Shope v. Shope

89 P.2d 859, 149 Kan. 754, 1939 Kan. LEXIS 124
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 6, 1939
DocketNo. 34,127
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 89 P.2d 859 (Shope v. Shope) 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
Shope v. Shope, 89 P.2d 859, 149 Kan. 754, 1939 Kan. LEXIS 124 (kan 1939).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, C. J.:

This was an action by the beneficiaries and joint executors of the last will and testament of the late Jake H. Shope, of Meridian, Logan county, Oklahoma, against a claimant to an interest in his estate.

The testator died in Oklahoma on February 20, 1937. By his will he devised his entire estate to these plaintiffs, Benjamin and Gaye Shope, husband and wife. They, too, were residents of Meridian, Okla., and by the will they were named as joint executors.

The devised estate consisted chiefly of a 120-acre farm in Franklin county, Kansas, and the testator’s interest as landlord in an unma-[755]*755tured wheat crop of twenty-three acres planted thereon in' the autumn of 1936.

The will was duly probated in Oklahoma and an authenticated copy thereof was admitted to record in the probate court of Franklin county.

In their petition plaintiffs alleged that defendant was in possession-of the Shope farm residence, and that pursuant to an agreement the remainder of the farm had been planted to spring crops of oats ’and kafir corn by third parties.

Plaintiffs alleged that defendant claimed some interest in the farm, which clouded their title, and which, they understood, was based on a claim that the testator had made an oral promise to defendant that if he and his family would come and live on the Shope farm and do the work and care for him and remain with him until his death defendant should receive the farm and all the testator’s personal property. The petition continued:

“But plaintiffs say that the said Jake |H. Shope never entered into any contract to leave the said farm or his personal property to the defendant, J. E. Shope, and they say that the defendant, J. E. Shope, has no right, title or interest therein.”

Plaintiffs also alleged that sometime towards the end of the testator’s life (date not shown) he became physically and mentally incompetent to care for himself and his property, and a guardian of his person and estate was appointed, following which a full settlement of all the business affairs of testator and defendant was effected, except as to the twenty-three acres of wheat which defendant had sown in the fall of 1936; and that as to it the testator and defendant had agreed that when it was ripe and harvested, and threshed and marketed, the expense thereof should be deducted from the proceeds and the net remainder divided equally between them. To attend to these necessary details concerning the wheat crop, plaintiffs asked for the appointment of a receiver (which was granted), and for a decree quieting their title to the farm and for half the proceeds of the wheat crop and for the landlord’s share of the oats and kafir corn sowed on the farm in the spring of 1937.

Defendant filed an answer and cross petition, in which he admitted the appointment of a guardian for the person and estate of the testator by the probate court of Franklin county (inferentially that testator’s personal occupancy of the farm had ended in November, 1936), and that he had died in Oklahoma, as alleged in [756]*756plaintiffs’ petition. In other respects defendant’s answer was a general denial.

In his cross petition defendant alleged that in 1929 he was a section foreman of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company and drawing a salary of $130 per month, and that the testator was then about ■ sixty years of age and afflicted with palsy, and not able to properly feed and care for himself or to attend to his business, and that he had never married.

The cross petitioner alleged that in November of 1929 testator proposed to defendant that he would purchase and equip a farm and stock it if defendant would quit his railway job and make a home for him and operate the farm, and that during testator’s lifetime defendant would get half of all the livestock and grain and produce sold from the farm, and at testator’s death he would give defendant the farm “as well as all of the [testator’s] personal property.”

The cross petitioner further alleged that pursuant to- such agreement defendant quit his job as a railway foreman and removed with his family to a farm near Pomona, which testator had purchased, equipped and stocked, and that defendant carried out his part of the oral agreement from early in 1930 until November 28,1936, at which time the testator left the farm, and that defendant was then ready, able and willing to continue to carry out his part of the agreement, but that without defendant’s fault the testator was taken out of the state of Kansas and so remained until his death.

The cross petition concluded with a prayer for judgment on the alleged oral contract and for confirmation of defendant’s title, and in the event defendant was adjudged to be the owner of any less interest in the farm that it be partitioned among its respective owners as their several interests might appear.

While this action was pending on the issues joined as above, defendant on July 13,1937, filed a motion reciting that the wheat crop had been harvested and marketed and that the receiver had on hand the sum of $407.34 as the net proceeds thereof, and defendant prayed that the receiver be directed to pay him one-half of that amount.

On July 13, 1937, the court granted that motion in part and directed the receiver to pay to defendant the sum of $190 and that the balance in the receiver’s hands should be held subject to further order of the court.

On August 16, 1937, plaintiffs filed a general denial as their reply and answer to defendant’s answer and cross petition.

[757]*757On September 20, 1937, defendant filed a motion asking that the trial of this cause, which had been set for September 23, be postponed for the reason that it was necessary to protect defendant’s rights that he file suit in the district court of Logan county, Oklahoma, to set aside the probate of the testator’s will, and he alleged—

“That the defendant is prepared to file such suit against the plaintiffs in this action and will do so.
“The defendant would show to the court that he is prepared to file such a suit and that he will file his amended answer in this cause within twenty days showing that such a suit has been begun in Logan county, Oklahoma.”

By consent, this action was held in abeyance until the January, 1938, term of court, but defendant abandoned entirely whatever intention he may have had to file a contest on the probate of the testator’s will in Oklahoma. Meantime plaintiffs filed a demurrer to defendant’s cross petition on the ground (1) that it did not state a cause of action, and (2) because such cross petition in effect sought to contest the will of Jake H. Shope which had been duly probated in Oklahoma and admitted to record in the probate court of Franklin county as a foreign will and could not be contested in any Kansas court.

This demurrer was overruled on January 25, 1938. Thereupon a jury was waived and the cause was tried by the court. The parties adduced their evidence; their counsel argued and submitted the cause; and on February 28 the court found that plaintiffs were the owners of the farm, that their title thereto should be quieted, and that they should be put in possession. Judgment was entered accordingly, and the sheriff was directed to remove defendant from the premises and put plaintiffs in possession.

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Related

Hoffman v. Hoffman
135 P.2d 887 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1943)
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102 P.2d 1001 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 P.2d 859, 149 Kan. 754, 1939 Kan. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shope-v-shope-kan-1939.