid to him; at A. J.’s request Lloyd and Mary Ann executed an amortization mortgage on the farm realty; a bank account denominated “Place farm account” was opened; Lloyd was the only person authorized to sign checks on this account but A. J. signed Lloyd’s name on the checks drawn on it; part of the Place farm was taken in condemnation proceedings; Lloyd hired the attorney and was shown in the pleadings as owner of the farm; Lloyd received the condemnation proceeds which were placed in a time deposit in his name; Lloyd and his wife executed a power line easement on the farm; farming operations were carried on under certain federal feed and grain programs with Lloyd shown in the written applications as the owner and A. J. the operator; between three and four hundred cattle were handled at times; when A. J. was injured while working on the farm he claimed and received workmen’s compensation benefits as an employee of Lloyd; in borrowing bank money for farming operations Lloyd and A. J. both were required to submit financial statements but Lloyd was shown as owner of all realty; Lloyd received a nominal monthly salary from the farm income for the small amount of work he did; A. J. had indicated he needed more quarters on his own social security program; A. J. had income tax forms prepared which Lloyd always signed without knowing the contents; some of the returns showed A. J. as Lloyd’s employer. Considerable evidence was developed respecting the farming operations but there was no evidence of any actual change in their method after the 1958 deeds were signed. A. J. always collected the rental on the city properties.

[738]*738In 1954 A. J. had had a large judgment in federal district court entered against him allegedly for an assault upon an employee and as a result of his testimony in the trial of that case he had thereafter been convicted of perjury, subornation of perjury and attempting to corrupt justice.

Eventually relations between A. J. and Lloyd deteriorated, ostensibly because of A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
486 P.2d 1354, 207 Kan. 734, 1971 Kan. LEXIS 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/place-v-place-kan-1971.