Shumate v. Dugan

934 S.W.2d 589, 1996 Mo. App. LEXIS 1766, 1996 WL 612807
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 22, 1996
Docket20750
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 934 S.W.2d 589 (Shumate v. Dugan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shumate v. Dugan, 934 S.W.2d 589, 1996 Mo. App. LEXIS 1766, 1996 WL 612807 (Mo. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Appellants Ruth Shumate, Anna Lee Cornelison, Ruby McFall, Ben Denney, Sherman Denney, and Lonnie Denney (Plaintiffs) are six of seven heirs at law of Ethel Hartley (Ethel) deceased. Their father was Ethel’s first husband, B.F. Denney. Plaintiffs sought to partition their mother’s undivided one-half interest in 81.25 acres of land (the Hartley Farm) located in Douglas County, Missouri. 1

Respondents Loetta Dugan and Katrina Dye (Defendants), are the daughters of Ethel’s second husband, Lyle Hartley. Loetta Dugan (Loetta), the seventh heir at law of Ethel, and Katrina Dye (Katrina), Loetta’s half-sister from Lyle’s former marriage, counter-claimed and requested that the trial court vest title in them as to Ethel’s one-half undivided interest in the Hartley Farm.

Defendants assert that Ethel and Lyle had entered into an oral agreement whereby Ethel, during her lifetime, would deed an 80 acre tract of land located in Douglas County, Mis *591 souri, (the Denney Farm) to her first husband’s children (Plaintiffs herein), and Lyle’s two children (Defendants herein), would be willed the Hartley Farm, i.e., the 81.15 acres in contention herein.

Defendants also pled that at Lyle’s death Ethel promised Defendants that they would receive full title to the Hartley Farm. Defendants asserted that they relied on these representations by Ethel and “did not probate the Last Will and Testament of Lyle Hart-ley” nor had their names placed on the deed to the Denney Farm that Ethel made to Plaintiffs. Therefore, Defendants assert Plaintiffs should be estopped from denying the promises Ethel made to the Defendants that Defendants would receive full title to the Hartley Farm.

In its judgment, the Circuit Court of Douglas County, Missouri, denied Plaintiffs’ partition action and instead granted Defendants the title to Ethel’s one-half interest in the Hartley Farm.

Plaintiffs raise two points of error.

In their Point One, Plaintiffs assert that the trial court erred when it recognized an alleged oral agreement between Ethel and Lyle because it was not in writing and was contrary to §§ 432.010 and 451.220, RSMo 1978. Therefore, the alleged oral agreement was barred from enforcement by the trial court.

In their Point Two, Plaintiffs argue that there was insufficient evidence to support the “estoppel element of reliance”, in that Ethel and Defendants’ failure to probate Lyle’s will was due to their uninformed and mistaken belief of the law; further, there was not sufficient evidence to establish that the Defendants were offered a share of the Denney Farm.

I.

Lyle and Ethel were married on September 29, 1955. At the time of his marriage to Ethel, Lyle owned 81.25 acres of real property (the Hartley Farm). Ethel separately owned 80 acres of real property located in Douglas County, Missouri, (the Denney Farm), that she had acquired during her marriage to B.F. Denney.

The Hartley Farm remained separately titled in Lyle’s name at the time of his death on March 15,1992.

Ethel died on April 27,1994. She had not remarried.

On October 7, 1985, Lyle made a will leaving the Hartley Farm to Defendants, and reserving a life estate to Ethel. 2 Ethel did not make a will at the same time.

In November 1990 Ethel and Lyle executed a warranty deed conveying the Denney Farm to the Plaintiffs.

After Lyle’s death, his will was never admitted to probate and no letters of administration were granted. His will was found in his lock box by Loetta after Ethel’s death.

II.

Because Lyle’s will was never submitted for probate the Hartley Farm passed through the laws of intestate succession to Lyle’s heirs at law, Loetta and Katrina. See § 474.010, RSMo 1986 and § 473.070, RSMo Cum.Supp.1989. Thus, Ethel received a one-half undivided interest in the Hartley Farm and Loetta and Katrina each received an undivided one-fourth interest in the Hart-ley Farm.

Ethel died intestate. Under the laws of intestate succession, Ethel’s seven children, the six Plaintiffs and Loetta, were otherwise entitled to share in Ethel’s undivided one-half interest in the Hartley Farm. Thus each of Ethel’s issue was entitled to receive a one-seventh interest in her one-half interest, i.e., a one-fourteenth interest in the totality of the Hartley Farm. It was on this basis that Plaintiffs brought a partition action, seeking to have the Circuit Court of Douglas County partition the Hartley Farm.

III.

After Lyle had made his will, he and Ethel allegedly made numerous statements to neighbors and relatives that Defendants *592 were to receive the Hartley Farm and Plaintiffs were to receive the Denney Farm.

Ethel’s sister-in-law, Myrl Cox, testified that prior to Lyle’s death he had informed her of an agreement that he and Ethel had concerning their two tracts of land. She stated that Ethel’s children by Mr. Denney “was supposed to get the Denney property and his home where he lived on, Ethel and Lyle, that was to go to the two daughters, Lyle’s two daughters [Defendants herein].”

Yoyne Hartley, the brother of Lyle, testified that “[w]ell, her kids was to get her place and his two girls was to get his place.” He also stated that Ethel had made similar representations to him after Lyle had died. In like manner, Naida Hartley, wife of Voyne Hartley, testified that Ethel and Lyle “agreed for his kids to get his place and her kids her place.” Helen Workman, a neighbor, also testified in a similar vein, as did Pete Workman, her husband, and Mike En-gelhardt, grandson of Ethel.

Katrina testified that her father, Lyle, had told her that he and Loetta’s mother [Ethel] had agreed that the property [Hartley Farm] would be divided between Loetta and Katrina. Katrina Dye also testified that at the hospital Ethel “told me that she and my dad had agreed that the property would be divided between Loetta and I.”

IV.

The standard of review herein is as set out by Murphy v. Carron, 536 S.W.2d 30, 32 (Mo.banc 1976). The judgment of the trial court will be sustained unless there is no substantial evidence to support it, unless it is against the weight of the evidence, or unless it erroneously declares the law, or erroneously applies the law. See Rule 73.01, Missouri Rules of Civil Procedure (1996). There being no specific findings of fact, we consider all fact issues to have been found in accordance with the result reached. Brown v. Mercantile Bank of Poplar Bluff, 820 S.W.2d 327, 334 (Mo.App.1991).

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934 S.W.2d 589, 1996 Mo. App. LEXIS 1766, 1996 WL 612807, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shumate-v-dugan-moctapp-1996.