Sykes v. Perry

176 P.2d 579, 162 Kan. 365, 1947 Kan. LEXIS 316
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 25, 1947
DocketNo. 36,736
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 176 P.2d 579 (Sykes v. Perry) 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
Sykes v. Perry, 176 P.2d 579, 162 Kan. 365, 1947 Kan. LEXIS 316 (kan 1947).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Harvey, C. J.:

This was a suit to rescind a contract pertaining to the lease and sale of real property upon the ground that defendant had failed to perforin conditions thereof, and particularly those set out in paragraph 8 of the contract. (A copy of the contract is attached hereto as Appendix “A.”) Defendant answered that paragraph 8 of the contract was void, and by cross bill sought a. reformation of the contract to eliminate that paragraph. Fur[366]*366ther pleadings put those matters in issue. The trial court heard the evidence and made conclusions of fact and of law and rendered judgment for plaintiff. Defendant has appealed.

The plaintiff and the defendant, Thomas C. Perry, were married in December, 1919, and were divorced in February, 1933. Sometime thereafter plaintiff married a Mr. Sykes. The defendant also remarried and at the time this action was brought his wife was Harriett Harper Perry. She died in April, 1946. Hereinafter Thomas C. Perry will be referred to as defendant. Prior to her marriage to defendant, and since, plaintiff has been a beauty parlor operator, which business- over the years made a substantial profit. A year or more before her marriage to defendant she bought two of the lots described in the contract here involved, upon which a residence was situated, for $2,500, and made improvements thereon ■ — put in hardwood floors and bathroom fixtures. At the time of their marriage defendant was a student in Kansas State College, taking a veterinary course. He completed his course and was graduated in 1921. While he was in school his wife remained in Wichita and continued her work. When defendant was graduated he returned to Wichita and began the practice of his profession as a veterinary, confining his work to small animals. A small animal hospital was built upon the two lots owned by plaintiff at a cost of about $300. Later the parties bought four lots adjoining on the north of those owned by plaintiff at a cost of $750. Later improvements were made in the house and a larger animal hospital was built at an expense of about $4,000. This became known as The Perry Small Animal Hospital. Defendant continued to operate the hospital and practice his profession until in June, 1932, when he left the state and did not return until September, 1933. During all this time plaintiff had continued her work of operating a beauty parlor, using the profits to assist in the enlargement and improvement of the hospital. While he was gone she operated the hospital with hired help for a time, and from February, 1933, to December, 1935, rented it for $150 per month. Defendant was not present when the divorce was granted plaintiff, in February, 1933, but he was represented by an attorney. In that action the plaintiff was awarded the six lots, with improvements thereon, as her separate property, she to pay the defendant the sum of $400. After defendant returned to Wichita, in September, 1933, he and plaintiff had several talks about his buying the property, which [367]*367finally culminated in the contract here in question, which was executed December 23, 1935. The contract was drawn by Mr. Hart, an attorney of Wichita, who was employed for that purpose by the defendant.

Plaintiff and defendant went to the office of the attorney to- ■ gether. Apparently at that time they had agreed on a' price of $8,000 for the property, she having previously asked more and he having offered less. They explained to the attorney what they wanted to do. Plaintiff testified that defendant suggested what was embodied in the eighth paragraph of the contract in lieu of paying interest on the $8,000 purchase price, and stated: “I will pay you 10 percent if you don’t charge me interest, as long as I live and as long as you live.” The attorney explained to her that the accounting and the payments under the eighth paragraph would stop in the event of the death of defendant. She understood that. He inquired if he should die prior to having made all the $75 payments if his estate would have some equity in the property. The attorney told him there would be an equity. She was satisfied with that understanding and said she wanted to know that she would have an income. Defendant testified that the contract was written like the plaintiff wanted it and that he fully understood it. Her testimony was that she understood it. But before she executed it she took it to her attorney, Mr. Gardiner of Wichita, for independent advice. After consulting him she executed the contract. On the same date the deed from plaintiff to defendant was prepared and executed, and a copy of the contract and the deed were left with a bank where the payments were to be made.

Apparently all provisions of the contract which pertained to plaintiff and defendant were performed until about May, 1945. In the meantime and in 1940 defendant had moved the residence property from the south lots to the north lots, rebuilt and enlarged it at a cost of about $5,500, and also made some improvements in the hospital building at a cost of about $600, and had purchased some new equipment. In May, 1945, defendant consulted Mr. Holmes, an attorney of Wichita (Mr. Hart being deceased), concerning the provisions of the eighth paragraph of the contract. He testified that Mr. Holmes advised him that the eighth paragraph of the contract was void and that he need not comply with it; that he should complete making his $75 payments, get the deed from the bank and record it, and then he could convey the property or handle [368]*368it as he pleased. The balance of the $75 payments was made on June 11, 1945, and a few days later Mr. Holmes got the deed from the bank. The deed was filed for record June 26, 1945, and three days later defendant executed- a deed conveying the property to his then wife, Harriett Harper Perry. Previously he had had some correspondence with Doctor Peterson, of the Tuskegee Institute, of Tuskegee, Ala., and with Doctor Evans, head of the veterinary school of the institute, about going there to teach veterinary surgery. The April, 1945, catalog of the Tuskegee College listed as a member of its faculty “Thomas G. Perry, Head.of the Small Animal Medicine, Surgery, Obstetrics, and Small Animal Clinic,” giving his degree as D.V.M., Kansas State College. His salary there was-to be $4,000 per year. Pie left his wife in charge of the animal hospital in Wichita and went to Fort Collins, Colo., and took some work there preparatory to his going to Tuskegee September 1, 1945. He returned from Colorado and went to Tuskegee about that time, 'but had been there only about a week when hi's wife fell and broke her hip. This caused him to return to Wichita to care for his wife, which he did until her death in April, 1946. He testified that during this time he did not practice as a veterinary surgeon, but that his ,wife continued to .operate the hospital.

On March. 12, 1946, defendant executed a lease of the property, except the residence, for $200 per month, to Doctors Balton and McDonald, who had previously been employed by Harriett H. Perry to operate the hospital. No date was named for the termination of the lease, but it contained a provision for its termination on thirty-days’ written notice of either party thereto. The lease recited that the lessor was the owner of drugs and supplies and accounts receivable in the sum of $5,500, which sum should be paid to the lessor by the lessees before they applied any profits to their own' use, and stipulated that the income from the business should be applied first to (a) the payment of the rent; (b)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
176 P.2d 579, 162 Kan. 365, 1947 Kan. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sykes-v-perry-kan-1947.