Rowe v. Childers

219 P.2d 1066, 169 Kan. 616, 1950 Kan. LEXIS 392
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 8, 1950
Docket37,953
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 219 P.2d 1066 (Rowe v. Childers) 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
Rowe v. Childers, 219 P.2d 1066, 169 Kan. 616, 1950 Kan. LEXIS 392 (kan 1950).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Thiele, J.:

This appeal arises from rulings on a motion to strike and on a special demurrer and a general demurrer lodged against a petition which we may designate as one instituted by the beneficiary of an express trust to enforce the trust.

Plaintiff’s amended petition filed December 1, 1947, contains twenty-two numbered paragraphs and her prayer for relief. Summarized, the allegations of the several paragraphs state: 1. The residence of plaintiff. 2. The residence of defendant Robert L. Childers. 3. That defendants The First National Bank in Wichita and Edith K. Mahaffey were trustees appointed and named in “E. K. Childers Trust” later referred to. 4. That defendants Robert L. Childers and George R. Blake were the duly appointed and acting executors of the estate of Ethel K. Childers. 5. That Ethel K. Childers died at Arkansas City, Kan., on June 23,1946. 6. That plaintiff was the owner of an undivided one-half interest in and to the trust estate created and established by E. K. Childers in her lifetime, sometimes called the “E. K. Childers Trust.” 7. That plaintiff was born in Jackson County, Missouri, on May 24, 1924, her mother’s name being Kathryn Turner. 8. In this paragraph plaintiff pleaded at length that Ethel K. Childers orally agreed with Kathryn Turner that if permitted to adopt plaintiff, she would maintain plaintiff and if plaintiff remained with her until plaintiff should become grown or married, and would render love, affection, devo *618 tion, obedience and services to Ethel K. Childers, at her death she would leave plaintiff an undivided one-half of all property she owned at her death; that she intended soon to adopt a boy, and she contemplated the establishment of a trust for the use of plaintiff and of the boy, and that in the event she created a trust into which she put in all or any part of her funds she would provide in such trust that plaintiff should have and be the beneficiary of an undivided one-half interest therein and that she would not by will or otherwise make any disposition of her property which would deny plaintiff an equal undivided one-half interest therein. 9. That on July 1, 1924, under proceedings in Jackson County, Missouri, Ethel K. Childers adopted plaintiff and plaintiff’s name was changed to Dorothy Childers. 10. That plaintiff carried out and performed all things required of her under paragraph 9. 11. That Ethel K. Childers adopted Robert L. Childers on October —, 1925. 12. That Ethel K. Childers thereafter confirmed the oral agreement by creating an irrevocable trust, designated as “E. K. Childers Trust” of which the above-named bank and Edith K. Mahaffey were trustees and into which she placed a large amount of property, the exact amount being unknown to plaintiff, and in which she named plaintiff as one of the beneficiaries, which trust was created in writing; that plaintiff had no copy but the original document was in the possession of the executors or trustees above named; that the trust was created about 1932, and thereafter Mrs. Childers on numerous occasions confirmed and recognized her oral agreements and her statements that she was carrying it out, and that Robert L. Childers was named as the other beneficiary. 13. That Robert L. Childers for many years had notice of the oral understandings and of the creation of the trust and that he and the plaintiff were beneficiaries' thereof. 14. That Robert L. Childers and the trustees claimed that plaintiff had no interest in the trust and was not a beneficiary thereof and that Robert L. Childers was the owner of and entitled to the interest of the plaintiff therein. 15. That the trust instrument had never been filed of record and plaintiff as a beneficiary thereof was entitled to have the original trust instrument brought into court and made a matter of record and her interest, and the interest of Robert L. Childers, established of record. 16. That notwithstanding the oral agreements at the time of her death, Ethel K. Childers left a last will and testament which had been duly admitted to probate in the probate court of Cowley *619 County, Kansas, and the executors above named appointed. 17. That under the second paragraph of the will of Ethel K. Childers she stated it was not her intention to dispose of by will any trust created by her as it would be no part of her estate but if it should be held to be part of her estate, it should be held and disposed of as provided in the trust agreement. Provision concerning taxes is not of present importance. 18. Refers to another paragraph of the will, and that in substance it provided for the creation of a testamentary trust of the residue of the estate, and that if the income to Robert L. Childers under the trust of 1932 did not amount to $7,500 per annum it was to be supplemented from the testamentary trust. 19. That in the administration of the Childers estate it was necessary to determine whether the trust estate created about 1932 was a part of her estate subject to administration, and in making final distribution of that estate to find and determine the interest of plaintiff in the 1932 trust in order to determine whether Robert L. Childers income therefrom equals $7,500 per year. 20. That the 1932 trust estate, and the additions and accumulations thereto were no part of the estate of Ethel K. Childers in process of administration, and that the estate so in administration had no legal or equitable title or interest therein and that the executors claim that it was. 21. That by reason of the will of Ethel K. Childers and the claim of the executors it was necessary and proper that the executors be made parties in order that a final judgment may be entered, binding all parties. 22. That plaintiff had filed a claim in the probate court but due to uncertainty of the jurisdiction of the probate court to decide and determine the questions involved herein, and to make its judgment binding on all parties, she brought the present action in the district court as a court of original general jurisdiction. The prayer was for judgment establishing the oral agreement, requiring the defendants to bring into. court and file the “E. K. Childers” trust agreement, establishing plaintiff to be the owner of an equal undivided one-half interest in and to the trust, and for all proper relief.

On the same day, the trustees of the E. K. Childers trust filed a motion to strike all of the allegations of paragraphs 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11, and certain language in paragraphs 12 and 13 concerning recognition of the alleged oral agreement, on the general ground that the allegations related to an oral agreement which plaintiff sought to enforce; that the petition disclosed that Ethel K. Childers died *620 testate, her will had been admitted to probate, her estate was in process of administration and plaintiff had filed her claim, and that the district court was without jurisdiction; that the allegations were not relevant to the cause of action pleaded to establish plaintiff’s claimed interest in the trust estate; that the plaintiff alleged an irrevocable trust was created, and establishment of plaintiff’s rights did not depend on establishment of the alleged oral agreement. They moved further to strike from paragraphs 17 and 18 references to the provisions of the will of Ethel K. Childers for the reason they were wholy irrelevant to any cause of action pleaded and because no provision of the will could have any affect on the alleged irrevocable trust nor on the determination of plaintiff’s claim to a beneficial interest therein.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
219 P.2d 1066, 169 Kan. 616, 1950 Kan. LEXIS 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rowe-v-childers-kan-1950.