Shirk v. Shirk

348 P.2d 840, 186 Kan. 32, 1960 Kan. LEXIS 259
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 23, 1960
Docket41,578
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 348 P.2d 840 (Shirk v. Shirk) 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
Shirk v. Shirk, 348 P.2d 840, 186 Kan. 32, 1960 Kan. LEXIS 259 (kan 1960).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wertz, J.:

Plaintiff (appellant), Betty Shirk O’Brien, brought this action against defendants (appellees), William S. Shirk and Claire Shirk, to recover damages sustained on account of alleged fraud and deceit practiced by them against plaintiff, causing her to waive her right to contest her mother’s will. Plaintiff and defendant William are sister and brother and the only heirs at law of their mother, Gertrude McCourt Shirk, deceased. Claire is the wife of William. Plaintiff appeals and contends the trial court erred (1) in striking paragraph 12 from her amended petition, (2) in making William S. Shirk in his capacity as executor a party defendant and (3) in sustaining defendants’ demurrer to the first cause of action of her second amended petition.

*33 The lengthy petition as amended will be summarized insofar as necessary to determine the questions involved: Plaintiff alleged that Gertrude McCourt Shirk died September 17, 1957, survived by her two children, plaintiff, Betty Shirk, and defendant William S. Shirk, who were her sole and only heirs at law; that on September 19, defendant William filed a petition for the probate of his mother’s will and at the same time petitioned for and was appointed special administrator of the estate and was subsequently appointed executor thereof; that plaintiff, not having received immediate notification of her mother’s death, arrived in McPherson September 21, thirty minutes after the funeral; that by reason of shock and bereavement, she was distressed and unnerved and physically and mentally unfit to transact business; that the same evening William took plaintiff to her mother’s former office and told her their mother’s will was then being probated, asking her not to talk to anyone but himself and Mr. Cassler, stating the latter was her attorney also, and that, according to the will, she was to receive $100 a month and her two children were to receive about $15,000 each for educational purposes. Plaintiff said that amount was not enough for her and asked what would happen if she broke the will. Defendant stated that she could not break the will because Mr. Cassler made it and if she tried she would not get anything. "Defendant then told plaintiff: ‘I am your big brother, Betty.’ Nou can trust me.’ ‘You do what I tell you.’ ‘I’ll always help you and look after you.’ ‘I’ll never let you starve.’ ‘You have nothing to worry about.’ ‘I’ll take care of you.’ 1 can get you anything you want through the necessitous clause.’ . . . ‘You are going to need some money and you will not be able to get a cent out of the estate for about a year unless you sign some papers, which are just legal red tape to get the money.’ ”

It was further alleged that the next day defendants took plaintiff to their church, then to their home, where she had dinner and spent the afternoon and evening with them, and while there defendants both stated to plaintiff that they would always look after and help her, that she should trust them and should not talk about or discuss her mother’s will and the estate matters with outsiders, that she should do whatever William told her to do with regard to the will.

Plaintiff also alleged that the following morning defendant Wil *34 liam took her to Mr. Cassler’s office, attorney for William individually and as special administrator of the estate, where there were prepared and she signed a petition to probate the will, a petition for allowance of a bequest, a claim against the estate and an assignment of that claim to William, after which William took her before the probate judge and she verified the instruments, which were then filed.

Plaintiff further alleged that prior to and at the time the will was made, defendants William and Claire exercised certain acts of undue influence over her mother, who was suffering from various physical ailments which destroyed her mother’s free agency in the making of the will, and by reason of said acts the mother willed four-fifths of her property to defendant William and his children and such will would not have been admitted to probate if it had been contested and opposed by the plaintiff.

It was further alleged that defendant William remained with plaintiff September 21, 22 and 23 to prevent her from discussing her mother’s will with anyone or from receiving any independent or legal advice and from discovering that the will was the product of defendants’ undue influence and fraud and was invalid; that defendants William and Claire made the representations as set forth in the petition for the purpose of inducing plaintiff to make and execute the aforementioned instruments so that she would thereby recognize said will and accept some benefits thereunder; that the petition to probate her mother’s will and the petition for allowance of bequest were unnecessary. Paragraph 11 reads:

“Plaintiff did not know that the petition for probate and the execution of said instruments together with her receiving of money provided under the terms of the will constituted and was an election to take under the will and that she could not elect to take under the will and also at the same time contest the validity of said will of Gertrude McCourt Shirk. That if plaintiff had known, or had been told, of the legal effect of such acts, she would not have signed said instruments nor accepted the payments provided in said will.”

It was further alleged that while discussing her mother’s estate plaintiff reposed her complete trust and confidence in defendants William and Claire and followed their request to sign the instruments they had had prepared for her, believing they were “just legal red tape to get on with the estate”; that by reason of the deceit and fraud of defendants and their breach of her trust and confidence she, in reliance thereon, petitioned for the probate of the will, accepted benefits thereunder and elected to take under said will in *35 stead of contesting it; that her mother died possessed of property of the value of approximately $550,000 and if the will had been contested, plaintiff, as a daughter and heir to one-half the estate, would have been entitled to an amount in excess of $200,000; that by reason of the fraud and deception practiced against her, which caused her to take under the will instead of contesting it, she was damaged.

Paragraph 12 of the amended petition struck by the trial court alleged that William’s statements to Betty that he would always help and look after her were false and fraudulent, in that, subsequently while using the facilities of the hotels belonging to the estate, when she was in destitute and necessitous circumstances, William demanded payment of her for rent and then bodily and physically ejected her from the hotel.

Defendants’ demurrer raises the question of whether the facts stated in the petition constituted a cause of action. It has been a long standing rule of this court, supported by many decisions, that the allegations of a petition when tested by a demurrer are to be taken as true, the pleader being entitled to all favorable inferences that may be drawn from the facts pleaded. (Merchant v. Foreman, 182 Kan. 550, 555, 322 P.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
348 P.2d 840, 186 Kan. 32, 1960 Kan. LEXIS 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shirk-v-shirk-kan-1960.