Rector v. Tatham

174 P.3d 445, 38 Kan. App. 2d 933, 2008 Kan. App. LEXIS 4
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 11, 2008
Docket97,725
StatusPublished

This text of 174 P.3d 445 (Rector v. Tatham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rector v. Tatham, 174 P.3d 445, 38 Kan. App. 2d 933, 2008 Kan. App. LEXIS 4 (kanctapp 2008).

Opinion

Green, J.:

Mary Rector contracted with her siblings that she would receive the remaining funds, if any, used to care for their mother after their mother’s death. In consideration of her siblings’ promise to turn over these funds to Rector, Rector conveyed her one-half interest in the home she jointly owned with her mother to the conservatorship established for their mother’s care. After their mother’s death, Rector sued her siblings for breach of contract for failing to turn over the remaining funds. Rector’s siblings moved to dismiss Rector’s lawsuit, maintaining that her petition failed to state a cause of action against them. The trial court agreed and dismissed the action.

To sustain the trial court’s granting of the siblings’ motion to dismiss, this court would have to conclude that, under Rector’s *934 pleadings, Rector could not produce any evidence justifying some form of relief. We are unable to say with certainty the untenability of Rector s position. As a result, we determine that Rector s petition should not have been dismissed for failure to state a claim. Accordingly, we reverse and remand.

Maiy Rector, Clifford Tatham (Tatham), Patricia Disque, and Ruth Strickland are the adult children of Bonnie Tatham (Bonnie). On January 31,2003, Rector and her attorney attended a mediation session with Tatham, Disque, and Bonnie’s attorney, Hatem Chahine. The mediation resulted in an agreement to establish a conservatorship to provide for the care of Bonnie until the end of her life. The relevant portions of the handwritten document dictated during the mediation session stated as follows:

“3. Maiy agrees to purchase the home from her mother for $89,000. Mary will assume the existing mortgage and pay her mother $42,900. If Mary cannot raise the $42,900, the home will be placed on the market and sold. The proceeds of sale will be held for [Bonnie].
“6. The parties agree that the conservatorship and its successor arrangement will provide that in die event [Bonnie] dies and funds remain, that die remaining balance will be payable on deadi to Mary Rector.”

The document was signed by all present. Strickland was not present at the mediation and did not sign the document.

On February 18, 2003, Rector, Tatham, Disque, and Chahine appeared before the district court in Douglas County in In the Matter of the Guardianship and Conservatorship of Bonnie L. Tatham (guardianship case). The trial court appointed Tatham as guardian of Bonnie and J. Michael Davies as conservator of her estate. The trial court also referenced the mediated agreement and approved and incorporated it by reference into the court’s order.

Following the mediation on January 31, 2003, Rector stated that she performed all of the obligations and duties required by the mediated agreement. The house was sold and the sale proceeds were placed into a conservator’s account for the care of Bonnie. After Bonnie’s death on August 17, 2003, approximately $50,000 was left in the conservatorship. On November 18, 2003, the trial court in the guardianship case terminated the conservatorship and *935 released the remaining assets to Tatham as executor of Bonnie’s estate. In its order, the court stated:

“This order should not constitute or be construed as a waiver of any claims which any of the respondents, Patricia Dique [sic], Clifford B. Tatham, and/or Mary Rector may have or claim to the assets of the conservatorship estate remaining after payment of allowed expenses and fees, including but not limited to any claim which Mary Rector may assert under the mediated agreement attached to petitioner s petition as Exhibit ‘A.’ ”

After Bonnie’s death, the issues regarding the agreement were revived in In the Matter of the Estate of Bonnie L. Tatham (estate case). In the estate case, Tatham, as executor of Bonnie’s estate, sought to distribute the estate, including the funds from the conservatorship, according to the terms of Bonnie’s will. Rector and Tatham filed competing motions for summary judgment in the estate case, but both were denied. Rector also moved to reconsider, which was also denied, because the trial court stated that there were factual disputes regarding the mediated agreement and summary judgment was not appropriate. According to Rector, the trial court in the estate case informally advised both parties that the issues surrounding the mediated agreement were more appropriately suited for a Chapter 60 proceeding.

On January 9,2006, Rector sued Tatham, Disque, and Strickland for breach of the mediated agreement in a Chapter 60 proceeding. In addition, the suit requested that the court enjoin any distribution of Bonnie’s estate until this matter was resolved. Shortly after filing the petition, Rector filed a petition to stay proceedings and distributions in the estate case. Although the record does not contain any court order resolving the petition to stay proceedings, Rector stated in one of her pleadings that the district court in the estate case distributed the remaining conservatorship funds in Bonnie’s estate under the provisions of Bonnie’s will, with each sibling receiving approximately $12,700.

In her petition, Rector outlined certain provisions of the mediated agreement and referenced the court order in the guardianship case that purported to incorporate it. Rector further argued that all parties to the matter ratified and affirmed the mediated agreement, but that, although she performed all of the obligations and *936 duties set forth in the agreement, Tatham, as executor of Bonnie’s estate, has refused to convey the remaining conservatorship funds to Rector. This, according to Rector, was a breach of the mediated agreement. Nowhere in the petition does Rector assert an ownership interest in the property that was sold under the mediated agreement, nor does she assert any relevant motivations of the parties in making the agreement.

After Rector brought her action, Tatham, Disque, and Strickland moved to dismiss the petition for failure to state a claim. In their motion to dismiss, the defendants asserted that the mediation agreement was not a valid family settlement agreement and thus could not control the distribution of Bonnie’s estate. After a reply by Rector and a response by Tatham, Disque, and Strickland, tire trial court granted the motion to dismiss. The trial court stated that the mediation agreement was a family settlement agreement because it affected the distribution of an estate. The trial court further stated that the mediation agreement failed to meet the statutory requirements demanded of such agreements because it was not properly acknowledged and was not binding on all material parties with an interest in the estate. The trial court further noted that, even if the mediation agreement was not a family settlement agreement, contract principles could not bind Tatham, Disque, and Strickland because Kansas law allows an estate to be distributed only according to a will, to intestate succession, or to a valid family settlement agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
174 P.3d 445, 38 Kan. App. 2d 933, 2008 Kan. App. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rector-v-tatham-kanctapp-2008.