Stalcup v. Stalcup

19 P.2d 447, 137 Kan. 141, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 72
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 11, 1933
DocketNo. 30,953
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 19 P.2d 447 (Stalcup v. Stalcup) 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
Stalcup v. Stalcup, 19 P.2d 447, 137 Kan. 141, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 72 (kan 1933).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Hutchison, J.:

This was an action to set aside a deed from a daughter to her father to a tract of land conveyed to her by her father about two and one-half years earlier, in which the plaintiff claims to be the owner of a half interest, and to have the daughter declared to be a trustee for the plaintiff’s half interest therein and directed to execute and deliver to plaintiff a good and sufficient deed therefor. The trial court made findings of fact and conclusions of law and rendered judgment thereon in favor of the defendants, from which the plaintiff appeals.

The plaintiff, S. R. Stalcup, was a farmer, who for seven years lived with his brother and family in Stafford county, and was engaged with his brother in farming land belonging to his brother’s wife and, also, some land the plaintiff had rented. The name of the brother’s wife was Mattie May Stalcup, and she was the daugh[142]*142ter of R. C. Gates, both of whom are defendants in this action. They kept their funds in one account in a neighboring bank in the name of the brother of the plaintiff. After the purchase of the land in question by the daughter from her father, plaintiff continued with his brother farming the land they previously had and this new quarter section, dividing the crops on this new quarter, the plaintiff getting half of it. He paid half the interest on the mortgage of $6,000 assumed thereon and half the taxes for two and one-half years, sending one interest check directly to defendant R. C. Gates.

The following findings of the trial court have special reference to the questions involved in this appeal:

“4. The court finds that the defendant, Mattie May Stalcup, purchased the above-described real estate from the defendants, R. C. Gates and wife, on September 24, 1928, and said deed was made subject to the following conditions :
“ ‘Said party of the second part hereby agrees to assume six thousand dollars of a certain twenty-four thousand dollar mortgage, on all of section 35-21-13 to The Prudential Insurance Company of America, ... that the consideration for said sale and conveyance of said land from R. C. Gates and wife to the defendant Mattie May Stalcup was twelve thousand dollars, of which the defendant Mattie May Stalcup assumed six thousand dollars, or one-fourth of a twenty-four thousand dollar mortgage, on said real estate, agreed to pay R. C. Gates one thousand dollars, and that the said’ Mattie May Stalcup paid five thousand dollars to the said R. C. Gates in cash, and that she obtained the said five thousand dollars in cash by mortgaging some real estate that she owned in her own right and that she owned at the time she married plaintiff’s brother.
“5. The court finds that the plaintiff paid no part of the purchase price of said land which the defendant, Mattie May Stalcup, purchased from the defendant R. C. Gates, her father, being the real estate involved in this action.
“8. Plaintiff and Mattie May Stalcup, his sister-in-law, defendant herein, had business transactions relative to farming, and at or about the time the land was purchased from R. C. Gates by Mattie May Stalcup, plaintiff and Mattie May Stalcup figured up what was due the plaintiff and Mattie May Stalcup told plaintiff, and they agreed, that plaintiff had three thousand one hundred seventy-six dollars due him from Mattie May Stalcup, and the parties had a verbal agreement or understanding that plaintiff was to own a three-thousand-dollar or one-half interest in the above-described real estate, provided he paid out his share of the mortgage on the land.
“9. The land was to be kept in the name of Mattie May Stalcup, so when Mattie May Stalcup bought plaintiff out, a new deed would not have to be given.
“10. Mattie May Stalcup offered to give plaintiff a deed for a one-half interest in said real estate several times, but plaintiff said he did not desire a deed.
[143]*143“13. The price of real estate declined rapidly on account of the present depression, and the mortgage on the real estate came due and the defendant R. C. Gates, defendant Mattie May Stalcup’s father, was compelled to and did pay the mortgage on said real estate.
“14. On May 5, 1931, a divorce was granted Mattie May Stalcup from J. A. Stalcup, known as Burt Stalcup, brother of plaintiff, in the district court of Stafford county, Kansas; the evidence was introduced on April 25, 1931, and the decree rendered May 5, 1931.
“15. On April 1, 1931, and also under date of May 26, 1931, Mattie May Stalcup conveyed said real estate back to her father, R. C. Gates, by a general warranty deed; the deed of May 26, 1931, was recorded. The plaintiff knew of the conveyance from Mattie May Stalcup to R. C. Gates prior to the' time the divorce case was tried.
“16. The consideration for the sale and conveyance of the real estate from Mattie May Stalcup to R. C. Gates, her father, was that R. C. Gates pay the mortgage assessed against the above-described real estate, which was a twenty-four thousand dollar mortgage on a section of land which covered the land in question, and the said R. C. Gates canceled the one thousand dollars which his daugther, Mattie May Stalcup, owed him; and the said R. C. Gates further orally agreed to pay the five thousand dollar mortgage indebtedness which the defendant, Mattie May Stalcup, put on her real estate at the time she purchased the land from her father and which she paid her father, R. C. Gates.
“17. The land in question, at the time of the trial of this action, was worth approximately nine thousand dollars.
“18. The court finds that from the time Mattie May Stalcup purchased from R. C. Gates in 1928 the land in controversy, and up until the spring of 1931, plaintiff had never had any conversation with R. C. Gates in which plaintiff told R. C. Gates that he had bought a half interest in the quarter section of land involved in this controversy; and the evidence is not clear that the defendant R. C. Gates ever knew that plaintiff and his daughter had had any conversation or agreement relative to the land in question.
“19. All the negotiations between the plaintiff and defendant Mattie May Stalcup were oral.
“20. The defendant R. C. Gates is in possession of the real estate.
“21. The defendant R. C. Gates has already paid the twenty-four thousand dollar mortgage, of which the defendant Mattie May Stalcup had assumed six thousand dollars in the deed, and has canceled the' one thousand dollars due him, and has agreed to pay the five thousand dollar mortgage indebtedness owed by Mattie May Stalcup.
“22. The court finds that no fraud was practiced by R. C. Gates in any of the transactions related herein.
“23. The court finds that the plaintiff was not indebted to any person; and there was no fraud practiced by him in any of the transactions related herein, and the agreement between Mattie May Stalcup and plaintiff was free from fraudulent intent.
“24. Mattie May Stalcup sold the land baok to her father, R. C. Gates, for exactly what she gave for it.
[144]*144“25.

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Related

Stalcup v. Stalcup
30 P.2d 1106 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 P.2d 447, 137 Kan. 141, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stalcup-v-stalcup-kan-1933.