Redland v. Redland

2015 WY 31, 346 P.3d 857, 2015 Wyo. LEXIS 35, 2015 WL 798099
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 2015
DocketNo. S-14-0159
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 2015 WY 31 (Redland v. Redland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Redland v. Redland, 2015 WY 31, 346 P.3d 857, 2015 Wyo. LEXIS 35, 2015 WL 798099 (Wyo. 2015).

Opinion

KITE, Justice.

[¶1] This is the second appeal stemming from the Redland family's dispute over ranch property that some of the Redland children claim their father, Robert Redland, agreed to place in a family trust.1 In the first appeal, Redland v. Redland, 2012 WY 148, 288 P.3d 1173 (Wyo.2012) (Redland I ), this Court held that questions of fact precluded the district court's entry of summary judgment on the 'issues of whether the Redland Children's claims against Robert Redland were barred by the statute of frauds and the statute of limitations, and we remanded for a trial on those issues.

[¶2] Following a bench trial on remand, the district court found that the claims were not barred, and it ordered that all of the disputed property, with the exception of the property on which Robert Redland resides ("the Manderson Place"), be immediately transferred to the family trust. With respect to the Manderson Place, the district court ordered that the property be transferred to the trust upon Robert Redland's death. We affirm the district court's order, with the [860]*860exception of its disposition of the Manderson Place. With respect to the latter property, we remand for entry of an order directing that the Manderson Place be immediately transferred to the family trust subject to Robert Redland's life estate in the property.

ISSUES

[¶3] Robert Rédland states the issues on appeal as follows:

I. The District Court erred, as a matter of law, in holding that an enforceable agreement existed that required placing the disputed property in the Family Trust.
II. The District Court erred, as a matter of law, in determining that the Statute of Limitations did not bar [the Redland Children's] claims for the placement of property in the Family Trust.

FACTS

[¶4] The disputed Redland property is located in three areas of the Big Horn Basin in Wyoming. Because the property at issue in the present appeal is the same property we discussed in Redland I, we will use the Redland I nomenclature to reference the property in this appeal:

Manderson Place
The Manderson Place is located in Big Horn County. The parties variously refer to the deeded portion of this property as the Manderson Farm, the Manderson Place or the Home Place. Associated with this property is State of Wyoming Lease No. 88-8179. Also associated with the property is Bureau of Land Management (BLM) Lower Nowood Allotment No. 00144. For ease of reference, throughout this opinion, we will refer to the deeded property as the "Manderson Place," and to State Lease No. 38-8179 by number or as the "State Farm at Manderson."
Original Mountain Land & Additional Mountain Land
Washakie and Johnson Counties. The Original Mountain Land is located in Associated with the deeded property is State of Wyoming Lease No. 38-8195, BLM Box Canyon Allotment No. 02008, and BLM Cedar Ridge Allotment No. 00145. For ease of reference, when we refer to State Lease No. 3-8195 separately, we will refer to it by number or as the "Mountain Land State Lease."
The Additional Mountain Land is located in the area of the Original Mountain Land and is deeded land that was owned by Eric Redland, Robert Redland's brother, until Eric's death in 1992.
Woody Place
Woody Place is also located in Washakie County, south of the Mountain Land. Associated with this property is State of Wyoming Lease No. 3-8248, BLM West Allot, ment No. 00147, and BLM East Allotment No. 00146. For ease of reference, we will refer to State Lease No. 3-8248 by number or as the "State Lease at Woody Place."

Redland I, ¶¶ 9-12, 288 P.3d at 1178-79.2

[¶5] As in Redland I, we believe it is helpful to an understanding of the parties' dispute to begin with a history of the parties, their property acquisitions, and their ranching operations. Again, these facts remain unchanged since our decision in Redland I:

Richard and Nellie Redland were the parents of Robert Redland and the grandparents of Robert and Irene Redlands five children: Rolly Redland, Kendrick Red-land, Roalene Redland McCarthy, Teresa Redland Shelton, and Lisa Redland Kim-sey. Throughout their lifetimes, Richard and Nellie Redland accumulated ranching and farming property in the Big Horn Basin, including deeded land and federal and state leases, which they hoped would be held and operated by future Redland generations. All of the property that is in dispute in this action is property originally acquired by Richard and Nellie Redland.
[861]*861Robert and Irene Redland were married in 1951, and began living on Manderson Place in 1953. Sometime between 1959 and 1962, they purchased the Manderson Place from Richard and Nellie Redland. Robert and Irene raised their five children on the Manderson Place, and during those years they ran sheep on the Original Mountain Land and grew crops on BLM land near Manderson.
In 1971, Robert and Irene Redland purchased Woody Place from Richard and Nellie Redland. The purchase included the deeded land and an assignment of the State Lease at Woody Place. The State Lease at Woody Place is important to the Woody Place operations because the leased land is adjacent to the deeded property and holds all of the operation's water.
When Robert and Irene Redland purchased Woody Place in 1971, Rolly Red-land, Robert's oldest son, was attending community college in Riverton, Wyoining. Robert called on Rolly to work the new property and to manage the cows Robert then owned. Woody Place required substantial work, including clean-up, fencing, and irrigation work, and after making some initial improvements to the property, Rolly stayed on and has since 1971 lived and ranched at Woody Place.
Kendrick Redland began his fulltime career as a rancher in 1978. Kendrick lived on Manderson Place, and he conducted his operations primarily on Manderson Place and the Original Mountain Land. While the two Redland sons lived on separate properties, they often operated together and with their father. This included running their cattle together and supplying veterinary care, breeding and feed for the cattle.
Robert Redland's father, Richard Red-land, passed away in 1971. In his will, he left to his wife, Nellie Redland, a life estate in all of his properties. 'To his sons, Robert and Eric Redland, he left a divided option to purchase the Original Mountain Land for $27.50 per acre, which option could not be exercised until the death of Nellie Redland. * * *
In March of 1983, Robert Redland paid Eric Redland $100,000 for his one-third option in the Original Mountain Land. As of 1983, then, Robert owned the entire option to purchase the Original Mountain Land as set forth in Richard Redland's will.
By 1989, the operations of Robert Red-land and his two sons, Rolly and Kendrick Redland, had grown, with each individually continuing to increase the number of livestock they were running. Also in 1989, Nellie Redland passed away, and Robert was able to exercise the option to purchase the Original Mountain Land as described in Richard Redland, Sr.'s will. Before exercising the option, however, Robert took two steps.

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Bluebook (online)
2015 WY 31, 346 P.3d 857, 2015 Wyo. LEXIS 35, 2015 WL 798099, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/redland-v-redland-wyo-2015.