Walter v. Walter

345 P.2d 636, 185 Kan. 546, 1959 Kan. LEXIS 429
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 7, 1959
DocketNo. 41,481
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 345 P.2d 636 (Walter v. Walter) 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
Walter v. Walter, 345 P.2d 636, 185 Kan. 546, 1959 Kan. LEXIS 429 (kan 1959).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Robb, J.:

Plaintiffs (appellants) commenced a suit against defendant to quiet title to and obtain possession of a half section of land. Defendant filed her answer and a cross petition in which she sought to set aside a warranty deed upon which plaintiffs’ title was predicated and to have herself decreed to be the owner of the land in question. Plaintiffs then filed a reply to defendant’s answer and an answer to her cross petition. Defendant filed her reply to plaintiffs’ answer to her cross petition and also formally moved for judgment on the pleadings. The trial court sustained the motion and decreed that under the warranty deed defendant was the owner in fee simple of an undivided one tenth interest in the land and further decreed that defendant’s suit to set aside the deed on the grounds of fraud in its execution was barred because the cause of action accrued more than two years before she commenced her suit. Plaintiffs appeal from the trial court’s order sustaining the motion for judgment on the pleadings and decreeing defendant to be owner in fee simple of an undivided one tenth interest in the land. De[547]*547fendant appeals from that portion of the trial court’s decree which declared her suit barred by the statute of limitations.

A summary of the allegations of the petition shows Edward W. Walter died intestate on November 29, 1938, leaving as his only heirs at law Ora T. Walter, L. H. Walter, (whose death on February 28, 1958, necessitated revivorship proceedings, intervention and the filing of an amended petition including his widow, son, and daughter as plantiffs) Iva Jane Anderson, Dora Ellen Sidebottom, Minnie Evelyn Ashby, Joe A. Walter, Lawrence B. Walter, Marguerite Edna Allphin, Charles M. Walter and Sidney E. Walter. On June 14, 1939, the nine brothers and sisters of Sidney E. Walter conveyed their interests to Sidney by quit claim deed and on April 17, 1950, as a single man, Sidney, by warranty deed filed and recorded on April 17, 1950, at 9:30 a. m., conveyed back to them the ■following:

“The Northeast Quarter (NE %) of Section Twenty-nine (29) (except Railroad Right of Way) and the Southwest Quarter (SW %) of Section Twenty-eight (28), Township Eighteen (18) South, Range Twenty-seven (27), West of the 6th P. M. Containing 311 Acres.
“(Reserving in the grantor a life estate and reserving for the surviving widow of said Grantor, should there be one, upon the death of the Grantor herein an undivided l/10th interest in the fee title of said above described property.)”

Defendant filed a general denial except she admitted Edward’s death, intestate, and the transfer of the land in question by the above-named heirs of Edward to Sidney in consideration for his having remained at home and cared for their parents during their lifetime and for the further reason there was an $1,800 mortgage on the land which approximated the value thereof. Defendant also admitted Sidney’s purported execution of the above warranty deed which spoke for itself. She and Sidney had contracted a marriage on April 17, 1950 (recording date of warranty deed) and they were married on April 18,1950.

For her cross petition defendant alleged Sidney’s courtship and marriage proposal. He had told her that if they worked together they would have a home, sufficient income to care for them for life and they could pay the $700 balance due on the land. Defendant relied on these statements and married Sidney. Her assets were valued at $450 at the time of their marriage and this amount was subsequently applied on the mortgage, which was paid in full on December 11, 1956.

[548]*548Defendant further alleged she had at all times been a good wife to Sidney; she had had full and implicit faith, confidence and trust in him and did not learn of the warranty deed to plaintiffs until after his death on February 27, 1957; the warranty deed was in fraud of the marital agreement and her rights thereunder; it was without consideration, and had been solicited and obtained by improper and undue influence of plaintiffs so that it was invalid and of no legal effect. Defendant asked that the warranty deed be set aside and held for naught, and that she, as Sidney’s sole and only heir, be decreed owner of the land in question.

The amended petition filed because of the death of L. H. Walter in no way affected the facts or issues.

Plaintiffs’ reply was a general denial with an additional specific denial that the consideration for their deed to Sidney was his remaining at home, caring for the parents, as well as the existence of the $1,800 mortgage and had been done because the mortgagee, The Federal Land Bank of Wichita, desired to deal with only one or two of the debtors. Plaintiffs alleged that defendant had recognized the title of plaintiffs in the quit claim deed to Sidney, she should not be allowed to deny that title now, and should be estopped from so doing because on May 14, 1951, defendant and plaintiffs had executed, acknowledged, and delivered an oil and gas lease on the land, from which defendant and Sidney had accepted benefits thereunder in the way of tax and mortgage payments when it was Sidney’s duty as life tenant to pay these items.

For reasons later to become apparent we shall not set out plaintiffs’ answer to defendant’s cross petition or defendant’s reply thereto.

Thereafter defendant filed the following motion for judgment on the pleadings:

“Comes Now, the defendant and moves the court for an order for the entry of judgment in her favor as to the plaintiffs’ alleged cause of action for the reason that the pleadings raise no issue of fact as both parties are relying on the effectiveness of reserving or .excepting clause in a deed which neither party contends is ambiguous, but only its legal effect is challenged. The plaintiffs have not presented a cause of action because the interest in the land contested for by plaintiffs was excluded from the grant by the exception clause in the deed.”

In its journal entry of judgment the trial court, after making certain findings substantially as already shown by the pleadings, continued as follows:

[549]*549“The court further finds that the Warranty Deed from Sidney E. Walter to his brothers and sisters, the plaintiffs named in the original petition filed in said action dated April 17, 1950 and recorded on said date in Deed Record 34 at page 403 in the Register of Deeds Office, Lane County, Kansas, and that any cause of action for fraud in the execution of said deed, if any, accrued to the defendant and cross-petitioner on the 17th day of April, 1950, which is more than two years before the commencement of this action.
“The court further finds that the clause in said deed dated April 17th, 1950 and recorded in Deed Record 34 at page 403 ‘reserving for the surviving widow of said Grantor, should there be one, upon the death of the Grantor herein an undivided l/10th interest in the fee title to said above described property,’ constitutes an exception to the grantor from the granting clause in said deed of an undivided l/10th interest in the fee title in the described real estate remaining after the life estate reserved in the grantor, in the whole of said real estate and that the defendant, Mildred Walter, is the owner in fee simple of said undivided l/10th interest in the above described real estate as the heir of Sidney E.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Anderson v. Stice
348 P.2d 833 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
345 P.2d 636, 185 Kan. 546, 1959 Kan. LEXIS 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walter-v-walter-kan-1959.